From WE ACT <[email protected]>
Subject Mapping a Path for Climate Justice in New York State
Date March 28, 2023 5:30 PM
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State Announces Key Criteria for Climate Action Agenda

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MAPPING A PATH FOR CLIMATE JUSTICE:
New York State Announces Key Criteria for Ambitious Climate Action Agenda

In 2019, WE ACT helped pass New York State’s Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act, also known as the Climate Act ([link removed]) , which mandates that the state reduce economy-wide greenhouse gas emissions 40 percent by 2030 and no less than 85 percent by 2050, based on 1990 levels. And we helped ensure that equity was baked into this new law, requiring that no less than 35 percent – with a goal of at least 40 percent – of the benefits of these climate actions go to Disadvantaged Communities.

But what exactly is a Disadvantaged Community? Sonal Jessel was part of the state’s Climate Justice Working Group, which was tasked with recommending the appropriate guidelines to define Disadvantaged Communities. Everyone will benefit from these investments to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and other forms of air pollution as well as improving energy efficiency and developing clean sources of energy, but clearly defining Disadvantaged Communities ensures that at least 35 percent of those benefits go to the communities across the state most impacted by climate and other environmental burdens.

Yesterday, March 27, New York State’s Climate Justice Working Group voted to approve and adopt the criteria for Disadvantaged Communities required to enact the Climate Act, the most ambitious climate agenda in the nation. Following extensive statewide public input on the proposed criteria identified and evaluated by the 13 members of this working group, they ultimately agreed on 45 indicators at the census tract level, including environmental burdens and climate change risks; sociodemographic factors such as age, race, and income; and health vulnerabilities. These indicators have been used to create a map of the state’s Disadvantaged Communities.

You can view the criteria, learn more about the process, and see the map(s) of New York’s Disadvantaged Communities here ([link removed]) .

"This is a major step for climate justice in New York State,” explained Sonal Jessel, WE ACT’s Director of Policy and a member of New York State’s Climate Justice Working Group. “It will ensure that we deliver long-overdue investments to the communities most burdened by climate and environmental injustices.”

We would like to take this opportunity to thank New York State Governor Kathy Hochul, New York State Department of Environmental Conservation Commissioner Basil Seggos, and New York State Energy Research and Development Authority President and Chief Executive Officer Doreen Harris for their leadership on this.

What’s next? Making sure that this map is used across all of the state’s agencies and programs, so that the communities that deserve these benefits are the ones actually receiving them.

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