TY - JOUR
T1 - Assessing environmental attitutes and concerns about a contaminated site in a densely populated suburban environment
AU - Burger, Joanna
N1 - Funding Information:
I thank C. Dixon, M. Fitzgerald, C. Jeitner, R. Ramos, S. Shukla, and M. Gochfeld for field and computer assistance during all phases of the research, and M. Gochfeld, B. D. Goldstein, M. Greenberg, E. Faustman, B. Friedlander, and C. Powers for valuable comments on the research or manuscript. This research was conducted under a Rutgers University human subjects protocol, and was partly funded by NIEHS (ESO 5022) and the Consortium for Risk Evaluation with Stakeholder Participation (DOE, DE-FG 26-00NT 40938). The results, conclusions and interpretations reported herein are the sole responsibility of the author, and should not in any way be interpreted as representing the views of the funding agencies.
PY - 2005/1
Y1 - 2005/1
N2 - Considerable attention has been devoted to the concerns and perceptions of people residing around contaminated facilities, both brownfields in urban areas and others located in remote and lightly populated areas. This paper examines the concerns of recreationists and sportsmen residing near the Department of Energy's (DOE) Brookhaven National Laboratory, in central Long Island, one of the most densely populated regions in the United States, where tourism is of prime importance. On an open-ended question, the greatest concern was pollution, followed by environmental health as a global concern, and human health as a concern for Brookhaven. Accidents/spills, loss of public health, and loss of ecological health were rated highest among a list of concerns, and change in property values was rated lowest. When asked to rank seven concerns, protecting human health was ranked the highest, and economic interests were ranked the lowest. For future land use at Brookhaven, recreational uses were rated the highest, while building houses and factories, and storage of nuclear material were rated the lowest. These data can be used by managers, decision and policy makers, and the general public to assess and manage local and regional environmental concerns and to consider future land uses for decommissioned lands, such as those at Brookhaven.
AB - Considerable attention has been devoted to the concerns and perceptions of people residing around contaminated facilities, both brownfields in urban areas and others located in remote and lightly populated areas. This paper examines the concerns of recreationists and sportsmen residing near the Department of Energy's (DOE) Brookhaven National Laboratory, in central Long Island, one of the most densely populated regions in the United States, where tourism is of prime importance. On an open-ended question, the greatest concern was pollution, followed by environmental health as a global concern, and human health as a concern for Brookhaven. Accidents/spills, loss of public health, and loss of ecological health were rated highest among a list of concerns, and change in property values was rated lowest. When asked to rank seven concerns, protecting human health was ranked the highest, and economic interests were ranked the lowest. For future land use at Brookhaven, recreational uses were rated the highest, while building houses and factories, and storage of nuclear material were rated the lowest. These data can be used by managers, decision and policy makers, and the general public to assess and manage local and regional environmental concerns and to consider future land uses for decommissioned lands, such as those at Brookhaven.
KW - Brookhaven
KW - Department of Energy
KW - Economic interests
KW - Environmental perceptions
KW - Future land use
KW - Global environmental concerns
KW - Recreation
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M3 - Article
C2 - 15739267
AN - SCOPUS:14944384728
SN - 0167-6369
VL - 101
SP - 147
EP - 165
JO - Environmental monitoring and assessment
JF - Environmental monitoring and assessment
IS - 1-3
ER -