The Loma Prietan
May/June 2001
Sierra Club Environmental Justice Principles
Remembering that the Sierra Club’s founder, John Muir, said: “Everybody needs beauty as well as bread, places to play in and pray in, where nature may heal and give strength to body and soul alike,” we adopt the following Environmental Justice Principles to provide a vision of how our Club’s purposes should justly serve the Earth and all of humanity. Through these Principles, we intend that Earth’s wild places should be protected so that all people and future generations may explore and enjoy nature’s beauty; that the Earth’s ecosystems and resources should be used responsibly and sustainably so that all people and future generations may share nature’s bounty; that the damage to the natural and human environment should be restored to the benefit of all people and for other living things, and their future generations; and that no community should bear disproportionate risks of harm because of their demographic characteristics or economic condition.
1. We support the right to a clean and healthful environment for all people:
A. The Right to Democracy
We support government by the people. Corporate influence over (democratic) governments must be constrained to stop the erosion of the peoples’ right to govern themselves and governments’ ability to establish justice and to promote the general welfare.
B. The Right to Participate
People have the right to participate in the development of rules, regulations, plans, and evaluation criteria and at every level of decision-making. Environmental decision-making must include the full range of alternatives to a proposed action or plan, including rejection of the proposed action or plan. Barriers to participation (cultural, linguistic, geographic, economic, etc.) should be addressed.
C. The Right to Equal Protection
Laws, policies, rules, regulations, and evaluation criteria should be applied in a nondiscriminatory manner. Laws, policies, regulations, or criteria that result in disproportionate impact are discriminatory, whether or not such a result was intended, and should be corrected. We support environmental restoration and the redressing of environmental inequities.
D. The Right to Know
People have a right to know the information necessary for informed environmental decision-making.
E. The Right to Sustainable Environmental Benefits
People are entitled to enjoy the sustainable aesthetic, recreational, cultural, historical, scientific, educational, religious, sacred, sustenance, subsistence, cultural, and other environmental benefits of natural resources. However, actions that tend to ruin the integrity, stability, and beauty of the biotic community are unethical.
F. The Right to Equity
Environmentally degrading land uses should be avoided, but when such uses occur, they should be equitably sited, taking into account all environmental and community impacts, including the cumulative and synergistic ecological and health effects of multiple facilities. All people have the right to a safe and healthful work and home environment.
G. The Right to Generational Equity
Future generations have a fundamental right to enjoy the benefits of natural resources including clean air, water, and land and an uncontaminated food chain and to receive as their heritage wilderness a functioning global ecosystem with all species naturally present.
H. The Rights of Native People
We oppose efforts to dispossess indigenous peoples of their lands, their cultures, and their right to self-determination. We support Native Peoples’ wielding of their sovereign powers to protect the environment and to establish environmental justice.
2. We support an end to pollution:
The long-range policy goal priorities for environmental protection must be:
(1) To end the production of polluting substances and waste through elimination, replacement, redesign, reduction, and reuse (zero waste).
(2) To prevent any release of polluting substances (zero emissions, zero discharge).
(3) To prevent any exposure of plants, animals, or humans to polluting substances.
(4) To remediate the effects of any such exposure.
3. We support the precautionary principle:
When an activity potentially threatens human health or the environment, the proponent of the activity, rather than the public, should bear the burden of proof as to the harmlessness of the activity. Where there are threats of serious or irreversible damage, lack of full scientific certainty shall not be used as a reason for postponing measures to prevent environmental degradation.