I could take a stab at it.
I think you raise a very good question. When we do the work that we do to assess chemicals, to set drinking water quality standards, to set air quality standards, it is data that drives all of this. Certainly, when we do our work, as I mentioned before, on vulnerable populations and we factor in vulnerable populations when we do chemical risk assessments, we need the data. We need the data both in terms of who those vulnerable populations are and how they are located vis-à-vis these sources of exposure to whatever it is of concern, be it chemicals or end of pipe emissions or smoke-stacks.
I suspect that the same sort of approach certainly applies to racialized communities and it is the need to have data. That is what will drive the work that we do.