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EPA's Environmental Justice Collaborative Problem Solving Model
Collaborative Problem-Solving Cooperative Agreement Program provides funding for eligible applicants for projects that address local environmental and public health issues within an affected community. The CPS Program assists recipients in building collaborative partnerships to help them understand and address environmental and public health concerns in their communities.
A document explaining EPA's EJ Collaborative Problem Solving Model and providing case studies of its use.
Please directly consult the provider of a potential resource for current program information and to verify the applicability and requirements of a particular program.
Environmental Justice
The environmental justice collaborative problem-solving cooperative agreement program.
- Request for Applications
Previous Project Descriptions
The Environmental Justice Collaborative Problem-Solving (CPS) Cooperative Agreement Program provides financial assistance to eligible organizations working on or planning to work on projects to address local environmental and/or public health issues in their communities, using EPA's "Environmental Justice Collaborative Problem-Solving Model." The CPS Program assists recipients in building collaborative partnerships to help them understand and address environmental and public health concerns in their communities .
The CPS Program requires selected applicants, or recipients, to use the EPA’s Environmental Justice Collaborative Problem-Solving Model as part of their projects. The model aims to address local environmental and/or public health issues in a collaborative manner with various stakeholders such as communities, industry, academic institutions, and others. Case Studies highlight some of the successful and effective strategies of previous projects.
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Request for Proposals
The FY 2016 solicitation is now closed. One award will be made per region in amounts of up to $120,000 per award for a two-year project period. Cooperative agreements will be awarded to local community-based organizations seeking to address environmental and public health concerns in their communities through collaboration with other stakeholders, such as state and local governments, industry, academia and non-governmental organizations.
UPDATE: (November 24, 2015) The FY 2016 solicitation was amended to include additional details governing partnerships and the required training workshop. This version of the RFP supersedes all previous versions .
- FY 2016 Request for Proposals -- Amended 11/24/2015 | FY2016 Request for Proposals en Español
- FY 2016 Request for Proposals
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- 2007 Project Descriptions
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- Environmental Justice Collaborative Problem-Solving Model
Note: EPA no longer updates this information, but it may be useful as a reference or resource.
Environmental Justice Collaborative Problem-Solving Model : Project and Documentary Film EPA Office of Enforcement and Compliance Assurance
Geographic location or area of activity : Spartanburg, South Carolina
Description of activity : The southside of Spartanburg, SC, is home to the low-income and minority communities of Arkwright and Forest Park, which are situated amidst two Superfund sites, an operating chemical manufacturing plant and six Brownfields sites. The collective effect of the residential areas’ close proximity to these sites, as well as the apparent lack of environmental controls during and after facility closures, reduced the value of area real estate and fostered a systemic deterioration of the community.
In 1998, resident Harold Mitchell contacted EPA about the adverse health conditions in his community and the possible link to contaminated local sites. Although EPA did initial testing and found no immediate threat to human health or the environment, the Agency decided to conduct further investigation. Meanwhile, Harold Mitchell formed a community organization called ReGenesis and secured a $20K EJ Small Grant to work with community stakeholders to identify local issues. ReGenesis was also selected as one of the first 15 federal Environmental Justice Interagency Working Group (IWG) demonstration projects, opening doors to funding and attention at the federal and state level. First, the community identified three areas of concern: (1) the former IMC fertilizer plant, (2) the Arkwright landfill, and (3) the Rhodia chemical manufacturing facility. The community embarked on a visioning and goal-setting process, and formed the ReGenesis Environmental Justice Partnership to revitalize the 500-acre project area.
Simultaneously, through the demonstration projects, EPA and the IWG developed the Environmental Justice Collaborative Problem-Solving (CPS) Model as a framework for addressing local environmental and public health concerns through collaborative partnerships. The ReGenesis Environmental Justice Partnership used elements of the CPS Model to leverage the initial grant from EPA to generate more than $166 million in funding (as of 2006), including over $1 million from EPA Region 4. The partnership marshaled the collaboration of more than 200 agencies as well as local residents, industry and a university to revitalize two Superfund sites and six Brownfields sites into new housing developments, an emergency access road, recreation areas, green space and job training that are vital to the community’s economic growth and well-being.
ReGenesis proved to be such an excellent example of what can be accomplished with EPA’s funding, training and partnerships that the Office of Environmental Justice produced a documentary film about it as a training tool to put thousands of other communities on the path of collaborative-problem solving. The DVD can educate other, similarly situated communities about the value of the collaborative problem-solving process, and give them a glimpse of what such communities can achieve.
