Appendices
Appendix A
STEERING GROUP
Jesse H. Ausubel, Chair
Director
Program for the Human Environment
The Rockefeller University
1230 York Avenue, Box 234
New York, NY 10021
Tel: 212-327-7917
Fax: 212-327-7519
Terry Davies
Director and Senior Fellow
Center for Risk Management
Resources for the Future
1616 P Street, NW
Washington, DC 20036
Tel: 202-328-5080
Fax: 202-939-3460
Maxine L. Rockoff
Information Technology Initiative Office
6 MetroTech Center, Room 152
Brooklyn, NY 11201
Tel: 718-643-3252
Fax: 718-643-3362
Dr. William L. Roper
President
The Prudential Center for Health Care Research
2859 Paces Ferry Road, Suite 820
Atlanta, GA 30339
Tel: 404-801-7880
Fax: 404-801-7170
Lenny Siegel
Director
Pacific Studies Center
222B View Street
Mountain View, CA 94041
Tel: 415-969-1545
Fax: 415-968-1126
John H. Steele
Senior Scientist
Marine Policy Center
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Woods Hole, MA 02543
Tel: 508-457-2000 x2220
Fax: 508-457-2184
Iddo K. Wernick
Research Associate
Program for the Human Environment
The Rockefeller University
1230 York Avenue, Box 234
New York, NY 10021
Tel: 212-327-7842
Fax: 212-327-7519
Liaison with The Robert Wood Johnson
Foundation
Robert G. Hughes
Director of Program Research
The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
Route 1 North and College Road East
Post Office Box 2316
Princeton, NJ 08543-2316
Tel: 609-452-8701
Fax: 609-987-8746
FORUM PARTICIPANTS
Jesse H. Ausubel is Director of the Program for the Human
Environment at The Rockefeller University in New York City.
Formerly, Mr. Ausubel served as Director of Studies of the Carnegie
Commission on Science, Technology, and Government. From 1977 to
1988, Mr. Ausubel was associated with the National Academy complex,
serving as a Sloan Fellow of the National Academy of Sciences, a
Staff Officer with the National Research Council Board on
Atmospheric Sciences and Climate, and Director of Programs for the
National Academy of Engineering.
Daniel Beardsley is Managing Partner of Albers &
Company. Most recently, he was EPA's Director of Assistance
Programs for the Office of International Activities, where he
managed a multimillion-dollar bilateral cooperative program with
central and eastern European nations. Prior to that, Mr. Beardsley
was EPA's Deputy Assistant Administrator for Policy, Planning and
Evaluation, where he codirected reauthorization of the Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act. His early career included directing
drug rehabilitation programs for the National League of Cities and
serving as the Executive Assistant to the Director of the Peace
Corps.
Alexander G. Bearn began his career in the United States as
a Research Associate and Assistant Physician in the Hospital at The
Rockefeller Institute, becoming a Professor in 1964. He is a former
Chairman of the Department of Medicine at Cornell University
Medical College and was Senior Vice President of Medical and
Scientifi c Affairs at Merck & Co.'s International Division.
Currently, Dr. Bearn serves as a Trustee of the Rockefeller
University and of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.
Jodie Bernstein is responsible for developing and
implementing the WMX Technologies, Inc.'s Ethics Policies that
govern the WMX family of environmental services companies. Ms.
Bernstein joined Chemical Waste Management, a subsidiary of WMX, in
1985 as Vice President and General Counsel. She was appointed to
her current position in 1990. She has served as General Counsel and
Acting Assistant Administrator for Enforcement of the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency and as General Counsel of the
Department of Health and Human Services.
Patricia Boiko is a research scientist in the Department of
Environmental Health at the University of Washington and a
practicing Family Physician. She has a Master of Public Health in
Epidemiology and completed a National Institutes of Health
Fellowship in primary care research. She was actively involved in
community environmental boards such as the Spokane County Air
Pollution Control Authority Advisory Board. She studied the risk
communication process in central Washington, examining the role of
the practicing physicians as environmental risk communicators for
their communities.
J. Clarence (Terry) Davies is Director and Senior Fellow of
the Center for Risk Management at Resources for the Future (RFF).
He was formerly Senior Fellow at the World Wildlife Fund and
Executive Director of the National Commission on the Environment.
Prior to that, he was Assistant Administrator for Policy, Planning
and Evaluation at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency where he
had oversight responsibilities for all policies and programs at EPA
as well as the regulatory process. Before joining the EPA, he was
Executive Vice President of The Conservation Foundation from 1976
to 1989.
Theodore S. Glickman is a Senior Fellow in the Center for
Risk Management at Resources for the Future. He has been on the
faculties of Boston University, Virginia Tech, and Johns Hopkins
and has held research positions at the World Bank and the U.S.
