Environmental justice leader joins Howard Law School

By Kevin Bogardus | 06/26/2025 04:25 PM EDT

Charles Lee served over 25 years at EPA before retiring earlier this year.

Charles Lee

Charles Lee, who left his job at EPA's Office of Environmental Justice and External Civil Rights earlier this year, will be a visiting scholar at Howard Law School. Francis Chung/POLITICO, LinkedIn

Charles Lee, a trailblazer for the movement to aid marginalized communities overburdened by pollution, is joining one of the most prestigious historically Black universities in the country.

Howard University School of Law is welcoming Lee as a visiting scholar for its environmental and climate justice center, the school announced Thursday. He will support work on the intersection of law, equity and environmental justice.

Carlton Waterhouse, the center’s director, said in a statement that Lee was “foundational for advancing environmental justice.”

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Lee was the lead author of “Toxic Wastes and Race in the United States,” a 1987 groundbreaking report that showed how pollution disproportionately affected Black and Latino communities in the United States. Lee started at EPA in 1999 and held several jobs at the agency, including as director of its environmental justice office.

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