UCLA Engineering Professor
wins Rosenfield Distinguished Community Partnership Award
Award recognizes collaborative efforts to enhance
the quality of life in Southern California
Yoram
Cohen, professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering, was
named a 2008 recipient of the Ann C. Rosenfield Distinguished
Community Partnership Prize. The program honors outstanding
examples of engaged scholarship in which UCLA faculty or staff
have collaborated with Los Angeles non-profit organizations
to address issues of community concern.
Cohen was recognized for his efforts
in spearheading a four-year long scientific effort and in assisting
the community in the cleanup of the Santa Susana Field Laboratory
(SSFL) located in Simi Valley (also known as the Boeing Rocket
Testing Facility). Cohen’s work helped frame the issues
surrounding the SSFL as a contamination site and a contamination
source.
Cohen, in partnership with the
Committee to Bridge the Gap (CBG), educated the public about
the adverse environmental and health impacts associated with
the release of chemical contaminants and radionuclides from
various operations at the SSFL. His study and its recommendations
contributed to the formulation and successful passage of California
State Senate bill (SB 990), authored by State Senator Sheila
Keuhl, that ensures the cleanup of the field laboratory area
and its designation as a state park when Boeing vacates the
location. Cohen’s efforts also included assistance to
Rep. Jane Harman in dealing with contamination of the pesticide
DDT in the congresswoman’s district. Cohen’s efforts
with the Water Technology Center, an engineering center which
works on advance technologies of water production, were also
recognized.
“It is essential that we
develop an understanding of the fate and effects of chemicals
in our environment and their impact on human health and environment,
especially as new chemicals and advanced nanomaterials are being
developed,” Cohen said. “Environmental protection
must consider not only the scientific issues associated with
environmental pollution but we should strive for greater transparency
of the regulatory process and work to address community concerns
in a timely manner. I hope that the SSFL story will serve as
an example of how academia and the community can work together
to have a positive impact on environmental protection and help
to improve community life.”
The Rosenfield Distinguished Community Partnership Prize program
is designed to publicly recognize ongoing or one-time collaborations
between UCLA faculty, or staff and with community residents
or non-profit organizations that have already enhanced the quality
of life in Southern California communities in meaningful and
measurable ways. The award, which includes a cash prize of $25,000
(made possible through the Ann C. Rosenfield Fund), is made
jointly to the principal UCLA participant and the community
partner, thereby publicly recognizing and uniting the two halves
of the UCLA in LA partnership.
For information on the Rosenfield Distinguished Community Partnership
Prize, including all the 2008 winners, visit: http://la.ucla.edu/awards/index.shtml
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04/09/08