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New England EPA Still Without Permanent Director

A sign near the Housatonic River in Pittsfield, Massachusetts, in 2009 after a GE/EPA cleanup of part of the river
Nancy Eve Cohen
/
NEPM

The EPA’s New England office — which serves six states and ten tribal nations — has been run by an acting administrator for three months. 

Deborah Szaro, the deputy regional administrator, took over in January after the former administrator stepped down to become the assistant administrator of the EPA’s Office of Chemical Safety and Pollution Prevention.

The head of the EPA had appointed a new person to lead the New England region.

Paul Mercer, former commissioner of Maine’s Department of Environmental Protection, was supposed to start in early March, but he backed out the Friday before his first day.

Dennis Regan, Berkshire Director of the Housatonic Valley Association, said he is optimistic about Szaro, the interim administrator.

“Just the title — acting [regional administrator] — doesn’t provide a lot of confidence,” said Regan. “But she is also the deputy [regional administrator] of Region 1, and has been for quite a while, so I believe she has a lot of experience.”

Regan said he is hopeful Szaro, who has worked for the EPA since 1987, will make progress on the Housatonic River cleanup. He said past leadership wanted to mediate points of conflict, which he said is delaying the cleanup.

EPA’s southeastern office is also headed up by an acting regional administrator. That office works with eight states and six tribes.

Other parts of the federal government that serve as stewards for natural resources are also led by people in acting positions, according to agency websites.

The U.S. Department of Interior has an acting secretary, leading 70,000 employees.

The National Park Service, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and the Bureau of Land Management — all part of the Department of Interior — are led by deputy directors .

Nancy Eve Cohen is a former NEPM senior reporter whose investigative reporting has been recognized with an Edward R. Murrow Regional Award for Hard News, along with awards for features and spot news from the Public Media Journalists Association (PMJA), American Women in Radio & Television and the Society of Professional Journalists.

She has reported on repatriation to Native nations, criminal justice for survivors of child sexual abuse, linguistic and digital barriers to employment, fatal police shootings and efforts to address climate change and protect the environment. She has done extensive reporting on the EPA's Superfund cleanup of the Housatonic River.

Previously, she served as an editor at NPR in Washington D.C., as well as the managing editor of the Northeast Environmental Hub, a collaboration of public radio stations in New York and New England.

Before working in radio, she produced environmental public television documentaries. As part of a camera crew, she also recorded sound for network television news with assignments in Russia, Guatemala, Mexico, Cuba and in Sarajevo during the war in Bosnia.
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