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Congresswoman Hilda Solis, 32nd District of Califonia: logo
 
Congresswoman Hilda Solis: Issues Section.  Images of Hilda with constituents
Congresswoman Solis Issus Section links below


ENERGY & THE ENVIRONMENT

. Member, House Committee on Energy & Commerce
. Ranking Member, House Subcommittee on the Environment & Hazardous Materials
. Member, House Subcommittee on Energy & Air Quality

Improving Air Quality
More than four million Californians live with lung diseases, like asthma, that are related to poor air quality. Residents of Los Angeles are at greater risk of health impacts from dirty air, and more are hospitalized because of asthma than residents of nearly any other county in California. Each year, Los Angeles averages 72 days with unhealthy ozone levels and is the nation's ozone capital. Congresswoman Solis is fighting for for measures to reduce emissions from highways, trains, gravel operations, refineries, and other harmful sources to protect our public health. She believes such measures can meet the needs of both businesses and our communities.


Protecting Water Supplies and Fighting Toxic Waste Sites
Our nation's water infrastructure is crumbling and needs more than $280 billion to maintain current water services, and many of its worst toxic waste sites (superfund) are not being addressed. In the 32nd Congressional District more than 100 underground storage tanks are leaking, 136 drinking water wells have been taken off-line because of rocket-fuel (perchlorate) contamination, and there are three superfund sites. As Ranking Democrat on the Environment and Hazardous Materials Subcommittee on the powerful Energy and Commerce Committee, Congresswoman Solis will continue to fight for more funding to secure our water supplies and ensure toxic waste sites get cleaned up.

Ensuring Green Space for Safe, Healthy Neighborhoods
Studies have shown that communities with neighborhood parks and green spaces have lower asthma rates, fewer cancer risks, and are less obese than communities without green space. Unfortunately, the San Gabriel Valley has less than one-half an acre per 1,000 people - eight times less than the amount needed to positively impact health. Congresswoman Solis continues to work on legislation, like the San Gabriel River Watershed Study Act, to bring green space and other opportunities to neighborhoods where they are needed and wanted.

Fighting for Environmental Justice
For decades, minority and underserved communities have been forced to live in close proximity to industrial zones, power plants, and toxic waste sites. In Southern California, African Americans are a third more likely and Latinos nearly twice as likely to be living in neighborhoods plagued by some of the most dangerous pollutants. As a State Senator, Solis authored the first state law in the nation to codify environmental justice as part of the responsibility of state agencies. Congresswoman Solis will continue to fight to ensure federal agencies consider environmental justice when drafting regulations, and that the Environmental Protection Agency complies with the Executive Order 12898 on Environmental Justice.

Securing a Reliable Energy Supply

Congresswoman Solis believes Californians need an energy policy which will secure its energy future, reduce its dependency on foreign oil, reduce gas prices and market volatility, and protect working families. The energy bill which President Bush signed in August, 2005, fails to achieve these goals and for these reasons Congresswoman Solis voted against it. As the price of oil continues to skyrocket, Congresswoman Solis is working to ensure more reliability in the energy market, reduce emissions that cause climate change, obtain the refunds California’s consumers deserve, make sure California has a voice in the siting of new facilities including liquefied natural gas and refineries, and help protect the California coast from drilling.

Protecting Public Health from Toxic Chemicals and Pesticides
Existing regulations fail to protect our health and the health of our most vulnerable populations – pregnant women, infants and children - from these chemicals and fail to include safe and ethical regulations for the practice of testing pesticides on humans. Approximately 80,000 chemicals are used by U.S. industries in everyday products but the Environmental Protection Agency only has health data on 15 percent of these chemicals, and fails to routinely assess existing chemicals. Congresswoman Solis believes families deserve to know that federal regulations will protect them from the risks of these chemicals and pesticides and will continue to fight for stronger regulations to protect public health.
 
El Monte District Office
4401 Santa Anita Avenue
Suite 211
El Monte, CA 91731
Phone: (626) 448-1271
Fax: (626) 448-8062
East Los Angeles District Office
4716 Cesar Chavez Avenue
Building A
East Los Angeles, CA 90022
Phone: (323) 307-9904
Fax: (323) 307-9906
Washington, DC Office
1725 Longworth House Office Building
Washington, DC 20515
Phone: (202) 225-5464
Fax: (202) 225-5467