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Community Forums

The NIEHS sponsors Community Forums in cities throughout the United States on the general theme of environmental impacts on human health. The purpose of the community forums is to bring together members of the public who are interested in public health and the environment with NIEHS and other federal, state, and local government health officials; environmental health professionals; and disease and environmental advocacy groups. The forums provide a platform for an open dialogue to establish better coordination among the public and health professionals working on community exposures, industrial exposures, and other environmental issues. These forums also provide an opportunity to promote local and state media coverage of environmental health issues to broaden public understanding. Many of these Community Forums are organized in collaboration with NIEHS Environmental Health Sciences Centers and Superfund Centers at universities around the country who carry out cutting edge research to better understand the most pressing and key environmental problems of the nation, and how best to solve them.

Contact

John Schelp, M.P.A.
Special Assistant for Community Engagement and Outreach
Tel (919) 541-5723
schelp@niehs.nih.gov

Next Community Forum

Environmental Health Currents: A Public Forum on Seattle Waterways & Your Health
Portage Bay Cafe
Seattle, Washington
April 18, 2013 (5:30-7:30)

"Lightning Talks" to showcase environmental health research going on in Seattle area -- including Seattle Waterways, Puget Sound, Duwamish River Superfund site, Fish Consumption, Industrial Waste, etc.

 

Air Pollution
Detroit, Michigan
June 18, 2013


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Recent Community Forums

Childhood Obesity & the Environment
November 29, 2012

NIEHS convened a panel of experts to tackle questions from the public on childhood obesity and related environmental factors. The unique, virtual event — the first of its kind at NIEHS to mix social media and Web broadcasting to reach a diverse national audience — attracted more than 600 viewers and sparked tweets to 1.5 million twitter users.

Read more about the forum:  Live from NIEHS: Experts field obesity questions (http://www.niehs.nih.gov/news/newsletter/2012/12/spotlight-obesity/index.htm)

View the webcast of the event: Virtual Forum on Obesity and the Environment

Obesity forum panel
The forum panel, left to right: Gregory Diette, M.D., Johns Hopkins University; Lawrence Kushi, Sc.D., Kaiser Permanente; Birnbaum; Kristina Thayer, Ph.D., NTP; moderator Kimberly Gray, Ph.D., NIEHS; Andrew Rundle, Ph.D., Columbia University; and Karen Peterson, Sc.D., University of Michigan. (Photo courtesy of Steve McCaw)

 

Asthma in our Neighborhoods
March 28, 2012
Dorchester House, Boston, MA

With its most recent community engagement outreach initiative, NIEHS tackled the issues of asthma and air quality in communities within the city of Boston.

Led by NIEHS/NTP Director Linda Birnbaum, Ph.D., a group of NIEHS-funded researchers and Institute representatives toured Boston-area neighborhoods by trolley the afternoon of March 28. Along their route, the group saw firsthand why residents are concerned about their urban environment, along with several examples of how private-public partnerships have helped improve health and quality of life there.

Read Entire Article: NIEHS energizes researchers and community in Boston (http://www.niehs.nih.gov/news/newsletter/2012/5/spotlight-boston/index.htm) (Source: Environmental Factor, NIEHS Monthly Newsletter)

From the trolley, visitors could see the results of community advocacy for improvements and a smoking ban in public housing to help combat the alarming increase in asthma incidence. Advocates benefited from Harvard University environmental health surveys, lung function tests, and integrated pest management protocols in their petition to make these urban environments healthier.
View of public housing in Boston

(Photo courtesy of John Schelp)

Improvements to the built environment include a new crosswalk at Dorchester House, site of the NIEHS community forum, which makes negotiating traffic safer for pedestrians
New crosswalk improvement at Dorchester House - site of NIEHS Community Forum

(Photo courtesy of John Schelp)

 

