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CommunityBased Science

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New Paradigm for Risk Science ... Management goals drive risk science ... social, economic, cultural, ethical values. Local knowledge on sources and exposures ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: CommunityBased Science


1
Community-Based Science
  • David Lynch and Hank Topper
  • EPA Office of Pollution Prevention and Toxics
  • National Community Involvement Conference
  • Philadelphia
  • July, 2003

2
New Paradigm for Risk Science
  • Understanding Risk, Informing Decisions in a
    Democratic Society, National Research Council
  • (insert flow chart)

3
Risk Science The Community-Based Approach
  • Interagency working group for participatory
    research
  • Community-based participatory research (CBPR)
    is scientific inquiry conducted in communities in
    which community members, persons affected by the
    condition or issue under study and other key
    stakeholders in the community's health have the
    opportunity to be full participants in each phase
    of the work (from conception - design - conduct -
    analysis - interpretation - conclusions -
    communication of results).

4
Risk Science The Traditional View
  • Agency manager as decision maker
  • Science and management separated to insure
    objectivity of science
  • Risk assessment done by agency or contractor
    scientists and results are presented to the
    community
  • Community involvement in form of public meetings

5
Characteristics of Community-Based Approach
  • Community or community partnership often decision
    maker
  • Management goals drive risk science
  • Community participation in all aspects of the
    application of risk science
  • Public meetings only one of multiple
    opportunities for community involvement

6
Community Input to Deliberative Risk Process
  • Community values to set goals
  • acceptable Risk
  • social, economic, cultural, ethical values
  • Local knowledge on sources and exposures
  • Oversight of analysis to insure consistency with
    community goals and values
  • Effective communication of results
  • Ideas and resources for solutions

7
Advantages of Community Participation
  • Better understanding of community needs to focus
    science
  • Better collection of data for all aspects of
    assessment
  • Better acceptance of results of analysis
  • Improved long term community capacity
  • More options and resources for risk management

8
Community-Based Science and Cumulative Risk?
  • Looking at risk from the community perspective
    all stresses, vulnerability, non-traditional
    factors such as access to health care
  • Need for active community role increased
  • New Agency Framework for Cumulative Risk
    highlights community role

9
Common Concerns with Community Participation
  • Loss of science objectivity
  • Need to educate community to participate requires
    more resources and time
  • Community residents ability to understand risk
    science not adequate for real participation
  • Factional divisions and low level of social
    capital make participation unrealistic

10
Community-Based Science New Role for EPA
  • Build capacity of communities for risk science
    education and deliberative process
  • Participate in team effort, not as
    decision-maker/risk manager
  • Provide technical assistance, information
  • Essential national role tools, communication,
    lessons learned, standards, training

11
Community Goals and Risk Science
  • Start from goals to understand role of risk
    science
  • The Goals
  • Community in agreement on sources of risk and all
    sectors of community are mobilized to take
    actions that effectively improve the health and
    environment of the community
  • Community has the long-term capacity to
    understand and address environmental concerns and
    continue to improve local environment

12
Community-Based Science and Community Goals
  • Science and deliberative process help build
    consensus on risks
  • Education and outreach improve community
    awareness of risks
  • Participation improves long-term community
    capacity to understand and address risks
  • Local creativity and local resources essential
    complement to national approach

13
How Can EPA Prepare for Community-Based Science?
  • Provide training for Agency staff team approach
    needs risk science, education, communication, and
    community expertise
  • Establish organizational structures that can
    address community concerns multimedia
    geographical teams
  • Develop national infrastructure for coordination,
    evaluation, communication, training
  • Develop information, tools, solutions for use in
    community setting

14
Community Air Screening How To Manual
  • A tool developed for Community-Based Science

15
History of Manual Development
  • Basic methodology developed by community
    partnership in Baltimore
  • Step-by-step guide developed to make methodology
    accessible
  • Methodology expanded to include all sources
  • Internal and external reviews completed
  • June publication target

16
Problems Addressed by Manual
  • Available data not easy to use to understand
    effects of aggregate concentrations from multiple
    sources
  • Need to identify priorities for effective action
    at neighborhood level
  • Sharply differing views on sources of risk among
    stakeholders means no action

17
Overall Manual Goals
  • Improved understanding of local air quality
  • Improved long-term community capacity to
    understand and address local air quality concerns
  • Consensus on priorities for reducing risk
  • All sectors of community mobilized and taking
    action to reduce risks

18
Manual Strategy to Meet Goals
  • Build a partnership of all stakeholders to
    address local air quality issues
  • Create a process that allows partners to share
    knowledge, build trust, and use sound science to
    answer questions and build consensus
  • Involve broader community in process to build
    basis for community mobilization

