EPA

Tribal Science
Bulletin

VOLUME 5, ISSUE 2« FALL 2 0 2 2
NATIONAL EPA-TRIBAL SCIENCE COUNCIL (TSC

GREETINGS FROM THE TSC EPA CO-CHAIR

My name is Tim Canfield. I am privileged, honored and humbled
to start my term as the TSC EPA Co-Chair, I was born and raised
in Bloomfield, Connecticut, but now make my home in Ada,
Oklahoma, I started my federal career in 1986 with the U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service in Columbia, Missouri. During my career, I
have worked for the National Biological Survey/Service,
U.S. Geological Survey and currently EPA I am married
(35 years and counting!} and have three grown daughters, two
sons-in-law, and as of April 2022, one grandson!

I am a limnologist by training but have worked in many diverse
areas of environmental research thr oughout my career. Prior to
coming to EPA in 1997,1 worked at the National Fisheries and
Contaminant Research Center in Columbia, Missouri, where I conducted research in
evaluating the effects of sediment contamination on resident benthic invertebrate
populations as part of an integrated assessment of several areas, including priority sites in
the Great Lakes, Superfund sites in Montana and Missouri, sites along the Upper
Mississippi River, and military sites in Aberdeen, Maryland.

I currently work at the Robert S. Kerr Environmental Research Laboratory (known locally
as the "Kerr Lab'3 in Ada, Oklahoma, which is part of the Office of Research and
Development (ORD). Within ORD, 1 work in the Center for Environmental Solutions and
Emergency Response, Groundwater Characterization and Remediation Division, Technical
Support and Environmental Restoration Branch. During the 25 years 1 have been with
EPA, I've worked primarily on ecosystem restoration and risk management research and
developing community structured decision-making approaches to address community
environmental issues. During the first 8 to 12 years of my EPA career, I was involved in a
broad spectrum of ecosystem restoration research projects. During the last 10 to 13 years,
I have served as co-lead for developing and implementing a Structured Decision Support
Approach for working with communities, especially small communities, to address
environmental challenges. 1 also serve as Chair of EPA's Cross-ORD Tribal Workgroup.

Throughout my career, I have been fortunate and honored to serve in multiple leadership
roles for nongovernmental science organizations, serving as ASTM International's
Committee Chair for ASTM Committee E47 on Biological Fate and Environmental Effects. I
have served on the North American Geographic Unit Board of Directors and global World
Council for the Society of Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry, serving as Vice-
President and President of both the North American and Global organizations. I currently
serve on the East Central University Linscheid Library Board of Directors. I am looking
forward to serving the TSC in my new role.

Key Dates & Events

•	Region 5 Regional Tribal
Operations Committee
(RTOC) Meeting,

November 29-30,

Cass Lake, MN

•	Region 1 Wolastoq/St. John
River International
Watershed Restoration
Summit, November 29-30,
Bangor, ME

•	White House Tribal Nations
Summit. November 30-

December 1, Washington, DC

•	Region 6 RTOC Meeting,
December 1, Virtual

•	Region 10 Extended RTOC
Meeting, December 5-7,
Seattle, WA

•	TSC Fall 2022 Face-to-Face
Meeting, December 6-8,
Research Triangle Park, NC

Inside This Issue

Regional Tribal Meetings 2
In Memoriam: David Jewett 3
Of Tribal Interest	4


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EPA Tribal Science Bulletin

REGIONAL TRIBAL MEETINGS

Attendees pose in front of the Haskell sign. Image
courtesy M.isha Mazurkewycz and Eliodora Chamberlain.

Signing the MOU. Image Touring the Haskell-Baker Wetlands,
courtesy Misha Mazurkewycz. Image courtesy Eliodora Chamberlain.

EPA Region 5 Tribal Water Workshop

In October, EPA Region 5 and the
Prairie Island Indian Community
and Shakopee Mdewakanton Sioux
Community co-hosted the Tribal
Water Workshop. Representatives
from 35 tribes in the Midwest
attended the workshop, which was
intended to build capacity for tribes
and focused on such topics as soil
health, prairie restoration, water
quality monitoring, data analysis,
erosion control and green roofs.

