protecting daycare facilities from contaminated sites - progress since kiddie kollege september 28,...
Post on 26-Mar-2015
216 Views
Preview:
TRANSCRIPT
PROTECTING DAYCARE FACILITIES FROM CONTAMINATED SITES - PROGRESS SINCE KIDDIE KOLLEGE
September 28, 2010
Introducing Your Hosts at Terradex
Introducing the Presenters
Diane Pupa, New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection
Bob Axlerad, USEPA Office of Air & Radiation, Indoor Environments Division - USEPA Office of Children's Health Protection (OCHP)
Carolyn Tatoian and Sam Martinez - California Department of Toxic Substances Control
Lenny Siegel, Center for Public Environmental Oversight
Bill Ottaway - New York DEC Dan Tatro, New York Office of Child and Family
Services Larry Schnapf, Schnapf Law Offices and Adjunct
Professor at New York Law School Larry Zaragoza, USEPA OSWER
Agenda
Logistics Introduction Presentations Discussion
A Video Recording of the Session Is Being Made
Daycare Overview
6,000,000 Children Under 5 in commercial daycare
400,000 Daycare Locations Childcare Centers Family Childcare
~20% Location Turnover Per Year
Family Childcar
e
Childcare
Centers
Source: Excerpted from the 2000 House Ways and Means Green Book, "Child Care"
20% Per Year
Cleanup Overview
>550,000 Cleanup Sites in the U.S.
Cleanup Progress Varies Its Complicated to
Assess the Risk to Children Proximity Factors Pathway Factors Contaminant Factors Data Gaps
Cleanup Complete –
Restrictions Apply
Presenters
Diane Pupa, New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection
Bob Axlerad, USEPA Office of Air & Radiation, Indoor Environments Division - USEPA Office of Children's Health Protection (OCHP)
Carolyn Tatoian and Sam Martinez - California Department of Toxic Substances Control
Lenny Siegel, Center for Public Environmental Oversight
Bill Ottaway - New York DEC Dan Tatro, New York Office of Child and Family
Services Larry Schnapf, Schnapf Law Offices and Adjunct
Professor at New York Law School Larry Zaragoza, USEPA OSWER
Address or site search.
Address or site search.
Click to daycare
information
Click to daycare
information
Remediation site polygons
with buffering.
Remediation site polygons
with buffering.
Daycare site inventory
listed in buffer with ID, name,
address, phone and
date.
Daycare site inventory
listed in buffer with ID, name,
address, phone and
date.
Discussion
Are there other state best practices that should be known about?
Can we offer summary views from key stakeholders: Daycare Operator Daycare Licensing Agency Environmental Agencies Parents
What are the typical local land use permits (e.g., city permits, zoning permits), as opposed to state licenses, required for daycare operations?
Discussion - Continued
Can we compare the challenge of school sites to daycare sites?
Can we identify other examples, other than Kiddie Kollege, of unacceptable exposure at daycare to environmental contaminants?
Which exposure pathways are critical or hold a priority toward daycare exposure.
What is the message to parents as it relates to daycare toxic risk?
Thank YouA Video and Attendee List Will be DistributedWe Welcome Feedback
Bob Wenzlau | J Michael SowinskiTerradex
Conclusion
top related