Gardenroots highlighted in Edible magazine article entitled: "Reading Roots".
The Gold King Mine spill that resulted in the sudden movement of millions of gallons of acid mine drainage into the Colorado River Basin in August 2015 has left many community members pondering the short- and long-term impacts of the spill. Mónica Ramírez-Andreotta, SRP investigator, was invited to give a presentation on the impacts of the spill at the 2nd Annual Desert Produce Safety Collaboration Conference in Yuma, AZ on January 12, 2016. The goal of multi-stakeholder conference hosted by the University of Arizona Cooperative Extension was to increase collaboration among all people who play a role in food safety. Ramírez-Andreotta was invited due to her expertise estimating the risk of environmental contamination of garden vegetables. Her talk, entitled: "Understanding the Gold King Mine Spill: Impacts on Water Quality and Potential Risks” drew from the bulletin developed by the University of Arizona Superfund Research Program, “Understanding the Gold King Mine Spill,” which Ramírez-Andreotta also handed out to farm representatives attending the event.
Dr. Ramirez-Andreotta spent a Saturday afternoon this April talking about environmental health justice and community gardening at the UA Biosphere II in Oracle, Arizona.
University of Arizona Superfund Research Program (UA SRP) Research Translation Core (RTC) investigator, Dr. Monica Ramirez-Andreotta, has been making waves since returning home to take a faculty position at her alma mater, the University of Arizona, last year. Ramirez-Andreotta is a transdisciplinary environmental health scientist who specializes in the fate and transport of contaminants in plant-soil systems, research translation, and community engagement efforts. Within this last year, she has received a number of city, state, international, and foundation grants to support her burgeoning research program.