State & Local News
Washington State Challenges EPA Enforcement Policy
March 19, 2026
Washington State Attorney General Nick Brown, joined by 12 other state attorneys general, has formally requested the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to rescind a December 2025 policy that weakens federal environmental enforcement. The coalition contends that the policy reduces accountability for polluters and disproportionately impacts vulnerable communities, urging the EPA to reinstate stronger enforcement measures to safeguard public health and the environment.
- Procurement professionals should anticipate potential shifts in EPA enforcement priorities that could affect environmental compliance requirements for contractors.
- Companies engaged in environmental services or remediation may see changes in contract scopes or enforcement-driven opportunities if the EPA revises or rescinds the policy.
- This development signals increased scrutiny from state-level legal authorities, which could influence federal procurement risk assessments and contract performance standards.
- Organizations should consider the implications for environmental risk management and compliance strategies in federal and state contracting contexts.
This administrationβs approach gives polluters a tacit green light to break federal environmental laws.
— Nick Brown, Attorney General of Washington State
Agencies
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Washington State Attorney General's Office, New York Attorney General's Office, Massachusetts Attorney General's Office, California Attorney General's Office