DENVER, CO - The House Energy & Environment Committee today passed legislation to help address some of the long-standing environmental injustices that have disproportionately impacted communities of color and low-income communities in Colorado.
HB24-1338, sponsored by Representatives Manny Rutinel and Elizabeth Velasco, would direct the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment (CDPHE) to carry out recommendations from the Environmental Justice Action Task Force, created by HB21-1266.
“The Environmental Justice Action Task Force spent almost a year meeting with communities and gathering important data points to create a comprehensive checklist of must-dos to clean up our air and support communities disproportionately impacted by environmental pollution,” said Rep. Manny Rutinel, D-Commerce City. “This bill implements key task force recommendations, including increased oversight of known polluters and better response time to community complaints of air pollution. Our legislation also dives deeper into the cumulative impacts of environmental injustice, so we can better understand and address the burdens on our neighbors of color and low income neighbors affected by harmful pollution.”
“Coloradans of color and low-income communities across our state have been disproportionately impacted by poor air quality and other environmental factors that have led to breathing or other health related issues,” said Rep. Elizabeth Velasco, D-Glenwood Springs. “We owe it to our neighbors to implement the recommendations of the Environmental Justice Action Task Force to clean up our air, take air pollution complaints seriously and combat some of the long-standing environmental injustices. Environmental justice is a statewide issue, and we all deserve access to clean air and water. This legislation takes the hard work of the task force and implements it into real, effective policy to make it easier for Coloradans most affected by poor air quality, and water and soil pollution to lead healthy lives.”
HB24-1338 passed by a vote of 9-4 and would authorize the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment to carry out recommendations of the Environmental Justice Action Task Force and address long-standing environmental injustices. Specifically, this bill would:
Increase oversight of petroleum refineries. The bill would fund the hiring of an expert in air pollution control for petroleum refineries. This expert would assess gaps in public health protections and identify the best regulatory tools to fill those gaps. The bill would also require refineries to provide near real-time emissions monitoring and compliance data.
Improve response to air pollution complaints. The department’s Air Pollution Control Division would house a new rapid response inspection team to support quicker responses to air pollution complaints by impacted communities.
Analyze the cumulative impacts of pollution. The bill would implement recommendations of the Environmental Justice Action Task Force by formally establishing and authorizing the department's Office of Environmental Justice to create at least two Environmental Equity and Cumulative Impact Analyses to analyze the cumulative air, water, soil, and demographic impacts in specific disproportionately impacted communities.
Founded in 2021 through HB21-1266, the Environmental Justice Action Task Force hosted several in-person meetings and gatherings with Coloradans in Commerce City, Grand Junction, Greeley, and Pueblo in addition to receiving more than 300 written comments and survey responses. The task force provided its final recommendations to Governor Polis, the legislature and the CDPHE in 2022.