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Friday, November 8, 2024

Popular map for exploring environmental health disparities, vulnerabilities in Washington gets an update

Since it first launched in 2019, Washington state’s Environmental Health Disparities Map has been used to help decisionmakers and government agencies engage  with

overburdened communities to clean up contamination, improve  buildings and electric grids, plant trees and many other projects.

Using a complex matrix of data, this  open-access, interactive map ranks Washington’s nearly 1,500 U.S. census  tracts by health risks due to environmental degradation and

economic  and health disparities. It acts as a guide for state agencies and the  legislature to improve environmental and economic justice and is  included in the state’s Healthy

Environment for All (HEAL) Act.

Now the University of Washington, one of the  original partners in the creation of the map, is helping the Department  of Health launch a new version, updating the data and

methodology for  how the map ranks vulnerable areas. The newly updated map went live on  July 28.

“The original request for this map tool came  from community members who felt that researchers and government  programs were looking at either air or water quality, treating them

as  separate. But communities experience them together, and so they wanted  to know if there was a better tool that could communicate the cumulative  impact of pollution,” said

Esther Min, a UW researcher who led the creation of the original map as well as its updated data and methods.

That was in the fall of 2016. At that time, Front and Centered, an environmental justice coalition of organizations rooted in communities of color, several state agencies and the UW

Department of Environmental & Occupational Health Sciences formed a working group that eventually published the first version of the map.

“It brings together not just the harms to  communities from pollution through an environmental health lens, but  also shows a community’s vulnerability — what makes certain

communities  less resilient to environmental degradations,” said Min, a clinical  assistant professor of environmental and occupational health sciences in  the UW School of Public

Health. “The map does a really good job of  framing that and communicating that.”

Map users can create data visualizations to  see environmental health risks and compare census tracts based on dozens  of factors, such as existing levels of pollution that include

ozone  concentration, PM2.5, diesel emissions, lead risks in homes,  proximity to heavilytrafficked roads, industrial or waste treatment  facilities and Superfund sites. Included also

are socioeconomic factors  such as English proficiency, education levels, housing affordability and  employment statistics, birthweights and prevalence of cardiovascular  disease.

“The Environmental Health Disparities map is  our most popular data product, used by organizations — big and small —  across the state,” said Jennifer Sabel, manager of the

Washington  Tracking Network, which publishes the map. “With this version release,  the data will be updated to reflect the changes that have happened since  we first launched the

map. This will lead to better-informed decisions  that support health and environmental equity in our state.”

According to the Department of Health,  the map has already been used as a guide by state agencies, such as the  Departments of Ecology, Commerce and Natural Resources,

when issuing  grants or funding projects with the goal of improving health and the  environment in an equitable manner. Examples include grants for  investigating and cleaning up

contaminated sites, funding for waste  management projects, programs for clean energy buildings and solar and  electrical grid modernization, as well as urban and community

forestry  programs.

In addition, Min said, “community groups are  using the map for their own advocacy, saying ‘Look, our communities not  only struggle with air pollution, but also here are all the

other  things that we really need to work on to eliminate disparities.’”

Original source can be found here.

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