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Credit: Stephen Melkisethian/Flickr

Trump’s EPA shake-up puts pollution controls in jeopardy

The Biden administration tightened pollution rules and expanded air monitoring in toxic hotspots, but Trump’s return threatens to unravel those efforts, leaving vulnerable communities exposed to industrial pollution.

Lisa Song reports for ProPublica.


In short:

  • The Trump administration is halting pollution regulations, freezing U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) grants and shifting enforcement to states, which have a track record of weak oversight.
  • Communities in pollution-heavy areas, like Pascagoula, Mississippi, and Laredo, Texas, face ongoing exposure to carcinogens, while state agencies often lack the resources or will to enforce federal air quality laws.
  • New EPA rules requiring industrial plants to monitor and reduce emissions by 2026 could be delayed or dismantled under Trump, putting thousands at continued risk of cancer and other health effects.

Key quote:

“People exposed to something so horrible and cancer-causing should have the same protection everywhere.”

— Tricia Cortez, Rio Grande International Study Center

Why this matters:

Trump’s rollback of pollution protections could leave many Americans — especially in low-income communities and communities of color — breathing toxic air. Without strong federal oversight, polluters may operate unchecked, worsening health disparities and increasing cancer risks nationwide.

Read more: Levels of cancer-causing benzene reached new heights in beleaguered Channelview, Texas. Regulators never told residents.

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EPA staff face pressure to resign as Trump reshapes environmental agency

As the Trump administration aggressively works to overhaul the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, more than 300 career employees have already left, while those remaining face mounting pressure to quit or work under an administration determined to roll back environmental protections.

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Iván Carrillo reports for Knowable Magazine.

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Climate change is erasing Indigenous languages along with biodiversity

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Julia Webster Ayuso reports for NOĒMA.

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Trump administration closes environmental offices, reshaping federal policy

The Trump administration is swiftly shutting down environmental initiatives, placing dozens of employees on leave and dismantling key offices within the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the Justice Department.

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U.S. Mid-Atlantic leaders plan for climate disasters as federal funding faces cuts

Pennsylvania saw a record number of billion-dollar weather disasters in 2024, prompting officials and experts to gather in Philadelphia to discuss emergency preparedness as the federal government threatens funding cuts.

Kiley Bense reports for Inside Climate News.

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Trump’s funding freeze halts solar program for low-income communities

President Donald Trump’s executive orders have put the $7 billion Solar For All Program on hold, leaving states and nonprofits scrambling to secure promised funds for expanding solar energy in disadvantaged communities.

Terry L. Jones reports for Floodlight.

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