19
Role for Risk Based Screening
  • Designed to identify risk based priorities with
    minimum of resources
  • Used when available risk information is not
    sufficient to build consensus
  • Used to build community capacity to understand
    and address local air quality concerns

20
Who Would Do the Work?
  • Partnership core with representatives of all
    stakeholders
  • All community sectors, schools and organizations
    contribute to assessment, education, and risk
    management
  • EPAs role can differ from facilitator of
    partnership, to providing technical assistance,
    to review

21
Who Has An Incentive to Join?
  • Community organizations Build capacity, get
    answers and risk reductions
  • Industry and business Improve understanding of
    risk and improve relationships and business
  • Schools Ideal teaching opportunity
  • Universities Teaching and research
    opportunities
  • Local government Get resources needed to answer
    questions
  • State governments Address urban risk issues

22
Resources Needed
  • Will vary depending on existing community
    capacity
  • Mostly in-kind contribution of partnership
    members
  • Funding recommended for community involvement
    staff, facilitator, and for outreach and
    education

23
Organization of Manual
  • Manual divided into two parts Overview and
    Technical Guidance (table of contents ?)
  • Overview provides basic information needed to
    equip all partnership members to participate
    fully in the direction of the process
  • Designed to be used chapter-by-chapter as the
    process proceeds
  • Manual points to areas where additional resources
    are needed to supplement text

24
Chapter One Getting Started
  • Manual covers steps needed to get started
  • build a partnership
  • clarify goals
  • decide on a workplan
  • Develop a communication plan
  • Presents alternatives to help community find
    appropriate approach (figure 1-1 ?)

25
Six Step Screening Process
  • Partnership, Goals, Work and Communication Plans
    (figure 2-1?)
  • Inventory
  • Initial Screen
  • Secondary Screen
  • Final Screen
  • Communicate Results, Develop recommendations

26
Building the Inventory
  • Inventory team collects available data and
    organizes community to collect and verify
    detailed location and release information
  • Information collected to handle all small
    businesses handled as point sources
  • Building inventory excellent opportunity for
    community education and capacity building (table
    3-1?)

27
Initial Screen
  • Lookup table based on Screen3 model used to
    provide conservative estimate of aggregate
    concentrations (table 4-1?)
  • Partnership team calculates Screening Level
    Concentrations (SLC) based on risk level set by
    community
  • Concentrations compared to SLCs to identify
    chemicals for further analysis

28
Secondary Screen
  • ISCST3 air dispersion model used to estimate
    concentrations from all sources (figure 10-1?)
  • All small and large businesses handled as point
    sources
  • Pseudo point method used to estimate area and
    mobile sources
  • Estimated concentrations compared to SLCs again

29
Final Screen
  • Detailed release information collected from point
    sources for target chemicals
  • Facilities visited if not already in partnership
  • ISCST3 run using more accurate release
    information
  • Concentrations gtSLCs identified as community
    priorities
  • Sources and source contribution to total
    identified for follow-up

30
Baltimore Example
  • Inventory 175 chemicals, 125 facilities
  • Initial Screen 29 chemicals, 36 facilities
  • Secondary 7 chemicals, 23 facilities
  • Final 4 chemicals, one stationary source
  • Benzene tank farm and mobile
  • 1,3-Butadiene mobile
  • Carbon Tetrachloride background
  • Methyl Chloride background

31
Results and Recommendations
  • Clear risk communication key to success
  • Partnership prepares for final report by
    communicating at each step of process (figure
    2-1?)
  • Teams formed to develop recommendations for
    priority sources
  • All opportunities explored P2, DfE, social
    marketing, benchmarking, diesel fleet retrofits,
    traffic patterns

32
Manual Use and Development
  • Updated as experience and methods develop
  • Possible addition of guidance for acute exposures
  • Chapters used individually, e.g., Getting
    started, Inventory
  • Exposure modeling added to develop risk
    information

33
Shelf-life for Manual?
  • More accessible exposure and modeling tools may
    make risk assessment easier for community
    partnerships
  • RAIMY, OAQPS risk assessment guidance and tools
    coming in future
  • Dont lose value of community participation for
    local inventory and for developing local
    capacity, consensus, and initiative

34
Contact Information
  • Community Assistance Technical Team
  • Office of Pollution Prevention and Toxics
  • Dave Lynch
  • lynch.david_at_epa.gov
  • 202-564-8532
  • Hank Topper
  • topper.henry_at_epa.gov
  • 202-564-8534
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