Interagency partners (main) : Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD); Department of Health and Human Services (HHS); Department of Transportation (DOT); Department of Energy (DOE); SC Department of Health and Environmental Control (SC DHEC); and SC Department of Transportation (SC DOT)
ReGenesis executive director Harold Mitchell with his mother and grandmother on the front porch of their house, a home located right at the center of the community's environmental, health, economic and social problems.
Local partners (main) : ReGenesis, Inc. (non-profit community-based organization); City and County of Spartanburg, SC; Spartanburg Housing Authority; Rhodia, Inc.; Vigindustries/The Mosaic Company; and University of SC, Upstate
Activity URL : https://www.epa.gov/compliance/resources/publications/ej/ejcps-dvd.html
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Use of EPA collaborative problem-solving model to obtain environmental justice in North Carolina
Affiliation.
- 1 University of Michigan School of Public Health, USA.
- PMID: 20208212
- DOI: 10.1353/cpr.2007.0036
Background: The West End Revitalization Association (WERA), a community-based organization (CBO) in Mebane, North Carolina, was awarded a Collaborative Problem-Solving (CPS) grant from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's Office of Environmental Justice (EPA OEJ).
Objectives: The purpose of this paper is to highlight WERA's efforts to bring stakeholders in three low-income African-American communities where environmental hazards created public health risks together for collaboration rather than litigation.
Methods: WERA's board and staff organized nine working groups with specific areas of expertise that would facilitate research, identify lack of basic amenities, and encourage funding for corrective action and participation in progress reporting workshops. WERA used consensus building, dispute resolution, and resource mobilization as part of the CPS model to address noncompliance with environmental laws, including the Clean Air Act, Clean Water Act, Safe Drinking Water Act, Toxic Substances Control Act, and Solid Waste Disposal Act.
Results: WERA's CPS "Right to Basic Amenities" project produced a framework for (1) grassroots management and ownership of a collaborative problem-solving process; (2) bringing stakeholders together with diverse and conflicting viewpoints; (3) implementation of an innovative community-owned and managed (COMR) research model; and (4) leveraging millions of dollars to fund installation of first-time municipal water/sewer services, street paving, and relocation of the 119-bypass to advance environmental health solutions.
Conclusion: The structure and successes of WERA's Right to Basic Amenities project have been discussed at demonstration and training sessions to help others replicate the model in comparable low-income communities of color in North Carolina and across the United States.
Publication types
- Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.
- Black or African American
- Community Networks*
- Community-Based Participatory Research*
- Conservation of Natural Resources / methods
- Cooperative Behavior
- Environmental Health
- Environmental Restoration and Remediation / legislation & jurisprudence
- Environmental Restoration and Remediation / standards*
- North Carolina
- Problem Solving
- Rural Population
- Social Justice*
- United States
- United States Environmental Protection Agency / standards*
- Waste Management / legislation & jurisprudence
- Waste Management / standards*
- Water Supply
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This is not the current EPA website. To navigate to the current EPA website, please go to www.epa.gov . This website is historical material reflecting the EPA website as it existed on January 19, 2021. This website is no longer updated and links to external websites and some internal pages may not work. More information »
Environmental Justice
Epa's environmental justice collaborative problem solving model.
A document explaining EPA's EJ Collaborative Problem Solving Model and providing case studies of its use
- EPA's Environmental Justice Collaborative Problem Solving Model (PDF) (44 pp, 1 MB, June 2008)
Contact Us to ask a question, provide feedback, or report a problem.
- Environmental Justice (EJ) Home
- Learn About Environmental Justice
- EJ 2020 Action Agenda
- Plan EJ 2014
- National Environmental Justice Advisory Council
- Grants and Resources
- EJ in Your Community
- Federal Interagency Working Group on EJ
- EJ and National Environmental Policy Act
- EJ and Title VI
- EJ for Tribes and Indigenous Peoples
- Equitable Development and EJ
- Community Voices on EJ
IMAGES
VIDEO
COMMENTS
EPA's Environmental Justice Collaborative Problem Solving Model (44 pp, 1 MB, June 2008) A document explaining EPA's EJ Collaborative Problem Solving Model and providing case studies of its use. EPA's Environmental Justice Collaborative Problem Solving Model (pdf) (1.3 MB, June 2008) Last updated on January 22, 2024.
