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PARTNERSHIP EVENTS

CHE Partnership call: 25 Years of the Superfund Research Program: Highlights and Hope
Thur, May 23

CHE Partnership call: Cancer: The Professional and the Personal: A Conversation with Dr. Susan Love and Susan Braun
Tues, May 28

CHE Partnership call: The Story of Camp Lejeune: Contaminated Drinking Water, Cancer Clusters, and the Struggle for Justice
Wed, May 29
Hosted by the CHE Alaska Working Group and ACAT

CHE Partnership call: Stress as an Endocrine Disruptor: Maternal Psychosocial Stress During Pregnancy and Fetal Development
Thur, June 6
Hosted by the CHE Fertility and Reproductive Health Working Group

CHE Cafe call: The Rise of the US Environmental Health Movement: A Conversatin with Kate Davies
Thur, June 20


Conference: Healthy Environments Across Generations
New York Academy of Medicine
June 7-8, 2012
Continue the conversation: Join the conference on Facebook

5/2/13: MP3 recording available: When There Is No Epidemiologist

4/16/13: MP3 recording available: Late Lessons from Early Warnings: A Retrospective Look at Learning About Precaution

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CHE Partners on why they value our work

CHE-AK call: The Hidden Hazards of Coal Development in Alaska: Public Health and Coal Combustion Waste

Aug 11, 2010

August 11, 9am Alaska time (10am Pacific / 1pm Eastern)

Coal combustion waste, or coal ash, is the material that remains after coal is burned.  Coal ash may contain heavy metals, radioactive elements, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), and particulate matter, all of which contribute to public health and environmental problems. Alaska currently has six coal-fired power plants, all located between Healy and Fairbanks in Alaska’s Interior. Coal ash from these facilities is used as fill in local areas, including public spaces, university grounds, and residential neighborhoods, which may pose a health hazard to nearby communities.  Improper disposal of this waste in holding ponds or landfill sites may also result in hazardous exposures.
 
Join us for a discussion of the dangerous chemicals in coal ash, how these chemicals may affect our health, air, water and food, and how you can help to protect Alaskans from the health hazards of coal ash.
 
GUEST SPEAKERS:

  • Barb Gottlieb, Deputy Director, Environment & Health, Physicians for Social Responsibility
  • Lisa N. Widawsky, Attorney, Environmental Integrity Project
  • Russ Maddox, Board member of Resurrection Bay Conservation Alliance and Executive Committee member of the Alaska Chapter of the Sierra Club. 
For more information or to join this free call and receive dial-up instructions, please RSVP to Alaska Community Action on Toxics at 907-222-7714 or diana@akaction.org

 

The Collaborative on Health and the Environment
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