EJCAP facilitates a collaborative space for environment justice community groups to tackle the life cycle of plastic pollution.

Earth Day is April 22nd!

Every year on April 22, Earth Day marks the anniversary of the birth of the modern environmental movement in 1970. Letā€™s take a look at the last half-century of mobilization for action

Community Power

Who We Are.

Established in 2021, EJCAP tackles the life cycle of plastic pollution, prioritizing frontline communities’ needs. We support developing local, environmentally responsible, zero-waste alternatives led by communities and workers.

The plastics life cycle is toxic and harmful at every stage, from the extraction of raw materials, production, transportation, consumption, to its ultimate disposal. These health impacts include cancers, developmental and reproductive harms, impacts to respiratory and cardiovascular systems, and more.Ā 

Environmental justice communities live and work at the frontline of these extractive and health-harming industries, and experience the highest levels of exposures to toxins at each stage of the plastics life cycle. Oil, gas, and petrochemical industries that manufacture plastics are disproportionately located in people of color and low-income communities. Most disposable plastics also end up in landfills and incinerators that are disproportionately sited in people of color and low-income communities. The cumulative health impacts that result from these exposures are intensified due to inadequate health access and infrastructure.

Meanwhile, industry-backed solutions do not address waste prevention, nor do they reduce plastic demand upstream, and often cause more harm. EJCAP works to ensure that environmental justice communities are leading just transition strategies and pathways to resolve the plastic pollution crisis.

Our
Priorities.

Click icons to read each priority story

prioritize frontline communities

invest in better solutions

increase access to alternatives

hold industry accountable

Why it Matters

The plastics life cycle is toxic and harmful at every stage, including extraction of raw materials, production, transportation, consumption, and disposal.

The plastics life cycle is toxic and harmful at every stage, including extraction of raw materials, production, transportation, consumption, and disposal.

Most disposable plastics end up in landfills and incinerators that are disproportionately sited in people of color and low-income communities.

Industry-backed solutions do not address waste prevention, nor do they reduce plastic demand upstream, and often cause more harm than good to EJ communities.

EJ communities and worker participation should lead just transition strategies and pathways to resolve the plastic pollution crisis.

Steering Committees

Just-Transition Alliance

(JTA) serves people of color, Indigenous peoples and low-income communities harmed by polluting industries, as well as workers in those industries. We support community organizing with a focus on education and action, led by those on the frontlines of production and at the fenceline of exposure, towards system changes that do not compromise people or our environment. Our goal is to help workers and communities achieve a just transition from dirty production processes towards health- based local economies to scale, protecting the most vulnerable populations and workers first.
For more information, visit www.jtalliance.org

East Yard Communities

is a community-based organization that works to facilitate self-advocates in East Los Angeles, Southeast Los Angeles and Long Beach. EYCEJ is working towards a safe and healthy environment for communities that are disproportionately suffering the negative impacts of industrial pollution. By providing workshops and trainings, EYCEJ prepares community members to engage in the decision-making processes that directly impact their health and quality of life.
For more information, visit www.eycej.org

Pacoima Beautiful

is a grassroots environmental justice organization that provides education, impacts local policy, and supports local arts and culture in order to promote a healthy and sustainable San Fernando Valley. Through collective action, we strive to create a safer and cleaner community where children, their family and neighbors can thrive. We believe that Pacoima and the Northeast San Fernando Valley residents are powerful and transformational environmental justice leaders who are stewards of our environment, health, and communities.
For more information, visit www.pacoimabeautiful.org