# Core B: Community Engagement Core

> **NIH NIH P42** · UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA BERKELEY · 2021 · $165,156

## Abstract

CORE B: SUMMARY/ABSTRACT
 The new Community Engagement Core - Water Equity Science Shop (CEC-WESS) of the UC Berkeley
Superfund Research Program (the Center) seeks to address drinking water quality problems in California that
exist despite sophisticated statewide water infrastructure and federal water quality laws. Industrial and
agricultural activities in California have resulted in elevated levels of chemical contaminants in drinking water
such as nitrate, arsenic, pesticides, and chromium. Among small, rural, and socioeconomically disadvantaged
communities, degraded infrastructure and a lack of resources to treat contamination problems result in drinking
water that does not meet regulatory standards for health and safety. Residents served by water systems with
fewer than five service connections and those using private wells face even greater challenges, as these
systems are not regulated under existing drinking water laws and little monitoring exists to evaluate
contamination problems. The fact that communities with elevated concentrations of contaminants in their
drinking water are largely low income and disproportionately Latino raises environmental justice concerns.
 The CEC-WESS will address these water equity challenges by leveraging the biomedical and water quality
engineering expertise of Center to address the needs, priorities and concerns of community-based non-
governmental organizations (NGOs) working to address water quality concerns in disadvantaged communities.
The overall approach of the CEC-WESS draws on community-based participatory research methods and
European Science Shops as models that advance sustainable and socially-just strategies to improve drinking
water quality by engaging community-based organizations throughout the research process-- from the
identification of research questions, to the implementation of study protocols, and the interpretation and
dissemination of results. The CEC-WESS will conduct a needs assessment to identify community-driven
research needs that directly support to our NGO partners' efforts to identify solutions to prevent and reduce
harmful drinking water exposures in disadvantaged communities. In partnership with the NGO Community
Water Center, the CEC-WESS will conduct a pilot Domestic Well Intervention Study that tests the drinking
water quality of domestic well users living in areas of high ground water contamination, the quality of locally-
available alternative sources of drinking water, and the effectiveness of point-of-use treatment technologies.
The pilot study will include a community-driven results communication strategy that delivers individual test
results to participants and leverages study data to impact state water policy and future intervention efforts. In
so doing, the CEC-WESS will fill key knowledge gaps regarding drinking water quality and effective
interventions to vulnerable users who are beyond the purview of current water quality regulation, and empower
domestic well ...

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 10136007
- **Project number:** 5P42ES004705-33
- **Recipient organization:** UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA BERKELEY
- **Principal Investigator:** Rachel Adele Morello-Frosch
- **Activity code:** P42 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2021
- **Award amount:** $165,156
- **Award type:** 5
- **Project period:** 1997-04-01 → 2022-08-24

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/10136007

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 10136007, Core B: Community Engagement Core (5P42ES004705-33). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-22 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/10136007. Licensed CC0.

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