Children's Environmental Health
Awards
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Apply on or before
December 15th, 2005
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U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA.)
2006 Children's Environmental Health Excellence Awards
Children may be more susceptible to environmental haz-
ards than adults. Their nervous, immune, digestive, and other sys-
tems are still developing and their ability to metabolize or inactivate
toxicants may be different than adults. They eat more food, drink
more fluids, and breathe more air in proportion to their weight than
adults, and their behavior—such as crawling and placing objects in
their mouths—may result in greater exposure to environmental con-
taminants.
Environmental health hazards that may affect children include:
1 air pollutants, both indoor and ambient;
2 toxic chemicals such as lead, mercury, arsenic,
organochlorines such as polychlorinated biphenyls,
and dioxins;
3 endocrine disruptors;
4 environmental tobacco smoke;
5 ultraviolet radiation;
6 water pollution;
7 pesticides;
8 brominated flame retardants;
9 radon; and
10 carbon monoxide.
Many environmental health problems can be prevented, managed, and
treated. While EPA retains a major role in safeguarding children from
environmental risks, industry, communities, and organizations can
take action where they live, learn, and play.
The Children's Environmental Health Excellence Awards are
designed to recognize ongoing and sustainable dedication to, and
notable leadership in, protecting children from environmental health
risks at the local, regional, national, and international level. Excellence
Award winners will be invited to a reception in Washington, D.C.
Excellence Awardees will also receive the right to use the children's
environmental health excellence awards logo, recognition on EPA's
Web site and in a press release, and photos with a senior EPA official.
Organizations or individuals who do not receive the Excellence Award
may qualify for a special Recognition Award. Recognition Awardees
will receive a certificate of recognition and use of the children s envi-
ronmental health recognition awards logo.
Excellence Award Categories
The EPA Office of Children's Health Protection (OCHP) is accepting Applications for the 2006
Children's Environmental Health Excellence Awards within one of the following five categories:
1. Government - State, Local, Federal, and Tribal.
2. Non-Governmental Organizations - Including domestic and International for-profit and
non-profit organizations and all United Nations' agencies.
3. Corporate - Commercial and Industrial sector.
4. Individual.
5. K-12 and Higher Education.
You must apply under ONLY ONE category. Please note that if the program or project you are
applying for is a collaboration of entities that fall under more than one category, choose the
category that corresponds with the prime entity that is managing the program/project.
Examples of Projects
EPA will be looking for programs/projects that have a significant impact in addressing chil-
dren's environmental health issues through:
• Research—programs or projects that generate, and or apply scientific research,
tools, and assessments to allow for increased understanding of the relationship of the
environment to the health of children; science and research that leads to more pro-
tective public policy on children's environmental health is included here.
• Indicators—programs or projects that contribute to the identification, development,
and compilation of a set of measures that fully reflect environmental factors impor-
tant for children's health. These could include measures that reflect trends in levels of
environmental contaminants in air, water, food, and soil; concentrations of lead
measured in children's bodies; and childhood diseases that may be influenced by
environmental factors.
• Capacity Building—programs or projects that provide tools and or information to state,
tribal, and local governments, international entities, health care providers, private
companies, and NGOs to ensure that more and more organizations are able to take
effective action to protect children from environmental risks. Includes projects that
aim to incorporate protection of children into existing environment or health programs.
• Regulatory and Policy Innovations—programs or projects that inform or implement
policies that reduce or eliminate environmental hazards to children's health on the
local, regional, state, national, or international level.
• Education and Outreach—programs or projects that increase public awareness of
children's environmental health issues or teach the public about the relationship
between their environment and children's health. Education and Outreach programs
must be based on peer-reviewed science.
• Interventions—programs or projects that take direct action to reduce or eliminate
environmental pollutants that adversely affect children. For example, this could
include programs to reduce diesel emissions in school buses or to eliminate lead
paint sources in public housing.
Award Selection/Evaluation Criteria
Applications will be evaluated by a panel of reviewers from EPA who are authorities in the
field of children's environmental health. Reviewers will score each application in the areas
listed below for a maximum of 100 points.
1. Program/Project Design (30 points)
Please explain how your program/project addresses the following issues (limit narra-
tive to 400 words):
• Describe the goals, objectives, and outputs (if applicable) of your program/project.
• Describe how you identified your target audience (if applicable) and why.
• Discuss the relationship of these goals and objectives to the target audience (if
applicable).
• Discuss the relevance and scope of your program/project to children's environ-
mental health.
2. Results (40 points)
Please explain how your program/project measures success using the following criteria
(limit narrative to 400 words):
• Describe your program/project results (both quantitative and qualitative).
• Discuss how you evaluate the effectiveness and sustainability of your
program/project.
• Discuss how your program/project had, or is having a direct or indirect effect on
reducing children's environmental health hazards. Research programs can discuss
the potential future effects.
• Discuss the resources (including people and funding) for the program/project and
address whether they provide a good return on the investment.
• Discuss whether and how your program/project findings could be shared with others
in the field and how it could be replicated.
3. Supporting Materials (15 points)
Make sure to include any collateral materials developed under your program/project—
news articles, journal articles, photos, brochures, fact sheets, posters, etc.—with your
application. Please address the following issues (limit narrative to 200 words):
• Describe how materials were developed to support project goals.
• In the case of outreach and educational materials, describe how the messages were
crafted to reach the target audience. Describe the distribution methods of your sup-
porting materials. Describe any feedback you received from the target audience on
the materials you developed.
Since application forms will be submitted electronically, if possible, please also submit
supporting materials electronically. Should you need to send in a hard copy, please mail
it to the address on the right.
4. References (15 points)
Submit two letters from individuals or groups outside your immediate organization discussing
your efforts to protect children from environmental health risks. Letters should specifically
address how your program/project makes you a leader in the field of children's environmental
health protection.
Application
Your application must provide the following information:
1. Name of your organization;
2. Program or project name exactly as you would have it appear on an award;
3. Name of main contact (person who applied or is being nominated and will receive all
correspondence);
4. Address;
5. Phone number and fax number;
6. Email address;
7. Web site, if any;
8. Award category (choose ONLY ONE category that best represents your organization:
Government, NGO, Corporate, Individual, or K-12 and Higher Education);
9. Project Type (Science/Research, Indicators, Capacity Building, Regulatory/Policy
Innovations, Education/Outreach). CHOOSE ALL THAT APPLY. Should your project goals
and objectives combine more than one of these project types, please make sure that
you address each of these areas in the narrative section of your application;
10. Narrative (see #1 and 2 under Award Selection/Evaluation Criteria above);
11. Supporting Materials (see # 3 under Award Selection/Evaluation Criteria above); and
12. References (see # 4 under Award Selection/Evaluation Criteria above).
Please email your application, along with all supporting materials, to
OCHPapplications@icfconsulting.com. Although submitting your application
electronically is the preferred way, should you need to send a hard copy, please
mail it to the following address:
ICF Consulting, Inc.
Attn: Children's Health Awards Coordinator
1725 Eye Street, NW Suite 1000
Washington, DC 20006
Tel: 202-862-1200
Fax:202-862-1144
Organization Logo: Please provide both a color and a black-and-white version of your
organization's logo in EPS, JPEG, or TIFF format that will allow for a printable resolution of
300 dpi at a size of 4 inches. Please provide the logo electronically when you email your
application. In the event that your organization is chosen for an award, this logo will be used
in the Excellence Awards Ceremony materials. Logos meeting the specifications mentioned
above will allow us to present your organization's mark to its best advantage.
Note: Winners will be announced in the spring of 2006.
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