Along the tour, visitors saw the George Robert White Environmental Conservation Center, which was built on reclaimed land in Dorchester. Programs there help neighborhood children learn about their connection to the environment.
George Robert White Environmental Conservation Center

(Photo courtesy of Marilyn Hair of the University of Washington)

Along with people from the community, the audience included directors and members of NIEHS-funded centers committed to community engagement as the foundation for environmental science research.
Audience at the NIEHS Community Forum

(Photo courtesy of John Schelp)

 

Birnbaum assured the audience that NIEHS is in for the long haul. “We look forward to continuing our support for this research and working with scientists, health care providers, community members, and other partners here.”
NIEHS/NTP Director Linda Birnbaum, Ph.D.

(Photo courtesy of John Schelp)

Several of the panelists had no problem relating to community concerns. “I’m not an asthma expert, just a kid who grew up in Boston with asthma,” remarked Boston City Councilman Felix Arroyo, left.
Boston City Councilman Felix Arroyo on the panel

(Photo courtesy of John Schelp)

 

Los Angeles Community Forum
Traffic Pollution and Your Health (255KB)

October 6, 2011
Progress Park Plaza, 15500 Downey Avenue, Paramount, CA

The nation's top environmental health official visited the Los Angeles/Long Beach harbor area to witness first-hand how communities are struggling with health issues related to pollution. Los Angeles has its share of health problems and we suspect many of them are environmentally related, said Linda Birnbaum, director of the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences. Several times a year, Birnbaum visits communities many in low-income, minority areas where federal research dollars are spent to study pollutants and human health... Emissions from trucks, ships and other diesel-powered sources envelop the region, and scientists from USC have found connections to an array of health effects... Birnbaum visited Hudson School near the ports of LA and Long Beach to witness first-hand how communities struggle with air quality health issues. (Source: Environmental Health News)

 

A large group of people view a powerpoint slide which reads "Traffic, Air Polution, and Health: Emerging Issues"

(Photo courtesy of John Schelp)

 

A group of people, three men and two women, watch a presentation at the community forum

(Photo courtesy of John Schelp)

A large collection of shipping containers at the LA port
Ports at Los Angeles and Long Beach

(Photo courtesy of John Schelp)

 

A group of people listen to a tour at the LA ports
Harbor Communities Tour

(Photo courtesy of John Schelp)

Teenagers play soccer beneath a sign that reads "Welcome to the Port"
Park near ports

(Photo courtesy of John Schelp)

 

New Orleans Community Forum

Community partnerships to solve environmental health problems (228KB)
February 23, 2011
New Orleans, LA

NIEHS/NTP Director Linda Birnbaum, Ph.D., and other representatives from the Institute engaged the New Orleans community during a visit to the city Feb. 23-24. The visit involved several meetings focused on local environmental health concerns and the NIEHS programs that address them including the Institute's multi-faceted response to the Gulf oil spill (GOS).

The visit began with a luncheon dialogue hosted by the Bayou Interfaith Shared Community Organizing followed by a tour of the lower Ninth Ward in New Orleans, hosted by NIEHS grantees at Tulane University School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine. The NIEHS delegation also drove out to Terrebonne Parish where they listened to residents in the coastal town of Montegut.

Later, the NIEHS delegation attended an evening community forum Feb. 23, hosted by Mary Queen of Vietnam Community Development Corporation at Ba Mien Restaurant in New Orleans East. Birnbaum addressed more than 100 attendees as part of a panel of local, state and federal agency representatives.

Birnbaum described NIEHS programs launched in response to Hurricane Katrina and the GOS, Birnbaum noted that NIEHS grants in New Orleans totaled $4.6 million last year. She also praised collaboration among Gulf region scientists, community groups, and NIEHS, encouraging partners to offer NIEHS their input and share their grass-roots knowledge of their city and region.

"We want to hear what's going on," she explained. "See where we can build on the partnerships we have on the ground. That's what keeps us going. That's what helps drive our work in the community."

