When Youth Lead
by Elise Miller and Jon Sharpe
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Teens are uncovering the connections between health and the environment, discovering science as part of their lives, and taking action for their communities' health.

Quincy is a small town in the heart of Washington
state's wheat and potato country. It's a conservative place, where
environmentalism has a bad name and pesticides are an integral part of
the economy. A string of chemical and food-processing companies lines
the railroad tracks through town. When Quincy's mayor began uncovering
a shocking story about fertilizer companies adulterating their products
with toxic waste as a way of cheaply disposing of it, few believed her.
When she began claiming that some land in Quincy was contaminated with
waste, and then recruited an investigative reporter from the Seattle
Times to substantiate her claims, many in the town were enraged at the
mayor for stirring up
trouble.  |  |  |  | Camille Grigg and Chelsea
Dannen analyze data |  |
The reporter, Duff
Wilson, eventually discovered that the problem was nationwide:
companies throughout the US were exploiting legal loopholes to turn
industrial waste into fertilizer, according to Wilson's book, Fateful
Harvest. But the story began with a chemical waste pond near Quincy
High School. No one knew exactly what was in it—perhaps not even the
company responsible for it knew. It was known that disposing of the
waste legally would be expensive. Instead, according to Wilson, the
company arranged to spray most of it on a local field; crops on the
field later died and contaminants began leaking from the pond site into
ground water. Eventually, US Environmental Protection Agency scientists
showed up in full chemical protection suits and began taking samples
from the capped-over pond. Generations of Quincy High graduates had
gone to work for the corporation responsible for the waste pond. Some
of them were implicated in an attempted cover-up of the story. When
a group of Quincy students was looking for a local issue to research
for a science class, their teacher suggested they study the waste pond.
Although high school runners on the track had sometimes complained of
fumes from the pond, the student researchers had never heard of the
issue. When they learned of the investigation, they were skeptical and
angry at the controversy stirred up. They wanted to check for
themselves the validity of the scientific methods investigators had
used, and their conclusions. It is just this kind
of project that Washington state's Youth Network for Healthy
Communities (YNHC) encourages. Through this program, the Quincy
students were connected via videoconferencing with university
scientists. They prepared a presentation of their research for a panel
of experts assembled at the University of Washington by the Center for
Ecogenetics and Environmental Health. The panelists queried the
students about their work, pushing the students to engage in critical
thinking. The network's resources and encouragement
helped energize the Quincy students. They researched the chemicals
involved in the leak, gathered documents from state and federal
agencies, and scrutinized air sample analysis. Their research showed
that the plume of contamination from the waste pond did not make a
right-angle turn as scientists had predicted, but instead flowed
straight under their high school. One student,
Camille Grigg, went to city hall to check correspondence between
agencies and learn about the public process that led to the scheduled
clean-up. Another student, Chelsea Dannen, checked what the government
knew about the health effects. Her analysis of documents found that
little was known. At first the students refused to
believe that school could be in session if the contamination were so
bad. Rob Stagg, the science teacher who worked with the students, said,
“They used to think that environmental issues were just dreamed up by
people with an agenda and that if there were a real problem we would
all know about it. Now they know that these issues involve real data
and that most people will never know about the issues unless they look
and listen for them.” The students concluded that
much more research needed to be done about the health effects of the
leak, and they learned something more: “They learned that it is within
our power to become aware of these conditions, share their
understanding with others, and influence actions taken to alter the
conditions,” said Stagg. He plans to continue working with YNHC in
years to come, helping class after class of students to study the
health effects of the chemical leak over the years, building a deep
community understanding of the issue. Already, one of his students,
Rose Gonzales, has analyzed the methods used to evaluate air quality
samples collected by previous Quincy High School students working with
Washington State University scientists. Quincy is
one of 28 schools around Washington state that have worked with YNHC in
the three years since it launched. Many have been in small, rural
towns, where young people are learning for themselves how environmental
issues affect their health and the lives of people in their
communities. Through YNHC, they are learning to ask tough questions and
then to take action.
Young people are frequently at the core of
social movements that change minds and hearts, and a growing coalition
of organizations is now supporting teen environmental health work. One
working in urban areas, Wilderness Inter-city Leadership Development
(WILD) project, works primarily with Asian and Pacific Islander teens
in the Seattle area. One of their initiatives prepares teens to help
elders and others in their communities with limited ability to read
English to understand posted fish warnings and household product labels
that warn of possible health hazards. Recently, the YMCA EarthService
Corps, with the help of the Institute for Children's Environmental
Health, devoted its annual teen symposium in Seattle to environmental
health topics—everything from the dangers of meth labs to pesticides in
food.
For more information on environmental
health efforts with young people, see the Center for Ecogenetics &
Environmental Health (CEEH),http://depts.washington.edu/ceeh/; Institute for Children's Environmental Health, www.iceh.org; Project WILD, www.projectwild.org; and YMCA Earthservice Corps, www.yesc.org. The National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences funds the CEEH and the YNHC program. Jon Sharpe is curriculum manager for the CEEH. Elise Miller is executive director of ICEH.
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