Department of Transportation's Transportation Systems Center in
Cambridge. Dr. Glickman's research interests are in risk assessment
methods and their application to technological systems. He serves
on several committees of the National Research Council. The book
Readings in Risk, which he coedited, is currently in its
third printing.
Jane E. Henney, M.D., is the First Vice President of the
University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center. Previously, Dr.
Henney served as the Deputy Commissioner for the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration. Dr. Henney was Vice Chancellor for Health Programs
and Policy at the University of Kansas immediately prior to joining
the FDA, where she also held positions as Associate Vice
Chancellor, Interim Dean of the School of Medicine, and Acting
Director of the University of Kansas Mid America Cancer Center.
From 1976 to 1985, Dr. Henney was at the National Cancer Institute
where she was Deputy Director from 1980 to 1985.
Jules Hirsch, M.D., is Sherman M. Fairchild Professor of The
Rockefeller University and Physician-in-Chief of The Rockefeller
University Hospital. Dr. Hirsch is a world leader in the scientific
study of obesity and the role of obesity in degenerative disease.
He came to The Rockefeller in 1954 with the title of Assistant and
Assistant Physician and received the title of Professor and Senior
Physician in 1967. Dr. Hirsch is also an Adjunct Professor of
Medicine at the Cornell University Medical Center and at Columbia
University.
Donald F. Hornig is currently Professor Emeritus at the
Harvard School of Public Health, where he was Professor of
Chemistry and Director of the Interdisciplinary Programs in Health
from 1977 to 1990. He is also President Emeritus of Brown
University where he served from 1970 to 1976 following a brief stay
as Vice President and Director of the Eastman Kodak Company. He
served as a science advisor to Presidents Eisenhower, Kennedy, and
Johnson and from 1964 to 1969 was Special Assistant for Science and
Technology under President Johnson. In this capacity, he also
chaired the President's Science Advisory Committee and the Federal
Council on Science and Technology, while also serving as Director
of the Office of Science and Technology in the Executive Office of
the President. Before coming to Washington, he held professorships
in Physical Chemistry at Princeton and Brown Universities.
Judith Jones is Director of the National Center for Children
in Poverty and Associate Clinical Professor in Public Health at
Columbia University. She also directs the National Program Office
of The Robert Wood Johnson's five-year Head Start initiative, Free
to Grow, which is housed at the Center. Previously, she served as
Deputy Director of the Center for Population and Family Health at
Columbia University. In that position, she designed and managed a
broad range of clinical and educational programs including the
implementation of comprehensive school-based clinics at the middle
school level, as well as an intervention to streamline Medicaid
certifi cation to increase early receipt of prenatal care.
Susan Klitzman has been the Director of Environmental and
Occupational Epidemiology at the New York City Department of Health
since 1988. She has been involved in numerous studies of the health
effects of occupational and environmental exposures on residents in
New York City. She is currently interested in developing more
effective methods for evaluating and educating the public about
community environmental health. Previously, Dr. Klitzman was a
postdoctoral fellow at the University of Michigan School of Public
Health. She has authored numerous publications in the fields of
occupational and environmental health.
Joshua Lederberg is a university professor of Molecular
Genetics and Informatics at The Rockefeller University. Dr.
Lederberg previously served as Professor of Genetics at the
University of Wisconsin, then at Stanford School of Medicine,
before coming to the Rockefeller in 1978. His life-long research,
for which he received the Nobel Prize in 1958 (at the age of 33),
has been in
genetic structure and function in microorganisms. He has been
actively involved in artificial intelligence research (in computer
science) and in the NASA experimental programs seeking life on
Mars. He has also been a consultant on environmental and
health-related matters for government and the international
community. For example, he has long had a keen interest in
international health and has served for six years on WHO's Advisory
Health Research Council. From 1978 to 1990, he served as President
of The Rockefeller University.
Nancy McDermott is the Associate Executive Director of
Sunnyside Community Services in western Queens, one of 37
settlement houses in New York City. Her previous positions include
auditing development programs throughout the world for Catholic
Relief Services and working for the National Academy of
Engineering. Her educational background includes a Master of Public
Administration degree from Columbia University and a Bachelor of
Arts degree from Carleton College.
Richard A. Minard, Jr. is the Associate Director of the
Center for Competitive Sustainable Economies at the National
Academy of Public Administration. For the last five years, he has
been a leader in the field of state and community comparative
environmental risk projects. Minard was founder and director of the
Northeast Center for Comparative Risk at Vermont Law School (1991
to 1993). Minard served as the Director of Vermont Governor
Madeleine M. Kunin's Office of Policy Research and Coordination
(1986 to 1989) and as Director of the State of Vermont's
comparative risk project (1989 to 1991) during which time he
assisted then Natural Resources Secretary Jonathan Lash in his work
as cochairman of the EPA Science Advisory Board's "Reducing Risk"
panel.