Birnbaum made a point of highlighting outstanding grantees, including Tulane University's Maureen Lichtveld, M.D. and Barry Dellinger, Ph.D., director of the Superfund Research Program at Louisiana State University (LSU).

As she did at each of the venues during the visit, Birnbaum emphasized interdisciplinary scientific research, interagency collaboration, and community engagement. "NIEHS hosted a series of community forums, stakeholder visits, webinars, and instructional meetings throughout the five-state Gulf region," she told her listeners, "in order to promote awareness, participation, and coordination for all of these programs among local residents, state and local health departments, regional universities and researchers, and federal agency partners."

During the evening forum, one attendee praised the NIEHS approach in the Gulf. "Thank you for the scientific focus of this study; it's critical," said Karen DeSalvo of the City of New Orleans Health Department.

The visit to New Orleans was part of a series of community forums Birnbaum began in 2009 when she began as director of NIEHS.

 

Dr. Birnbaum speaks to the audience
Birnbaum, second from right, joined panelists at the evening reception to hear concerns and questions voiced by members of the community impacted by Hurricane Katrina and the GOS.

(Photo courtesy of John Schelp)

A woman speaks into a microphone
The audience took Birnbaum and fellow panelists at their word as they passed around a microphone so anyone who wanted to give input had an opportunity to be heard.

(Photo courtesy of John Schelp)

Panel members sitting at a table
The panel at Dillard University included, right to left, Wright, Birnbaum, Sandler, and, only partially visible, Hughes.

(Photo courtesy of Jim Remington)

An audience seated at tables listens to a speaker
The audience at Dillard University included NIEHS staff and several grantees.

(Photo courtesy of Jim Remington)

A severely flood-damaged house
Today the city of New Orleans still has many reminders of the force of Hurricane Katrina and the frustrations of rebuilding the city.

(Photo courtesy of John Schelp)

A new home in a neighborhood
But there are also signs of the city's resilience, as people prepare their new and revitalized dwellings to face future threats from flooding.

(Photo courtesy of John Schelp)

 


Louisville Community Forum

Social Determinants of Health (160KB)
October 20, 2010
Louisville, KY
Hosted by University of Louisville

 

louisville community forum
louisville community forum speaker
Social Determinants of Health examples
Social Determinants of Health examples

(Photo courtesy of University of Louisville)

 


Harlem Community Forum
Healthy Homes & You 
April 13, 2010
Harlem Stage Gatehouse, 150 Convent Avenue at West 135th Street, New York, New York 10031
Co-hosted by Columbia University and WEACT

 

Harlem Forum Panel on stage
Harlem Forum Panel on stage

(Photo courtesy of Columbia University)

Harlem Forum Audience members
Harlem Forum Audience members

(Photo courtesy of Columbia University)

 

Bay Area Community Forum
Breast Cancer and the Environment
November 18, 2009
Saulsalito, CA

NIEHS Director Linda Birnbaum headlined a rousing, and at times, emotional public forum convened at historic Fort Baker. Attendees were mostly members of a concerned community struggling with a disease Birnbaum labeled in her opening remarks as "our common enemy — an equal opportunity killer."

Introduced by Robert Hiatt, M.D., Ph.D., director of Population Sciences at the University of California, San Francisco Comprehensive Cancer Center, Birnbaum spoke of the "state of the science" of breast cancer research, and also joined a distinguished panel in initiating a frank and open discussion about community needs in ongoing breast cancer research.

Moderated by noted television reporter, Ysabel Duron, a breast cancer survivor and inductee into the National Association of Hispanic Journalists' Hall of Fame, the panel of speakers (221KB)  featured leaders in various disciplines. Joining Birnbaum and Hiatt on the dais were Gwen Collman, Ph.D., interim director of the Division of Extramural Research and Training at NIEHS; Janice Barlow, M.S.N., executive director of Zero Breast Cancer; Rupali Das, M.D., chief of the Exposure Assessment Section in the Environmental Health Investigations Branch of the California Department of Public Heath; Peggy Reynolds, Ph.D., senior research scientist at the Northern California Cancer Center; and Jeanne Rizzo, R.N., president and CEO of the Breast Cancer Fund. The combined influence of these renowned experts shed light on different aspects of breast cancer from basic research to advocacy to education and prevention.

