The federal government sets the floor for environmental protection across the nation.
Congress — through both the House and the Senate — writes the laws, approves funding, and holds agencies like the EPA accountable when state and local systems fail. While both chambers share many powers, each plays a distinct role in shaping environmental policy and oversight.
U.S. House of Representatives’ Power Over Pollution
The House is the chamber closest to the people — every member represents a specific district and faces election every two years. That means House members can act quickly on community concerns, local pollution events, and funding priorities.
Core Powers
- Appropriations and Budget Control:
- All spending bills start in the House.
 - The House Appropriations Subcommittee on Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies decides how much funding the EPA, HUD, and other departments receive for enforcement and cleanup.
 
 - Oversight and Investigation:
- The Committee on Oversight and Accountability and the Committee on Energy and Commerce can hold hearings on industrial fires, environmental racism, or failures at EGLE or EPA Region 5.
 - They can subpoena records and require testimony from corporations or federal agencies.
 
 - Legislation:
- Representatives can introduce bills strengthening the Clean Air Act, Superfund, or Environmental Justiceprograms.
 - They can also sponsor targeted legislation for fence-line monitoring, asthma mitigation, and emergency alerts.
 
 - Constituent Advocacy:
- House members can demand direct EPA intervention for local crises and submit constituent casework on behalf of affected residents.
 
 
What Residents Can Demand from the House
- Hearings on environmental racism and cumulative pollution in Detroit and Wayne County.
 - Funding increases for EPA enforcement, air monitoring, and EJ grants.
 - Direct appropriations or earmarks for Detroit-based cleanup and public health projects.
 - New legislation requiring real-time public air data and stronger odor enforcement.
 - Investigations into state and local environmental failures impacting majority-Black neighborhoods.
 
U.S. House of Representatives
Rashida Tlaib (MI-12 – D-Detroit)
Represents western and southern Detroit, including portions east of Woodward and Downriver
Office: 7700 2nd Ave Ste 305, Detroit MI 48202
Phone: (313) 463-6220
Shri Thanedar (MI-13 – D-Detroit)
Represents central and East Side Detroit, Hamtramck, and Highland Park
Office: 400 Monroe St Ste 420, Detroit MI 48226
Phone: (313) 880-2400
U.S. Senate’s Power Over Pollution
The Senate provides confirmation, treaty, and long-term oversight powers that the House doesn’t have. Senators represent entire states, serve six-year terms, and can shape national environmental priorities and leadership.
Core Powers
- Confirmations:
- The Senate confirms all top federal environmental leaders — including the EPA Administrator, the Secretary of Energy, and heads of Health and Human Services and Transportation.
 - Senators can block or condition confirmations based on environmental performance or commitments.
 
 - Legislation:
- The Senate Environment and Public Works Committee (EPW) leads on Clean Air Act, water infrastructure, and toxic-waste reform.
 - The Senate can amend or originate major environmental bills and send them to the House for approval.
 
 - Treaties and National Policy:
- The Senate ratifies international climate and pollution agreements and can pressure the administration to meet global environmental standards.
 
 - Oversight:
- The Senate can hold investigations or bipartisan hearings into federal enforcement gaps, industrial safety, or environmental health impacts.
 
 
What Residents Can Demand from the Senate
- Confirmation accountability: Senators should only approve EPA and cabinet nominees committed to strong enforcement and environmental justice.
 - Hearings on Detroit and Michigan pollution oversight through the Senate EPW Committee.
 - Federal funding bills that include dedicated resources for fence-line monitoring, asthma programs, and industrial safety.
 - Support for a national Environmental Justice Act or Right to a Healthy Environment Amendment.
 - International and climate coordination to ensure local communities benefit from clean-energy investments.
 
EPA and Federal Agencies
- The EPA enforces national air, water, and waste laws and can intervene when state agencies fail.
 - The DOJ prosecutes violations and enforces environmental civil rights (Title VI).
 - HUD, DOT, and HHS link environmental standards to housing, infrastructure, and health funding.
 
U.S. Senate (Statewide)
Gary Peters (D-MI)
477 Michigan Ave Ste 1837, Detroit MI 48226
Phone: (313) 226-6020
Elissa Slotkin (D-MI)
719 Griswold St Ste 700, Detroit MI 48226
Phone: (313) 961-4330