Maxine L. Rockoff joined United Neighborhood Houses of New
York, Inc. in July 1993, to initiate an information technology
project for settlement houses. Since 1985 she has been a principal
in Clark, Rockoff and Associates, consulting in strategic planning
and development for computer- and telecommunications-based products
and services. She served as Senior Administrator of the Carnegie
Commission on Science, Technology, and Government. Prior to that,
Dr. Rockoff was Vice President and Director of Branch Group
Automation at Paine Webber and Vice President and Manager of
Marketing Technologies at Merrill Lynch from 1980 to 1985. Earlier
she was Vice President for Planning and Research at the Corporation
for Public Broadcasting and Program Analyst at the Department of
Energy. At the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare from
1971 through 1978, she initiated and managed a telecommunications
research and development program for improving health care delivery
in medically underserved areas.
William L. Roper, M.D., is President of the Prudential
Center for Health Care Research, a new unit of the Prudential
Health Care System designed to coordinate and perform health
services research projects for Prudential. Before coming to this
position, Dr. Roper was director of the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention
(CDC) from 1990 until 1993. He previously served as Deputy
Assistant to the President for domestic policy and Director of the
White House Office of Policy Development in 1989 and 1990. Earlier,
Dr. Roper served in the White House as Special Assistant to the
President for health policy from 1983 to 1986. He is board
certified in pediatrics and in preventive medicine and is licensed
to practice medicine in Alabama.
Lenny Siegel has served as Director of the Pacific Studies
Center in Mountain View, California, since 1969. He was a member of
the Environmental Planning Commission for the City of Mountain View
from 1978 to 1981. He cofounded both the Silicon Valley Toxics
Coalition and the Santa Clara Center for Occupational Safety and
Health. In 1992, he served on Santa Clara County's Strategic Vision
Task Force and represents the Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition on
the Moffett Naval Air Station Technical Review Committee and
California/EPA's Base Closure Environmental Advisory Committee. He
also serves on the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's Federal
Facilities Environmental Restoration Dialogue Committee and the
Working Group on Military Wastes of the Western Governors'
Association DOIT (Demonstration of Innovative Technologies)
Advisory Committee. He is an invited speaker at numerous public
forums and hearings on both high-technology and military
environmental issues. He currently serves on the subcommittee on
waste of EPAs National Environmental Justice Advisory Committee.
John H. Steele is currently Senior Scientist and Director
Emeritus at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. His principal
research interests include analysis of the structure and dynamics
of marine ecosystems and comparisons with terrestrial systems. He
is currently a member of the Board of Exxon Corporation, Robert
Wood Johnson Foundation, the Arctic Research Commission, and the
National Geographic Society's Committee for Research and
Exploration. He was awarded the prestigious Alexander Agassiz medal
by the National Academy of Science in 1973. Dr. Steele is the
United States Delegate to the International Council for Exploration
of the Sea.
Iddo K. Wernick is a Research Associate in the Program for
the Human Environment at The Rockefeller University. Dr. Wernick
received his B.S. in physics at UCLA in 1987 and Ph.D. in applied
physics from Columbia University in 1992. Dr. Wernick's primary
area of research is anthropogenic materials flows and technologies
for reducing their impact on the natural environment. He has also
investigated environment-related causes of mortality and issues in
risk assessment.
Appendix B
INFORMATION RESOURCES
National Neighborhoods Indicators Project
Talton Ray
3029 Ordway Street NW
Washington, DC 20008
Tel: 202-363-5480
Fax: 202-363-5480
Northeast Center for Comparative Risk
Kenneth Jones, Director
Vermont Law School
Post Office Box 96
Chelsea Street
South Royalton, VT 05068
Tel: 802-763-8303
Fax: 802-763-3217
Western Center for Comparative Risk
Kate Kramer, Executive Director
Post Office Box 7576
Boulder, CO 80306
Tel: 303-494-6393
Fax: 303-499-8340
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
Office of Strategic Planning
and Environmental Data
Debora C. Martin, Chief
Mail Code 2162
401 M Street SW
Washington, DC 20460
Tel: 202-260-2699
U.S. Department of Energy
Office of Environmental Management
Barbara Joyce Frank
Technology Transfer and Program Integration, EM-52
Washington, DC 20585-0002
Tel: 301-903-7936
Fax: 301-903-7238
Nancy Watkins
Community Health Promotion
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Mail Stop K46
4770 Buford Highway NE
Atlanta, GA 30341
Tel: 404-488-5532
Ashley Files
Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion
USDHHS
330 C Street SW, Room 2132
Washington, DC 20201
Tel: 202-205-5968
Heidi Klein
National Association of County and
City Health Officials
440 1st Street NW, Suite 500
Washington, DC 20001
Tel: 202-783-5550
Fax: 202-783-1583
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