EPA employees put names to 'declaration of dissent' over agency moves
under Trump
[July 01, 2025]
By MELINA WALLING
A group of Environmental Protection Agency employees on Monday published
a declaration of dissent from the agency's policies under the Trump
administration, saying they “undermine the EPA mission of protecting
human health and the environment.”
More than 170 EPA employees put their names to the document, with about
100 more signing anonymously out of fear of retaliation, according to
Jeremy Berg, a former editor-in-chief of Science magazine who is not an
EPA employee but was among non-EPA scientists or academics to also sign.
The latter figure includes 20 Nobel laureates.
The letter represents rare public criticism from agency employees who
could face blowback for speaking out against a weakening of funding and
federal support for climate, environmental and health science.
Scientists at the National Institutes of Health made a similar move
earlier in June.
"Since the Agency’s founding in 1970, EPA has accomplished (its) mission
by leveraging science, funding, and expert staff in service to the
American people. Today, we stand together in dissent against the current
administration’s focus on harmful deregulation, mischaracterization of
previous EPA actions, and disregard for scientific expertise," the
letter read.
The EPA responded with a statement that said policy decisions “are a
result of a process where Administrator (Lee) Zeldin is briefed on the
latest research and science by EPA’s career professionals, and the vast
majority who are consummate professionals who take pride in the work
this agency does day in and day out.”

The statement also criticized the Biden administration for what it
called “attempts to shut down American energy and make our citizens more
reliant on foreign fossil fuels,” with worse environmental outcomes
around the world as well as economic pain.
Employees want the EPA get back to its mission
“I’m really sad. This agency, that was a superhero for me in my youth,
we're not living up to our ideals under this administration. And I
really want us to,” said Amelia Hertzberg, an environmental protection
specialist at the EPA who has been on administrative leave since
February from the Office of Environmental Justice and External Civil
Rights, while the administration works to close down her department.
Hertzberg's work focused on the most vulnerable groups impacted by
pollution: pregnant and nursing people, young children and babies, the
elderly, people with preexisting and chronic health conditions and
people living in communities exposed to higher levels of pollution. That
wasn't supposed to be controversial, but it's become so in this
political climate, she said.
“Americans should be able to drink their water and breathe their air
without being poisoned. And if they aren’t, then our government is
failing,” she said.
Berg, who also directed the National Institute of General Medical
Sciences at NIH from 2003-2011, said the dissent isn't motivated by
partisan criticism. He said the employees hope it will help the EPA get
back to the mission for which it was established — which “only matters
if you breathe air and drink water."
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A person walks past the headquarters building of the Environmental
Protection Agency, March 12, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Mark
Schiefelbein, File)
 The letter outlines what the EPA
employees see as five main concerns: undermining public trust;
ignoring scientific consensus to benefit polluters; reversing EPA's
progress in America's most vulnerable communities; dismantling the
Office of Research and Development; and promoting a culture of fear,
forcing staff to choose between their livelihood and well-being.
EPA has cut funding and rolled back federal regulations
Under Zeldin, EPA has cut funding for environmental improvements in
minority communities, vowed to roll back federal regulations that
lower air pollution in national parks and tribal reservations, wants
to undo a ban on a type of asbestos and proposed repealing rules
that limit planet-warming greenhouse gas emissions from power plants
fueled by coal and natural gas.
Zeldin began reorganizing the EPA’s research and development office
as part of his push to slash their budget and gut their study of
climate change and environmental justice. And he’s seeking to roll
back pollution rules that an Associated Press examination found were
estimated to save 30,000 lives and $275 billion every year.
“People are going to die,” said Carol Greider, a Nobel laureate and
professor of molecular and cellular biology at the University of
California, Santa Cruz, who also signed the letter. She described
last week's East Coast heat wave as evidence of the ways people are
feeling the effects of climate change. “And if we don’t have
scientists at the EPA to understand how what we do that goes into
the air affects our health, more people are going to die,” she
added.
Berg said the declarations of dissent from both the NIH and EPA
employees are noteworthy because they represent scientists speaking
out as their careers are on the line. Even non-agency employees have
to consider whether the government will withdraw research funding.

Greider, asked about fears of repercussions or retaliation, said
she's “living the repercussions of everything.” She regularly meets
with graduate students who are worried about pursuing scientific
careers as labs lose funding.
It's a long-term problem if we aren't supporting the next generation
of scientists, she said: "That’s decades worth of loss.”
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