Marjorie Clarke: Difference between revisions
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===Committee memberships (public bodies)=== |
===Committee memberships (public bodies)=== |
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A longtime leader of both Manhattan's Citizens' Solid Waste Advisory Board and New York's City Recycling Advisory Board, Dr. Clarke serves on a large number of panels and committees, some connected to efforts to clean up lower [[Manhattan]] from the effects of [[9/11]] and others to solid waste prevention and recycling. These are listed on her full c.v. at [ |
A longtime leader of both Manhattan's Citizens' Solid Waste Advisory Board and New York's City Recycling Advisory Board, Dr. Clarke serves on a large number of panels and committees, some connected to efforts to clean up lower [[Manhattan]] from the effects of [[9/11]] and others to solid waste prevention and recycling. These are listed on her full c.v. at [http://www.maggieclarkeenvironmental.com www.maggieclarkeenvironmental.com]. |
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===NGO participation=== |
===NGO participation=== |
Revision as of 18:01, 7 June 2007
The neutrality of this article is disputed. |
Marjorie J. ("Maggie") Clarke, Ph.D., is an environmental scientist with specialties and experience in recycling participation, waste prevention methods, waste-to-energy/incinerator emissions controls, environmental impacts of the World Trade Center fires and collapse, community botanical gardening, bicycle route design, and citizen participation in government decision-making. Since the terrorist attacks on New York in 2001, she has been spending most of her efforts innovating methods of increasing participation in New York City's waste prevention and recycling programs and in understanding and publicizing the environmental consequences at the site of the World Trade Center.
Education
Born in 1953 and raised in Florida, a 1975 graduate of Smith College, she has degrees in geology- Smith B.A., environmental sciences - Johns Hopkins University M.A., energy technology - New York University, M.S., and a Ph.D. in earth & environmental sciences -- City University of New York.
Professional
Clarke was the Department of Sanitation's specialist on emissions from incinerators in the 1980s, the author of a book and a number of publications on the subject of minimizing emissions. She also served on a National Academy of Sciences committee on Health Effects of Waste Incineration, co-authoring the NRC publication by that name. She also served on the New Jersey Standard-Setting Task Force on Mercury emissions from incinerators in the early 1990s.
In 2002, she was a Scientist-in-Residence at Lehman College, and an adjunct professor at Lehman and Hunter College, City University of New York.
Her professional endeavors and a number of her papers and testimony are available through her website: www.maggieclarkeenvironmental.com. Her photography website is: www.maggieclarke.com.
Notable contributions
Dr. Clarke has been an effective documenter and articulator of technical issues relating to environmental toxicity and waste management and prevention ([1]).
Best known as a persistent questioner of Environment Protection Agency's claims about the safety of the World Trade Center site, Dr. Clarke has collected much data on toxicity and testified before dozens of committees and panels, from the U.S. Senate down to local eldercare centers. Dr. Clarke laid the groundwork for the later work of such area politicians as Congressman Jerrold Nadler and Senator Hillary Clinton.
She also conceived and garnered support for a New York City local law to eliminate 2200 apartment building incinerators in 1989.
Committee memberships (public bodies)
A longtime leader of both Manhattan's Citizens' Solid Waste Advisory Board and New York's City Recycling Advisory Board, Dr. Clarke serves on a large number of panels and committees, some connected to efforts to clean up lower Manhattan from the effects of 9/11 and others to solid waste prevention and recycling. These are listed on her full c.v. at www.maggieclarkeenvironmental.com.
NGO participation
Clarke has been chair or vice chair of the Manhattan Citizens' Solid Waste Advisory Board for 8 of the years since its inception in 1990, a steering committee member of the New York City Recycling Advisory Board since its inception in 1990, and was a founding member of the NYC Waste Prevention Coalition. Information on these, some of her testimony and writings can be found at her advisory boards website [[2]]. She has chaired and currently vice chairs the Municipal and Medical Waste Division of the Air & Waste Management Association [[3]] and is vice chair of the Manhattan Citizens' Solid Waste Advisory Board. She co-founded and has been president of the Riverside-Inwood Neighborhood Garden (RING) [[4]], a volunteer botanical garden in Upper Manhattan, since 1984.