The Prairie Island Indian Community
Land and Environment Department
led several tours. The pollution
reduction tour focused on marina
best management practices and
erosion prevention. Attendees

Volume 5, Issue 2 ••• Page 2

learned about the Edwin Buck Jr.
Memorial Buffalo Project, which
improves resiliency against flood
waters and erosion and supports the
Native Mdewakanton Sioux culture
and spirituality, as well as about
prairie and oak savannah
restorations that improve resiliency
against nutrient loading and erosion.
Participants also toured the
Huqkayapi TaOyaqke Ka Pezuta
Wozu Cistiqna (Elder's Cultural and
Medicinal Garden], in which 30
native species with cultural and
medicinal uses and 20 native prairie
species that promote pollinators and
healthy soil are grown. The next
Tribal Water Workshop will be held
in Michigan in 2024.

EPA Joint Region 7 and 8 Regional Tribal Operations Committee (RTOC) Meeting

Regions 7 and 8 held a joint
meeting at Haskell Indian Nations
University in October after 10 years
of planning. Seven of nine Region 7
tribes and 25 of 28 Region 8 tribes
attended the meeting, which began
with Haskell and Region 7 signing a
memorandum of understanding to
promote student career
opportunities and environmental
outreach on campus. The meeting
continued with presentations and
discussions on PFAS, changes to the
Clean Water Act Section 319

Wetlands, where Haskell students
showcased their research projects.
The meeting ended with the RTOC
inviting Haskell students to
participate in the On-Campus Pilot
Program. The students shared their
resumes, background and
experience, and one student was
hired by the Kickapoo Tribe of
Oklahoma. Attendees expressed that
it was truly great to get together
with another region and learn from
different perspectives.

request for applications, the Missouri
River Basin Interagency group,
drones, food sovereignty, misuse of
pesticides, climate change effects on
tribes, a unique solid waste program,
the U.S. Supreme Court McGirt v.
Oklahoma decision, the Indian
General Assistance Program, and a
new visualization tool.

The meeting also included a tour of
campus and a discussion of Haskell's
history. Attendees were treated to a
field trip to the Haskell-Baker

Images courtesy Prairie Island Indian
Community.


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National EPA-Tribal Science Council

IN MEMORIAM: DAVID JEWETT

David Jewett, former TSC EPA Co-Chair, passed away on August 24,2022, after a long, valiant battle
with progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP), an illness without a cure, Dave passed away peacefully
at home surrounded by his wife, Kathy, his daughters, Andie and Sami, and his sister-in-law, Myra.

He was born to Maiy and David Jewett. in New Brunswick, New Jersey, on July 31,1959, and had a
childhood that, according to Dave, mirrored/? Christmas Story. He attended Syracuse University,
originally planning to enter broadcasting but he chose another path and graduated with a B.S. in
geology. Dave worked as an EMT—becoming the Director of Operations at the Syracuse University	*

Ambulance his senior year—as a way to give back to the university community. Dave went on to
obtain an M.S. in geology at Wichita State University and a Ph.D. in hydrology with a minor in civil and environmental
engineering from the University of Arizona. Following his graduate education, he became an educator at Indiana
University-Purdue University Indianapolis.

Dave started with EPA in 1997 at the Robert S. Kerr Environmental Research Laboratory in
Ada, Oklahoma. Dave was an excellenthydrogeologistresearcher, buthe also served in a
variety of roles during his 23 years at Kerr Lab, including as Co-Director of the Center for
Subsurface Modeling Support, Branch Chief and Acting Division Director. In addition to serving
as the TSC EPA Co-Chair, he served on numerous national and international review panels.

Dave was outgoing jovial and enthusiastic, with a larger-than-life personality. A jokester with
an infectious sense of humor, he loved a good button-down Hawaiian shirt Dave was at ease
with all people and could talk with a small group or present research in front of hundreds,
equally comfortable with highly technical professionals or common, eveiyday people he met
around town. You would be hard pressed to find anyone who did not like Dave. Working in
government academia and industry, Dave wore many hats and was passionate in many
endeavors, but those who knew him best knew it was going to be a good time when his
Yankees cap wound up backwards on his head! Dave liked spoils of all kinds and loved watching and supporting his
daughters in their endeavors, especially sports. He was an avid sailor
and loved camping and canoeing with friends. Some of the best
discussions with Dave happened around a campfire, sharing that ever-
present, deep belly laugh.

