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Advocates see 2 Lee Zeldins: friend on local issues, not on global ones

February 20, 2026

WASHINGTON - As a four-term congressman, Republican Lee Zeldin played a key role in the yearslong bipartisan push to save Plum Island,  off Long Island's North Fork, from potential commercial development. He helped secure funding for clean water projects in his Suffolk district. And he spoke out against a 2018 proposal to permit offshore drilling in the Atlantic Ocean.

Local environmentalists were often grateful for Zeldin's work on issues that mattered to them over the years.

Those same environmentalists are now trying to reconcile that gratitude against their anger over his move last week as the head of the federal Environmental Protection Agency to repeal an Obama-era legal opinion that for the past 17 years has been used to regulate and reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

WHAT NEWSDAY FOUND

  • Long Island environmentalists are attacking a decision by the Environmental Protection Agency under Long Island's Lee Zeldin to repeal the so-called "endangerment finding" that declared six types of greenhouse gas emissions as a threat.
  • Local environmentalists were often grateful for Zeldin's work as a congressman on issues that mattered to them over the years., including his key role in the yearslong bipartisan push to save Plum Island from commercial development.
  • More than a year into Zeldin's tenure as EPA administrator, advocates describe a friend on local issues but a foe on global concerns - as he has stated a need to balance effective environmental protection with economic growth.

"People constantly ask, 'What do you think of him?' And I feel like a split personality," Long Island environmentalist Adrienne Esposito said.