Public participation is always encouraged at these kinds of meetings and other forums. "It provides an opportunity for feedback," Barlow said. "It does change the direction of the research and the relevance to the community; plus, when [the community is] involved from the beginning, it has an influence on the questions that are being asked." Birnbaum added, "We need input from communities in setting science agenda and in fostering positive partnerships. Together with my Institute's partners and grantees, we will solidify our coalition in the national effort to keep the science moving forward."

Birnbaum's closing comments summarized the discussion with partners, grantees, community leaders and advocates. "I look forward to the day when I can stand here with all of our partners to say, 'We did it. We know how it happens, and we can stop it.' That day will come. Until then, we will continue the hard work." In borrowing a familiar concept, she added, "Knowledge is power," a simple but powerful adage that in the context of cancer and disease prevention takes on deliberate new meaning.

 

Birnbaum talks with community leaders about the city¿s sustainable transportation initiatives.
Expert panelists engaged in open discussion on breast cancer at the Bay Area public forum &emdash; the latest in a series of community-based participatory events. Seated, left to right, are Birnbaum, Collman, Barlow, Reynolds, Rizzo and Das.

(Photo courtesy of Ed Kang)

Birnbaum talks with McLellan, who moderated the Town Hall Meeting.

The public forum at the Cavallo Point Lodge, a former military base turned hotel, brought together scientists, sufferers and survivors to talk frankly about environmental connections to breast cancer and prevention strategies.

(Photo courtesy of Ed Kang)

The October 1 Town Hall Meeting.

One of Birnbaum's many activities included a stop at the Breast Cancer Fund, a group committed to identifying and eliminating environmental causes of breast cancer.

(Photo courtesy of Ed Kang)

 


Wisconsin Town Meeting
Environmental Health in Milwaukee
October 1, 2009
Milwaukee, WI

At the Milwaukee Town Meeting, Linda Birnbaum set the stage for a panel discussion by environmental public health specialists and city and regional officials. Birnbaum began her presentation with impressions from the afternoon trolley tour of the city — recounting the neighborhoods, gardens and river valley industrial brownfield sites she saw that day to emphasize the interconnectedness of the environment with public health and quality of life.

In her talk, Birnbaum highlighted "some of the outstanding work that NIEHS is supporting here at UW-Milwaukee," including basic research into the biological mechanisms of toxicity, detection of freshwater viral, bacterial and chemical contaminants, and the innovative outreach initiative, Healthy Latino Families and Schools. She described work at UWM as an example of the productive mix of "'small science' conducted by individual labs" with the work of "'big science' teams, which may be needed to answer some of the most intractable questions."

Moving to the national and international levels, Birnbaum surveyed the Institute's "larger research investment" in environmental health science, especially in research on the long-term health effects of early environmental exposures. She focused on new and renewed efforts to prevent disease through effective translation of research results into public health initiatives for improving children's health and development by preventing and treating chronic diseases.

Birnbaum's closing comments brought her back to the streets and neighborhoods of Milwaukee. "We look forward to supporting and working with scientists, health care providers and community members here in a great city on a great lake," she concluded, "to continue the success of this work, to better understand how the environment affects our health, and to develop effective prevention strategies to protect public health."

In closing, Birnbaum emphasized the pressing need for environmental health research. "You can't change your genes, but you can change your environment," she said. "The question is not, 'Can we afford to do this research?'" she said. "It's, 'Can we afford not to?'"

 

Birnbaum talks with community leaders about the city¿s sustainable transportation initiatives.

