Home Sustainability Recycling brings environmental justice communities opportunities — and potential costs – GWC Mag

Recycling brings environmental justice communities opportunities — and potential costs – GWC Mag

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The National Recycling Congress conference this year brought together local, state and national experts to discuss the importance of recycling’s climate impacts and its connection to environmental justice initiatives.

Participants discussed how recycling and reuse groups can build capacity to better understand the areas they serve, while other discussions centered on how to more effectively make space for environmental justice topics. Speakers from federal agencies discussed progress on the Biden administration’s plans to advance recycling- and waste-related goals, while local community groups talked about how to tap into resources designed to help them win and keep grants, including from federal sources.

Here are some highlights from the virtual event, hosted by the National Recycling Coalition March 5-6.

Progress on federal recycling funding

The federal government has worked for the last few years to improve its resources for environmental justice initiatives, “and there’s more to come,” said keynote speaker Nena Shaw, director of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s Resource Conservation and Sustainability Division.

Environmental justice is a major lens through which the federal government thinks about and funds recycling initiatives, she said. Like other federal agencies, the EPA follows the Justice40 Initiative, which mandates that at least 40% of federal funding and benefits for programs go to disadvantaged communities. 

Shaw touted recent progress on projects funded by numerous rounds of multimillion-dollar waste and recycling grants announced in 2023. The next round of funding could be announced by the end of the year for the Solid Waste Infrastructure for Recycling grant and the Recycling Education and Outreach grant. That next round would give more applicants the chance to apply.

Meanwhile, recipients are in the process of using funding from the first round of grants, with 76% of the $105 million in SWIFR funding going to disadvantaged communities to improve recycling, organics and waste management systems. Some of the projects include purchasing recycling collection vehicles and building recycling dropoff facilities in rural areas. “We’re really excited about being able to see that come to fruition,” Shaw said. 

About 74% of the $33 million in recycling education grants will go to projects in disadvantaged communities, Shaw added. 

Beyond funding mechanisms, the EPA is working on finalizing the National Recycling Strategy after receiving 91,000 comments on the draft first published in 2021. That final strategy could also come by the end of the year. The EPA is also working on data collection strategies that could give the country a better picture of where and how waste is managed.

“The waste stream is changing and becoming more complex, and we’re also building for a circular economy, so we have different management pathways that are at play. Planning is incredibly important,” Shaw said.

Connecting community groups with federal resources

Community-led organizations play a major role in advancing recycling and waste policy and moving environmental justice efforts forward, speakers said. Such groups are key to building more inclusive and equitable recycling and waste policies, but they often have fewer resources and less time to coordinate major projects compared to larger organizations and companies, speakers said.

Federal funding and resources are available for such organizations, but accessing them can be confusing, time-consuming and cumbersome, said Sarah Salem of WE ACT for Environmental Justice. Salem co-leads the organization’s Thriving Communities Technical Assistance Center, which provides training and support to help communities better navigate federal grant systems. 

Some federal agencies are starting to create their own community engagement departments, “which many did not have before,” said Cleophus Lee, managing principal of New Life Development Group. It works with for-profit and nonprofit organizations on revitalization projects that sometimes involve environmental justice and economic development aspects. 

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