Posts by CEEJH Center
Stormwater

This National Science Foundation (NSF)-funded research project compares the effectiveness of different interventions, both technical and social, at reducing unhealthy stormwater management processes and feedbacks between the environment and people. Specific research objectives and activities include documenting neighborhood issues and needs in informing stormwater best-management practices; evaluating stormwater volume and quality, flooding risk, trash accumulation, and mosquito production within the watersheds; developing a tool that uses Geographic Information Systems (GIS) to guide watershed management; and enhancing community awareness and positive behaviors to improve water quality and protect urban green space.

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CEEJH Center
My Block Counts

This app provides a way for community members to collect data on social, natural, and built features of their environments using the city block as the unit of measure. By collecting this data, CEEJH will be able to work with communities to study and address individual and neighborhood-level variation in exposure to ecologic determinants of health. This tool will facilitate future research on the quality of built and social environments in neighborhoods that are differentially burdened by environmental hazards and pollution.

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CEEJH Center
Cheverly

Amidst community concerns of toxic emissions from a local metal recycling scrap yard and the impending expansion of the nearby Baltimore-Washington Parkway, the Town Council of Cheverly, MD approached the CEEJH Lab to establish a stationary air quality monitoring network throughout town. The proposed network will comprise more than 30 particulate matter sensors hosted by town residents, business, and public services buildings. The current memorandum of understanding addresses how the network will be maintained, how all resulting data will be hosted and managed transparently and openly available to the public, and how the results of the monitoring will be translated for, and disseminated to, community members through a user-friendly online platform as well as in-person community events.

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CEEJH Center
Symposium

The CEEJH Lab has hosted six symposia with the seventh to take place in August of 2021. Over the years, the overarching theme of the event has varied, ranging from the inclusion of environmental justice and health disparities in conversations about sustainability in the Chesapeake Bay watershed to grassroots activism to health, law, and policy tools for environmental justice communities to STEM innovations that can empower community stakeholders.

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CEEJH Center
Seeking Greenspace Equity Throughout Maryland

From providing cooling shade to helping clear the air of pollutants, green space is absolutely vital to the health, vitality, and quality of life of local neighborhoods. CEEJH is working with the Maryland Department of Natural Resources to develop a tool for mapping greenspace across the state.

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CEEJH Center
MD EJSCREEN

The CEEJH team has worked in partnership with the National Center for Smart Growth, faculty at the School of Public Health, and the Maryland Environmental Health Network to develop an environmental justice screening tool for the state known as Maryland Environmental Justice Screen (MD EJSCREEN).

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CEEJH Center
Environmental Benefits Districts in Prince George's County

Many disenfranchised communities have a disproportionate burden of environmental hazards, a high concentration of psychosocial stressors, and inequities in planning, zoning, and development. Environmental Benefits Districts (EBDs) may be a solution to the problem of environmental injustice because of the focus on equitable and positive development.

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CEEJH Center
Buzzard Point: Is DC Really United?

Buzzard Point in Washington, DC, is a neighborhood facing the brunt of urban environmental injustice. Through pollution from multiple sources and a lack of environmental amenities, residents have been exploited and drowned out to make way for further development.

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CEEJH Center
Toxic Air in Ivy City, Washington, DC

The Ivy City Right to Breathe Partnership brings together members from grassroots organizations such as the Ivy City Civic Association and Empower DC, a neighborhood community, and universities including Howard University, the University of Maryland-College Park, Trinity Washington University, and George Washington University to work for Environmental Justice in a traditionally African American neighborhood in the nation’s capital.

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CEEJH Center
Local Traffic is Choking Latinx Neighborhoods in Langley Park, MD

Langley Park is a multicultural community composed of over 80% Latinxs with household incomes that are 83% lower than the rest of Prince George’s County. Individuals in this area are exposed to commuter and industrial traffic-related air pollution (TRAP) including particulate matter, volatile organic compounds (VOCs), nitrogen oxides, sulfur dioxide, and other pollutants which can have adverse health outcomes including asthma, stroke, heart disease, and pre-mature mortality.

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CEEJH Center
Brandywine, MD as a "Sacrifice Zone" for the DMV

Brandywine, MD is an unincorporated community with less than 7,000 residents (approximately 72% are African-American) in Southern Prince George’s County. Being unincorporated means it does not have a mayor, town council, or representative government. This lack of political representation has led to Brandywine being exploited by County leadership and state officials to act as a dumping ground.

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