EPA's Environmental Justice Collaborative Problem-Solving Model is a handbook for all stakeholders to understand the basic tenets of the CPS Model, and, through practical examples, it describes how the CPS Model is used to address environmental and/or public health issues in distressed communities. The Office of Environmental Justice presents ...
Collaborative Problem-Solving Cooperative Agreement Program What is the CPS Model? The CPS Model represents a systemaic, community-based approach for stakeholders to achieve lasing soluions to local environmental and/or public health issues or concerns. There are seven elements in the CPS Model which can be used in distressed communiies
The U.S. EPA's Environmental Justice (EJ) Collaborative Problem-Solving (CPS) Model represents a systematic, community-based approach for bringing together various stakeholders to develop solutions to address local EJ and public health concerns. This mixed methods evaluation study, using a two-phase explanatory sequential design that allows for qualitative data to build upon initial ...
IWG Status Report - February 2002 Environmental Justice Collaborative Model 1. environmental justice dialogue had a limited understanding of a systematic and holistic model for engaging in collaborative problem-solving.4As a result of implementing the Action Agenda, a coherent model is beginning to emerge.
A document explaining EPA's EJ Collaborative Problem Solving Model and providing case studies of its use Jump to main content. US EPA. United States Environmental Protection Agency. Search ... EPA's Environmental Justice Collaborative Problem Solving Model (PDF) (44 pp, 1 MB, June 2008) Contact Us to ask a question, provide feedback, or report ...
The CPS Program requires selected applicants, or recipients, to use the EPA's Environmental Justice Collaborative Problem-Solving Model as part of their projects. The model aims to address local environmental and/or public health issues in a collaborative manner with various stakeholders such as communities, industry, academic institutions ...
EPA's Environmental Justice Collaborative Problem-Solving Model is a handbook for all stakeholders to understand the basic tenets of the CPS Model and, through practical examples, it describes how the CPS Model is used to address environmental and/or public health issues in distressed communities. The Office of Environmental Justice presents an ...
Collaborative Problem-Solving Cooperative Agreement Program provides funding for eligible applicants for projects that address local environmental and public health issues within an affected community. The CPS Program assists recipients in building collaborative partnerships to help them understand and address environmental and public health ...
The model aims to address local environmental and/or public health issues in a collaborative manner with various stakeholders such as communities, industry, academic institutions, and others. EPA's Environmental Justice Collaborative Problem-Solving Model (pdf) (1.3 MB) Last updated on December 26, 2023. This document contains EPA's ...
Primarily based on EPA's Collaborative Problem-Solving Model, EJA also incorporates the concepts associated with Appreciative Inquiry (AI). AI is a change management approach to identify what is working well, analyze why it is working and take action to do more of it. Through a series of nine modules, EJA participants cultivate skills to ...
The CPS Program requires selected applicants, or recipients, to use the EPA's Environmental Justice Collaborative Problem-Solving Model as part of their projects. The model aims to address local environmental and/or public health issues in a collaborative manner with various stakeholders such as communities, industry, academic institutions ...
The EJ collaborative problem-solving model was informed by the National Environmental Justice Advisory Council's (NEJAC) 2004 recommendations on ... First, EPA has identified a possible model or precedent in the use of Solid Waste Management Plans to address EJ impacts, as applied, for example, in New York City and Alabama. The City of New ...
Environmental Justice Collaborative Problem-Solving Model: Project and Documentary Film EPA Office of Enforcement and Compliance Assurance. Geographic location or area of activity: Spartanburg, South Carolina. Description of activity: The southside of Spartanburg, SC, is home to the low-income and minority communities of Arkwright and Forest Park, which are situated amidst two Superfund sites ...
Background: The West End Revitalization Association (WERA), a community-based organization (CBO) in Mebane, North Carolina, was awarded a Collaborative Problem-Solving (CPS) grant from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's Office of Environmental Justice (EPA OEJ). Objectives: The purpose of this paper is to highlight WERA's efforts to bring stakeholders in three low-income African ...
A document explaining EPA's EJ Collaborative Problem Solving Model and providing case studies of its use. You may need a PDF reader to view some of the files on this page. See EPA's About PDF page to learn more. EPA's Environmental Justice Collaborative Problem Solving Model (PDF) (44 pp, 1 MB, June 2008)