Lisa Garcia, a former regional administrator at the Environmental Protection Agency, spoke to City Limits about how plans for a new wave of federal cuts could trickle down to New York.
Brooklyn’s historically polluted Coney Island Creek. Expected EPA cuts could curtail testing efforts for local waterways, former Regional Administrator Lisa Garcia says. (Photo by Adi Talwar).
When word spread this week that the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) plans to eliminate its scientific research arm, EPA former Regional Administrator Lisa Garcia knew New York would feel the blow.
The move, Garcia explains, has the potential to nix critical public data that helps New Yorkers track air quality through an app called Air Now. It could curtail water and soil testing after floods or storms—when leaks from local power plants, chemical facilities or waste storage sites can contaminate lands or waterways.
And it may also endanger $15 billion set aside to help all states, including New York, remove hazardous lead pipes from the service lines that connect buildings to the underground water supply.
“These cuts are not strategic and they are not protecting public health,” Garcia told City Limits.
The environmental lawyer served as an EPA administrator from 2021 until President Donald Trump stepped into office. She was responsible for overseeing the agency’s agenda in New York, New Jersey, Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands and eight Indian Nations.
“The whole suite of work, tools and resources that we as citizens depend on is not functioning because it’s slowly being dismantled, [they are] slowly getting rid of people. And the people who remain are working in fear,” Garcia added.
A plan for the cuts, which the EPA reportedly presented to White House officials on Friday, would gut the scientific department known as the Office of Research and Development and get rid of up to 75 percent of its personnel. And the EPA plans to slash 65 percent of its overall budget, White House officials said at the end of February .
An EPA spokesperson told The New York Times that they sought to make “organizational improvements” and affirmed the agency is committed to delivering “clean air, water and land for all Americans.”
“While no decisions have been made yet, we are actively listening to employees at all levels to gather ideas on how to increase efficiency and ensure the E.P.A. is as up to date and effective as ever,” the agency said, according to the Times.
The head of the EPA, Lee Zeldin, took to social media Wednesday to back up the agency’s work with Trump’s newly established Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE.
“Loving the exceptional partnership EPA has had with Elon Musk and the entire DOGE team to pursue every efficiency possible as we end wasteful spending and practices,” Zeldin said on X.
Garcia talked to City Limits about what’s going on behind the scenes at the EPA right now, and how cuts to the agency’s funding could reach New York.
This conversation has been edited and condensed for clarity.
What was it like at the EPA when you were there, and what is it like now?
It’s just amazing when you show up and meet all the experts that work at EPA. To be able to do this work you need geologists, physicists, lawyers, people who do community outreach and policy work. For me, it was really great to see all the work that goes into making sure that a community is protected or that policies are implemented.
The EPA isn’t only about reducing the emissions from methane, carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gasses. It’s also about the work that can be done on the ground. So some of the grants that we gave out were for tree canopies, like how to make sure that we can plant more trees.
What’s happening now, unfortunately, is that they’re putting staff on administrative leave, because they’re terminating staff. Not much work is being done because they’re so worried and preoccupied [with the cuts].
It’s a real shame because the EPA staff is there to serve the public and to protect public health and the environment, but now you just see morale is down. The work isn’t really getting done as much or as quickly. And if you actually reduce the number of people doing the work, it definitely won’t get done because you won’t have enough people doing it.
The whole suite of work, tools and resources that we as citizens depend on is not functioning because it’s slowly being dismantled, [they are] slowly getting rid of people. And the people who remain are working in fear.
How are these EPA cuts on the federal level trickling down and impacting people in New York?
When you think about the wildfires from Canada that turned New York’s skies orange [in June of 2023], the first thing that people wanted to know was: how is this impacting my health? Should I go outside? What should my kids do?
To get those answers we rely on data that the EPA is monitoring. They say whether [the air quality] is severe, moderate or good.
Or when there was an incident in Wappinger Falls, where we thought that there may be lead coming from the cable lines onto a playground in upstate New York. The first thing people ask is: how is this impacting my health? They want the scientists on the ground with their tools and resources making sure that there is no lead. If there is lead: what do we do? How are you going to protect us? What’s the protocol for removing it anyway? The EPA provides those answers.
They are the experts on the ground making sure that people can drink the water after a hurricane. They help people figure out, if they clean up their basement after a flood, does it have mold?
That’s the type of information getting impacted with these cuts. So I think it’s a terrible move. It’s very short sighted.
Smoke from wide fires in Canada blurring the New York City skyline in 2023. (Michael Appleton/Mayoral Photography Office)
There is also a specific pot of funding for lead pipe removal that could get impacted by the cuts. Is that correct?
The Biden administration, through Congress, got billions of dollars to focus on clean water [through the Bipartisan Infrastructure Act].
And part of that funding would be used to get lead out of the pipes that connect to people’s homes, known as service lines. A rule was solidified that makes a 10-year commitment to replace all lead service lines [nation-wide]. This is important because we know there is no safe level of exposure to lead and it impacts children’s health the most.
So the pot of money set aside to address that was $15 billion and part of that would come to New York State.
And so it was really an important effort and everyone is nervous that if you reduce that money to the states, they will not be able to meet this commitment of swapping out hazardous lead service lines in 10 years.
What is the reasoning behind these cuts then?
It’s so political that there’s no real analysis and study of what the benefit is to the public. It’s not strategic and it’s not protecting public health.
This administration keeps saying we want clean air, we want clean water, we want clean lands. But if you remove the Office of Research and Development and remove the people doing the work, then you are not achieving clean water, clean soil and clean air, right?
You can remove the data on environmental justice or vulnerable populations. But that does not change the fact that climate change is impacting vulnerable communities. You cannot change the fact that Black and brown children have higher asthma rates. These are the facts.
So when I say that these cuts are not strategic, I mean it’s not analytical because you’re missing the facts of what is going on in this country.
Efficiency means doing something better and improving the process, right? If you just cut the numbers, that’s not efficient. That’s a numbers game.
We were on a trajectory to make sure that all communities have the benefit of clean air, clean water and clean lands. And I think that focusing on cutting the numbers and not focusing on the data and health of vulnerable populations is going to set us back.
Especially when you think about communities of color, low income communities and indigenous populations.
And it’s a real shame that as much as they say, we want to do this for all people. In reality, they are not going to achieve that by taking down and dismantling the EPA.
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