Office

Community Partnerships Program

Jessica Chou for Earthjustice

707 Wilshire Blvd., Ste. 4300
Los Angeles, CA 90017
(415) 217-2000

cpp@earthjustice.org

Media Inquiries

Keith Rushing
National Communications Strategist
(757) 897-2147
krushing@earthjustice.org

Legal Assistance Inquiries

Legislative Inquiries

Erica Martinez
Policy Advocate

Contacto de Prensa

Robert Valencia
Estratega de Comunicaciones y Asuntos Públicos Hispanos/Latinos
rvalencia@earthjustice.org
(212) 845-7376

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Who We Are

Earthjustice’s Community Partnerships Program works hand-in-hand with frontline communities fighting for a safe, just, and healthy environment.

Our Community Partnerships Program staff are based in Earthjustice’s offices in Los Angeles, New York, Philadelphia, and Washington, D.C., and in Sacramento. See bar admissions for our attorneys.

Casandia BellevueAssociate Attorney

Byron ChanSupervising Senior Attorney

Thien ChauAssociate Attorney

Danny CooperLitigation Assistant

Khushi DesaiSenior Attorney

Oscar Espino-PadronSenior Attorney

Adam FrankelAssociate Attorney

Lisa FuhrmannSenior Research and Policy Analyst

Angela Johnson MeszarosManaging Attorney

Erica MartinezPolicy Advocate

Colin PartsAssociate Attorney

Phuong PhamLegal Practice Manager

Lupe RuelasParalegal

Jonathan SmithSenior Attorney

Our Impact

Providing Legal and Advocacy Support

We provide community-led movements with legal and advocacy resources to help challenge polluters and ensure access to environmental benefits — no matter how long the fight.

Working Together

We act collectively with our community partners to transform social and political structures that stand in the way of equal access to a healthy environment.

Challenging the Status Quo

We take on the status quo by fighting to close dangerous regulatory loopholes; open access to information and records; increase transparency in environmental decision-making and polluting operations; and enforce federal, state, and local laws meant to protect communities from environmental harms.

Highlights of Our Work Include:

  • We’ve been working with the Ironbound Community Corporation (ICC) in Newark, N.J., to stop dangerous pollution from a municipal waste incinerator in the Ironbound neighborhood. The incinerator, owned by Covanta, is the state’s largest garbage incinerator and one of the largest single sources of air pollution in a community that is among the most polluted in the Northeast. With our legal support, ICC was able to force Covanta to develop new waste management practices, improve employee training, install monitoring cameras, conduct a health impact assessment, and pay a fine for violating the New Jersey Air Pollution Control Act. We’re now working with ICC to ensure Covanta follows through. Learn more.
  • We helped the Glendale, Calif., community stop a gas-fired power plant from being built — which would have locked the city into fossil fuel power for decades. Instead, city leadership is now exploring ways to deliver clean energy to Glendale. Learn more.
  • We supported the Wishtoyo Chumash Foundation in Southern California in a fight against a gas-fired power plant that would have been built on the banks of the Santa Clara River, also known as the Utom, which is sacred to Chumash peoples. With our legal support, the Wishtoyo forced the power company, Calpine, to withdraw its application for the Mission Rock plant. Learn more.
  • We produced a report that details how Quemetco — the last remaining secondary lead smelter in California — has exploited a failed regulatory structure to poison the air, soil, water, and surrounding communities. We are working with community members opposed to Quemetco’s proposal to increase its operations, to instead demand a transition away from the use of lead-acid batteries and secondary lead smelters, toward a cleaner future with alternative technologies. Learn more.
  • We’re working with communities in California’s Central Valley to challenge the San Joaquin Valley Air Pollution Control District’s decision to grant a number of unlawful loopholes that exempt the region’s four petroleum refineries — concentrated in the Bakersfield area — from requirements to monitor their toxic emissions. The region suffers from the worst air quality in the nation. Learn more.
  • We helped the West Long Beach, Calif., community hold Phillips 66 accountable for toxic gas leaks at its Carson and Wilmington refineries, after the local air quality management district failed to do so. The communities around the two refineries are among the most pollution-burdened in Southern California. Learn more.

Recent News
March 27, 2024 document

Sign-on Letter: EPA LMWC March 2024

. It has been over thirty years since Congress told EPA to protect the public from the harms of this incinerator pollution, and environmental justice communities are still waiting for those protections. EPA has committed to advancing equitable outcomes in environmental justice communities and building meaningful engagement with these communities. The time to deliver on...

March 27, 2024 document

EPA Comments: LMWC Proposed Rule March 2024

EPA’s proposed revisions to its LMWC Standards come over thirty years after Congress told EPA to protect the public from the harms of incinerator pollution. The Proposed Rule is a welcome, if overdue, step in the right direction towards achieving Congress’s mandate.

March 19, 2024 document

Justicia Demorada: La Lucha para Justicia Ambiental y la Renovación de Permiso de Phibro-tech

Al negar la renovación de permiso a Phibro-Tech, DTSC puede comprobar a residentes de Los Nietos y a todos los Californianos, que el departamento está dispuesta a tomar la guarda críticamente en contra de la contaminación tóxica de industrias.

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