A case study in innovative outreach - Combining training, research, and technology transfer to address real-world problems

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Abstract

Outreach, training, technology transfer, and research are often treated as programmatically distinct activities. The interdisciplinary and applied aspects of the Superfund Basic Research Program offer an opportunity to explore different models. A case study is presented that describes a collaborative outreach effort California's Davis and Berkeley program projects, the University of California Systemwide Toxic Substances Research and Teaching Program, the U.S. Navy's civilian workforce at the former Mare Island Naval Shipyard, Vallejo, California (MINSY), a Department of Defense (DoD) Environmental Education Demonstration Grant program, and the Private Industry Council of Napa and Sonoma counties in California. The effort applied a Superfund-developed technology to a combined waste, radium and polychlorinated biphenyl contamination, stemming from a problematic removal action at an installation/restoration site at MINSY. The effort demonstrates that opportunities for similar collaborations are possible at DoD installations.

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APA

Chang, D. P. Y. (1998). A case study in innovative outreach - Combining training, research, and technology transfer to address real-world problems. In Environmental Health Perspectives (Vol. 106, pp. 1065–1067). Public Health Services, US Dept of Health and Human Services. https://doi.org/10.1289/ehp.98106s41065

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