Dave was big on education (his—yours—mine), so we know he would
like you to learn a bit about the rare disease thattook his life. PSP is a
degenerative brain disease that seriously affects balance, movement,
vision, speech and swallowing. PSP has no known cause and no known
cure. It is a prime-of-life disease, often occurring when many people
have family responsibilities, careers and active lives—if you knew Dave,
you know he ticked all of those boxes. He knew that finding a cure was unlikely before the disease took him, but he kept
learning whatever he could. Dave donated his brain to the Mayo Clinic for PSP research in the hopes that it will help

provide clues and answers to finding a cure for this insidious disease.

For those of us who were privileged to know, work with and socialize with
Dave Jewett, we will miss him and cany his memoiy with us. Until we see you
again Dave, smooth sailing and Godspeed my friend!

Page 3 ••• Fall 2022


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EPA Tribal Science Bulletin

OF TRIBAL INTEREST

BOYS & GIRLS CLUBS OF AMERICA NATIVE SERVICES

EPA's Office of Children's Health Protection has partnered with the Boys & Girls Clubs of America Native Services Program to
integrate children's environmental health, environmental justice and environmental education into club programs and
activities. This partnership addresses key environmental health exposures, including indoor air quality, lead exposures,
climate change and climate justice, drinking water, and water quality. The Native Services Program has 233 clubs on tribal
lands and clubs in 28 states. For more information contact Ted Coopwood, National Youth/Regional Coordinator in the EPA
Office of Children's Health Protection, at coopwood.theodore@epa.gov or 202-564-2197.

2022 INDIAN GENERAL ASSISTANCE PROGRAM (GAP) GUIDANCE

On September 30, EPA's American Indian Environmental Office published the 2022 GAP Guidance. Written with support from
tribes, intertribal consortia, EPA program offices and EPA-tribal partnership groups, the guidance provides a national
framework for building tribal environmental capacity. The GAP program arose when Congress passed the Indian
Environmental General Assistance Program Act in 1992. This act authorized EPA to provide GAP grants to federally
recognized tribes and tribal consortia for planning, developing and establishing environmental protection programs in
Indian country and for developing and implementing solid and hazardous waste programs on tribal lands.

TRIBAL POLLINATOR PROTECTION

Through a cooperative agreement, EPA's Office of Chemical Safety and Pollution Prevention works closely with the Tribal
Pesticide Program Council [TPPC] on issues related to pesticide programs and has created a working group to support tribes'
pollinator protection efforts. During the past year, the TPPC Pollinator Protection Workgroup provided significant feedback
to inform the USD A Annual Strategic Pollinator Priorities Report: 2022. This report enables the U.S. Department of Agriculture
(USDA) and its partners to make efficient and informed decisions to support pollinator health, which is a multifaceted and
complicated issue that is of cultural importance for tribes.

The following paragraph from the report summarizes the cultural importance of pollinators to tribes: "Of the 574 federally
recognized tribes, many have long-standing relationships with pollinators that work toward long-term conservation of wild
pollinators. This doesn't account for the over 200 tribes that are not federally recognized who have similar relationships. For
tribal communities, in addition to the $4 billion and $5.9 billion directly and indirectly attributed to various crops, native or
wild pollinators represent continuity in cultural, historic, ecological and scientific value that make up their heritage and
provide food security. There is a land ethic on which a monetary value cannot be placed and various relationships that are
important for sustainability, such as water systems, soil health, biodiversity and pollinator health, and value continues to
build from the interconnectivity of these factors that are very important to tribal communities. Pollinators are needed for
reproduction of plants of cultural importance to Native American tribes, such as the continued supply of pollen for
ceremonies, including food and wellness uses."

The TPPC Pollinator Protection Workgroup will continue to create new relationships to expand support for pollinator
protection and provide feedback to the USDA Pollinator Workgroup. Other TPPC working groups focused on risk assessment
and direct implementation have ongoing projects. The TPPC meets virtually monthly with EPA and in person twice annually,
and the working groups meet virtually monthly.

DO YOU HAVE QUESTIONS ABOUT THE TSC OR THE BULLETIN? CONTACT MONICA RODIA,

TSC Executive Secretary, EPA Office of Science Advisor, Policy and Engagement,
AT RODIA.MONICA@EPA.GOV OR (202) 564-8322.

Volume 5, Issue 2 ••• Page 4


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