During a visit to Milwaukee's Intermodal Station, Birnbaum talked with community leaders about the city's sustainable transportation initiatives. Shown, left to right, are Mayor Tom Barrett, Peter McAvoy, J.D., and Birnbaum.

(Photo courtesy of UWM)

Birnbaum talks with McLellan, who moderated the Town Hall Meeting.

At one stop on the Trolley Tour, Birnbaum, left, talked with Sandra McLellan, Ph.D, who moderated the Town Hall Meeting. In the background is a community garden planted in the shadow of a brownfield - a former paint manufacturing plant - on Milwaukee's near north side.

(Photo courtesy of UWM)

The October 1 Town Hall Meeting.

The October 1 Town Hall Meeting was a standing-room-only event, as Birnbaum and key staff heard from Milwaukee community members about their environmental health concerns.

(Photo courtesy of UWM)


New Jersey Town Meeting
The Environment and Child Health
June 17, 2009
New Brunswick, N.J.

NIEHS scientists traveled to New Brunswick, N.J., in support of a June 17 Environmental and Child Health Town Meeting that included opening comments by NIEHS and National Toxicology Program (NTP) Director Linda Birnbaum ("/Rhythmyx/assembler/render?sys_contentid=1840&sys_revision=15&sys_variantid=639&sys_context=0&sys_authtype=0&sys_siteid=&sys_folderid=" sys_dependentvariantid="639" sys_dependentid="1840" inlinetype="rxhyperlink" rxinlineslot="103" sys_dependentid="1840" sys_siteid="" sys_folderid=""). The program was organized by the NIEHS Center for Environmental Exposures and Disease (CEED), which is housed in the Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences Institute (EOHSI) at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey (UMDNJ). The meeting was held at the Jane Voorhees Zimmerli Art Museum on the Rutgers campus in New Brunswick.

The event was an opportunity for Birnbaum, a native of New Jersey, to visit the city where NIEHS held its first town hall meeting in 1998. She told her audience at the evening session of the program that NIEHS is proud of its "long history of seeking involvement from a broad array of constituencies, including scientists, health care professionals and communities, in setting its research agenda and in fostering community-university partnerships to implement parts of that agenda."

"As we go forward, we want to make sure we are supporting the most important types of science, from 'small science' conducted by individual labs, which can be nimble and innovative, to 'big science' research teams, which may be needed to answer some of the most intractable questions," Birnbaum explained. "We will need to use a judicious mix of the best individual investigators, as well as the capabilities of research teams, to uncover all the complex ways in which environmental exposures work on biological systems with genetic and other host susceptibility mechanisms to affect health and disease."

An afternoon program of expert speakers opened with a welcome and introduction by UMDNJ Professor of Environmental and Occupational Medicine Helmut Zarbl, Ph.D.  , who is the principal investigator on the university's NIEHS Center grant. Zarbl was followed by talks by UMDNJ investigators on findings of their NIEHS-funded research. The presenters included Michael Gochfeld, M.D., Ph.D., Jason Richardson, Ph.D., Michael Gallo, Ph.D., and Kathy Black, Ph.D. They spoke on such environmental health topics as heavy metal exposure, neurological disorders linked to pesticides, endocrine disruption and breast cancer and childhood asthma. A poster session and reception followed.

The evening program opened with Birnbaum's comments and a brief panel session of local middle school students involved in the CEED Community Outreach and Engagement Program, leading into the highlight of the evening — a 90-minute panel session with scientists and environmental justice and public health advocates.

NIEHS Epidemiology Branch Staff Scientist Jane Hoppin, Sc.D. ("/Rhythmyx/assembler/render?sys_contentid=34208&sys_revision=7&sys_variantid=1278&sys_context=0&sys_authtype=0&sys_siteid=&sys_folderid=" sys_dependentvariantid="1278" sys_dependentid="34208" inlinetype="rxhyperlink" rxinlineslot="103" sys_dependentid="34208" sys_siteid="" sys_folderid=""), was one of the five members of the evening panel discussion. Hoppin described her research as part of the Agricultural Health Study and how "what we learn from farmers and their families [can be] relevant to the U.S. population as the chemicals used in agriculture are used for residential and public health purposes as well."

