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Sammantha Magsino
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春梦直播鈥檚 professor Marcos Luna has been appointed to a for the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. The 11-member Committee, which includes experts in geospatial data science and environmental health from around the country, will provide expert advice on geospatial data and approaches to guide federal agencies in identifying disadvantaged communities. Professor Luna will be focusing on issues around measures of uncertainty in Census demographic data and assisting with the facilitation of community input to the Committee.
In January 2021, President Biden鈥檚 announced , which mandates that at least 40% of the benefits of certain federal programs must flow to disadvantaged communities that are marginalized, underserved, and overburdened by pollution. The subsequently developed a that federal agencies must use in order to identify communities eligible for benefits from federal investments in critical sectors. Although the CEQ has released an early version of this interactive mapping tool, it is actively seeking both community input and expert advice on how the tool should function, what data it can or should use, and equally important, how 鈥渄isadvantaged communities鈥 should be defined and identified.
In response to the CEQ鈥檚 request for expert guidance, the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine created a to analyze 鈥渉ow environmental health and geospatial data and environmental screening tools can inform the Council on Environmental Quality鈥檚 vision by conducting a data assessment to assist CEQ in considering the disparities it has prioritized.鈥 The is a private, non-profit research organization, originally chartered by the U.S. Congress in 1863, whose mission is to provide 鈥渋ndependent, objective advice to inform policy with evidence, spark progress and innovation, and confront challenging issues for the benefit of society.鈥 Professor Luna was nominated by National Academies staff and subsequently appointed by leadership in February 2023.
Luna is a professor in the Geography and Sustainability Department, and Coordinator of the graduate Geo-Information Science program at Salem State. His area of expertise is on applications of geospatial technology to environmental justice and social equity. He is actively involved in research, policy, and community advocacy around issues of environmental justice in the Commonwealth. Professor Luna played a key role in the development of Massachusetts鈥 first statewide environmental justice policy, passed as part of the , and he currently serves as a governor-appointed member of the .