Press Release
Media Contact
Deidre Nelms; Communications Director; Coming Clean; dnelms@comingcleaninc.org, (802) 251-0203 ext. 711.
A new analysis and interactive map illustrates the real-world impacts of gutting regulations for the nation’s most hazardous chemical facilities, as recently proposed by the Trump Administration’s Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
Disaster Déjà Vu outlines six Texas facilities with recent histories of back-to-back chemical incidents – including fires, explosions, and worker injuries – that are regulated by the EPA’s Risk Management Program (RMP). New requirements for RMP facilities, intended to make communities safer from the threat of chemical disasters, were finalized under the Biden Administration and were slated to begin going into effect this year, until President Trump’s EPA proposed rollbacks.
These rollbacks are “a capitulation to industry demands, at the expense of public safety,” concludes the analysis, co-authored by Coming Clean, the Environmental Justice Health Alliance for Chemical Policy Reform (EJHA), and Texas Environmental Justice Advocacy Services (T.e.j.a.s.).
Six case studies exemplify the burdens that EPA’s proposed rollbacks would place on communities and workers if finalized:
Over 100 RMP facilities have experienced more than one chemical incident in the last five year period, shows the analysis, drawing from both EPA data and compiled media reports.
“No community should come to expect chemical disasters as a ‘fact of life.’ When the same facilities keep reporting fires, explosions and worker injuries year after year, it signals that we need stronger – not weaker – regulations.” said Maya Nye, Federal Policy Director for Coming Clean. “To claim that life-saving regulations are a ‘burden’ on hazardous facilities is an insult to the workers who have lost their lives, and the communities that have had to evacuate or tape up their windows time and again in the wake of recent chemical disasters.”
“This proposed rule is a direct assault on safety and a political gift to polluters,” said Ana Parras, Executive Director of Texas Environmental Justice Advocacy Services (T.e.j.a.s) “For fenceline communities and facility workers, this rollback is a declaration that our lives are deemed acceptable sacrifices. By ripping away the requirement for safer technologies, the administration is actively increasing the threat of explosions and toxic releases - preventable disasters that will deepen environmental injustice for generations."
“EPA has the authority and moral obligation to do more, not less, to reduce risk and eliminate the harm from chemical disasters that endanger workers and poison neighboring residents. Instead of going back again and rewriting basic protections for workers and communities, EPA must implement the 2024 provisions and move on to strengthen other overdue or outdated rules required to protect human health and the environment, as is their mission,” said Michele Roberts, National Coordinator of the Environmental Justice Health Alliance for Chemical Policy Reform.
Coming Clean is a nonprofit environmental health collaborative working to transform the chemical industry so it is no longer a source of harm, and to secure systemic changes that allow a safe chemical and clean energy economy to flourish. Our members are organizations and technical experts — including grassroots activists, community leaders, scientists, health professionals, business leaders, lawyers, and farmworker advocates — committed to principled collaboration to advance a nontoxic, sustainable, and just world for all.
The Environmental Justice Health Alliance for Chemical Policy Reform is a national network of grassroots Environmental and Economic Justice organizations and advocates in communities that are disproportionately impacted by toxic chemicals from legacy contamination, ongoing exposure to polluting facilities and health-harming chemicals in household products. EJHA supports a just transition towards safer chemicals and a pollution-free economy that leaves no community or worker behind.