Hoppin was joined by two UMDNJ professors — Daniel Wartenberg, Ph.D., and Howard Kipen, M.D., MPH— as well as Elyse Pivnick, vice president of Environmental and Community Health  at the non-profit organization Isles in Trenton, N.J., and Ana Baptista, Ph.D., program manager of the Ironbound Community Corporation  in Newark, N.J.

 

Student panel discussion

One of many high points at the Town Hall Meeting was the student panel discussion. Area middle school students, above, described what they've learned about environmental health through an NIEHS-funded outreach project.

(Photo courtesy of Wilson Rodriguez and UMDNJ)

Birnbaum and Hoppin

As they mingled with attendees during the reception, it was evident that Birnbaum, center, and Hoppin, right, were in New Jersey to listen as well as speak.

(Photo courtesy of Wilson Rodriguez and UMDNJ)

Linda Birnbaum, Ph.D.

"We're particularly glad to be back here now to focus our attention on children and environmental health," Birnbaum said.

(Photo courtesy of Wilson Rodriguez and UMDNJ)

NIEHS representatives

While the NIEHS representatives were in the area, they visited faculty and staff of the NIEHS Center and, later, the School of Public Health at UDMNJ. Standing, left to right, are Laura Hemminger, Mitchel Rosen, Junfeng (Jim) Zhang, Ph.D., Mark Robson, Ph.D., and Glenn Paulson, Ph.D. Seated, left to right, are Hoppin, NIEHS Associate Director Allen Dearry, Ph.D., Birnbaum and Audrey Gotsch, Dr.PH.

(Photo courtesy of Audrey Gotsch and UMDNJ-SPH)

Seated participants listen to speakers.

There were few empty chairs at either of the sessions, as students and people from the community turned out to hear experts and leaders in the environmental health sciences.

(Photo courtesy of Wilson Rodriguez and UMDNJ)

 


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Previous Community Forums

Your Home, Your Health15 September 2008Cincinnati, OhioUniversity of Cincinnati
NIEHS and University of Cincinnati Host Environmental Health Town Hall Meeting

The September 15 town hall meeting, "Your Home, Your Health, Your Voice," was about empowerment for individuals dealing with environmental exposures, and it was held appropriately in a monument to empowerment during extreme adversity, the Underground Railroad Freedom Center in Cincinnati, Ohio. The meeting was jointly sponsored by NIEHS and the University of Cincinnati (UC) Center for Environmental Genetics (CEG). The event featured talks by experts at UC to help residents understand better the exposures they face each day and to offer practical ideas about how individuals can improve aspects of their health related to those exposures.

More on Cincinnati Town Meeting(http://www.niehs.nih.gov/news/newsletter/2008/october/niehsanduniversity.cfm)
Asthma and the Air We Breath13 July 2007Charlotte, North CarolinaFriendship Missionary Baptist Church
Charlotte Town Meeting on Air Quality & Health Disparities: Public Invited to Help Set Research Agenda

Friendship Missionary Baptist Church joined with the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences and American Health Strategies in holding a town meeting in Charlotte to discuss ongoing and new ways to improve air quality among minority populations.

Research has consistently shown that African Americans, Latinos and Native Americans are more likely to develop chronic respiratory illnesses, including asthma when compared to white Americans. In addition, minorities are more likely to have poor outcomes associated with chronic respiratory illnesses. Differences in exposure to ozone and other pollutants may contribute to the disparities observed in disease prevalence and severity. It is time to clear the air. The Charlotte Town Meeting on Air Quality and Health Disparities was open to the public.

