Tomball - Magnolia Edition | September 2022

PEOPLE Latrice Babin Executive director, Harris County Pollution Control Services Latrice Babin was appointed to executive director of Harris County Pollution Control Services in 2019. She holds a doctorate in environmental toxicology from Texas Southern University and has been with the department for 27 years. In an interview with Community Impact Newspaper , Babin talks about what inspired her career path, what Pollution Control Services does, and her future goals for the department and tackling pollution control issues countywide. This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

BY RACHEL CARLTON

POLLUTION CONTROL SERVICES DUTIES

Responds to emergencies, often with other departments such as the Fire Marshal’s Oce Enforces Texas Commission on Environmental Quality regulations for air, water, solid waste and stormwater

Responds to citizen complaints

WHERE ARE YOU FROM, AND HOW DID YOU GET INTO YOUR CURRENT ROLE? I actually grew up in the Crosby-Barrett Station area, which is on the east side of the county. My father worked at a chemical plant, and so I was very used to him coming home and the odors that lingered in his Nomex. My father passed when I was graduating from college with my bachelor’s degree—he passed away of cancer. The more I learned of science when I went back to graduate school, I recognized that … my father’s early demise was probably connected to his line of work. One of my earlier career jobs that I took was with Pollution Control. I was an investigator for a very short time … and then moved into the laboratory where I really got exposed to the analysis and looking at what those chemical components and those contaminants were. My interest grew from being in the laboratory and answering questions that other investigators had. ... I actually went back and got a Ph.D. in environmen- tal toxicology. In that track, I moved through several positions in [PCS].

WHAT DOES PCS DO? We are the local government regu- lating authority for the environmental laws. We do not issue permits, … but we do enforce permits that are issued by the Texas Commission on Envi- ronmental Quality. We also regulate for the Clean Air Act, Clean Water Act, and Resource Conservation and Recovery Act. Anything that has an environmental aspect to it that we are given statutory authority by the state Legislature is under our purview. We work with TCEQ, with the Environmental Protection Agency and we work with county agencies as well. We work very closely with the Harris County Fire Marshal’s Oce when there is anything like a spill, a re [or] explosion. … [We] work very closely with all of the departments that we need to touch in any aspect of any investigation or to provide information or data. WHO WORKS FOR POLLUTION CONTROL SERVICES? When I rst came in as the interim director [of PCS], we were at 44, including me. We’ve grown to 77 now. … Most of [our sta] are natural

science majors. It’s important that they understand how the body and chemistry and the elements of contaminants may work together. WHAT CHANGES HAVE YOU IMPLEMENTED? We developed a more robust website, [and] developed a link to our [new] network of monitors that could look at ambient air for contam- inants, not just ozone—we’ve had ozone monitors for decades. But we included monitors that could look at toxins as well as particulate matter so that when we had an event like a re at a facility … we could look at what those contaminant levels might be that go into the environment as well as the particulate from the burning of whatever that was that was on re. HOW HAS THE ENVIRONMENT CHANGED IN HARRIS COUNTY OVER THE LAST CENTURY? Actually, air quality has improved from when [PCS was] established [in 1953]. That predated the develop- ment of the EPA. We were appointed by the Commissioners Court at the time … because the water quality and

Monitors, inspects and investigates activities and facilities related to pollution Analyzes water, soil and solid waste samples for hazardous materials

SOURCE: HARRIS COUNTY POLLUTION CONTROL SERVICESCOMMUNITY IMPACT NEWSPAPER

the air quality was so bad. … We had to use some very dierent rules to make an impact on pollution at that time. But over the decades, water quality has improved. Life has come to the Houston Ship Channel … and air quality has improved. You don’t see the overall dark haze of smog that they were seeing back then. But we still have a lot that we still have to do. WHAT WOULD YOU SAY TO RESIDENTS WHO FEEL THEY ARE NOT BEING HEARD? Ask questions [and] reach out. If it’s not the right people, keep asking until you get to the right people. Check out our information to see if we’re the group that you need. … We will ... help you nd who you need to nd to get your question answered.

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TOMBALL  MAGNOLIA EDITION • SEPTEMBER 2022

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