By Maria Rachal Waste Dive
New York City Mayor Eric Adams announced on Monday a new Mayor’s Office of Climate and Environmental Justice to better integrate justice work within the city’s comprehensive approach to climate. The office consolidates and unifies existing agencies focused on resilience, sustainability, environmental coordination, and environmental remediation.
Adams also announced new appointments to the climate team who he said will support the administration’s work to “offset the effects of climate change and unnecessary carbon emissions,” with plans to expand solar power installations and other citywide resilience and clean-energy infrastructure. He also pledged to complete the city’s “first comprehensive study of environmental justice.”
Environmental justice advocates welcomed the commitments. “The nature of environmental justice is about intersectionality,” said Eddie Bautista, executive director of the NYC Environmental Justice Alliance (NYC-EJA). “If your government is siloed, by extension, your policies are siloed.” At the same time, Bautista said that the newfound attention and formalization of environmental justice (EJ) in city operations raises the stakes. “We intend on holding the mayor’s office accountable to that title.”
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