I would refer you back to the testimony provided by Dr. Ingrid Waldron on the link to environmental justice or, really, on the definition of environmental racism. Certainly, these are embedded concepts.
You'll notice in my presentation of the U.S. government structure and legal requirements flowing from the order on environmental justice that that's the term employed in the U.S. However, we also see that the functional definition of “environmental justice” that the U.S. EPA uses specifically names discrimination based on race with respect to environmental harms as one of its focus areas. I would say that it's broadly accepted that environmental racism is one aspect within the broader concept of environmental justice.
One other thing I might add is that my understanding of the environmental justice movement in the United States, which has a much longer history—at least in terms of its legal, legislative manifestations—than here in Canada, is that it has really been driven by the African-American communities that have been affected by environmental pollution and degradation. Certainly, it's at the core of the concept.