NIEHS director, Dr. David Schwartz, was the keynote speaker for the meeting. The NIEHS has a noted tradition of supporting research relevant to understanding health disparities and concerns of disadvantaged communities. Congressional staff, state and local representatives, researchers and leaders in the medical and public health community participated in the community forum.
Environmental & Neurodevelopmental Disorders over the Lifespan11 September 2005Durham, North CarolinaInternational Neurotoxicolgy Conference
Town Meeting Agenda (175KB)
Growing Pains: Health & Community Impacts of Goods Movements and the Ports25-26 February 2005Long Beach, CaliforniaSouthern California Environmental Health Sciences Center (USC & UCLA)
 
Impact of Urban Sprawl on Health in the Inner City16 December 2004Atlanta, GeorgiaCrystal James Associates and Morehouse College
Morehouse Press Release (67KB)
Environmental Health Concerns in Hawaii14 February 2004Honolulu, HawaiiUniversity of Hawaii and University of Arkansas
 
Health Effects From Particulate Matter3 June 2003Children's Memorial Institute for Education & Research, ChicagoAmerican Lung Association of Chicago
 
Airborne Threats to Human Health: The latest Findings on Fine Particle Pollution - What you and Your Family Need to Know About Air Pollution and How It Affects Your Health21 April 2003Upstate Medical University, Syracuse, New YorkAmerican Lung Association of New York State and State University of NY-Upstate Medical
 
Oceans and Human Health27-28 February 2003Maritime and Science Technology High School, MiamiUniversity of Miami's Marine and Freshwater Biomedical Sciences Center Florida International University and the University of Miami
 
Voices of Diversity in the Environment and Health7-8 January 2003San Antonio Town MeetingAir Force Institute for Environment, Safety and Occupational Health Risk Analysis, San Antonio Metropolitan Health District, University of Texas Health Science Center, Alamo Breast Cancer Foundation
 
Voices for a Healthy Community - Breast Cancer and the Environment7-8 October 2002Marin County and San Rafael, CaliforniaMarin Cancer Watch Organization, NIEHS Berkeley Center, Community Outreach and Engagement Program and University of California, Berkeley
 
Children's Environmental Health Public Forum, Paso Del Norte Heavy Metal Exposure1-2 February 2002Tomas Rivera Conference CenterUniversity of Texas at El Paso
 
Voices for Healthy Environments, Healthy Communities, Healthy Jobs7-8 December 2001First Church of God, Los AngelesSouthern California Environmental Health Sciences Center (USC/UCLA)
 
Public Meeting on Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations: Airing on the Environmental Health Issues16 November 2001University of Iowa, Iowa City, IowaUniversity of Iowa College of Public Health
 
Neighborhood Environmental Health19-20 October 2001Houston, TexasBaylor College of Medicine
 
Public Meeting on Chromium VI14 January 2001Glendale City Hall, Glendale, CaliforniaCity of Glendale
 
Voices for Healthy Environments, Healthy Communities29-30 September 2000Mt Zion Baptist Church, Seattle, WAUniversity of Washington
 
Health Disparities9 July 1999Chicago, IllinoisUniversity of Illinois at Chicago
 
Health Disparities26 May 1999Baltimore, MarylandJohns Hopkins University
 
Children's Environmental Health19 February 1999Berkeley, CaliforniaUniversity of California at Berkeley
 
Environmental Health in Our Neighborhoods: Speaking Out About Pollution and Health19-20 January 1999Cincinnati, OhioUniversity of Cincinnati
 
Air, Soil, and Water Pollution: Environmental Health Implications17-18 November 1998Nashville, TennesseeVanderbilt University
 
Urban Environmental Health17-18 September 1998Piscataway, NJUMDNJ and Rutgers
 


More on NIEHS Community Forums (EHP article (http://ehp.niehs.nih.gov/members/2003/6267/6267.html))