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New England EPA Chief Tapped To Lead National Chemical Safety Office

New England EPA Administrator Alexandra Dunn, left, talks with Seacoast chemical cleanup activist Jillian Lane after a joint press conference near the Coakley Landfill in June.
Annie Ropeik
/
NHPR
New England EPA Administrator Alexandra Dunn, left, talks with Seacoast chemical cleanup activist Jillian Lane after a joint press conference near the Coakley Landfill in June.
New England EPA Administrator Alexandra Dunn, left, talks with Seacoast chemical cleanup activist Jillian Lane after a joint press conference near the Coakley Landfill in June.
Credit Annie Ropeik / NHPR
/
NHPR
New England EPA Administrator Alexandra Dunn, left, talks with Seacoast chemical cleanup activist Jillian Lane after a joint press conference near the Coakley Landfill in June.

The head of the Environmental Protection Agency in New England has been tapped to lead the agency's national Chemical Safety and Pollution Prevention office.

Alexandra Dunn is a long-time lawyer and environmental justice advocate who’s been the EPA's New England administrator for a little less than a year.

In this and other roles, she's worked with residents, industry and state officials in places like New Hampshire and Vermont to address chemical contamination in drinking water.

(Read more: Dunn met with neighbors of the Coakley Landfill Superfund site in June.)

EPA response in contaminated areas is often more gradual than worried residents would like.

But Vermont's former natural resources secretary, Deborah Markowitz, says Dunn is committed to working with those residents and their local leaders to carry out "cooperative federalism."

"I think in her role, she will be able to help states do their jobs better,” says Markowitz, who's now a visiting professor at the University of Vermont. “And she has a real understanding that our decisions need to be grounded in science."

As head of the EPA chemicals office, Dunn would also oversee enforcement of a 2016 law requiring more oversight of the chemical industry.

The EPA has been slow to implement that law under President Donald Trump. But Markowitz says she believes Dunn intends to do more.

"And we need that,” Markowitz says. “I mean, there's tens of thousands of chemicals in our environment, and we do not know what they do to us."

Markowitz wrote one of several letters supporting Dunn to the Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works, which must now confirm the nomination.

Copyright 2018 New Hampshire Public Radio

Annie Ropeik reports on state economy and business issues for all Indiana Public Broadcasting stations, from a home base of WBAA. She has lived and worked on either side of the country, but never in the middle of it. At NPR affiliate KUCB in Alaska's Aleutian Islands, she covered fish, oil and shipping and earned an Alaska Press Club Award for business reporting. She then moved 4,100 miles to report on chickens, chemicals and more for Delaware Public Media. She is originally from the D.C. suburb of Silver Spring, Maryland, but her mom is a Hoosier. Annie graduated from Boston University with a degree in classics and philosophy. She performs a mean car concert, boasts a worryingly encyclopedic knowledge of One Direction lyrics and enjoys the rule of threes. She is also a Hufflepuff.
Annie Ropeik
Annie Ropeik joined NHPR’s reporting team in 2017, following stints with public radio stations and collaborations across the country. She has reported everywhere from fishing boats, island villages and cargo terminals in Alaska, to cornfields, factories and Superfund sites in the Midwest.