Print Friendly and PDF
Welcome our hardworking interns — and, hey, whatcha reading?
Mo catching up on some reading. (Credit: Brian Bienkowski)

Welcome our hardworking interns — and, hey, whatcha reading?

Summer interns, a new advisory board, and your suggestions for summer

Summer is upon us — and things are heating up at EHN.


We've partnered with two of the nation's top journalism programs — the Knight Center for Environmental Journalism at Michigan State University and the MIT Graduate Program in Science Writing — to work with three talented journalists for the summer.

Emily Makowski

Emily Makowski is finishing up the MIT program and comes to reporting after a stint studying moths and mice. We haven't confirmed it yet, but, with choral singing as a hobby, we suspect she's the best singer on EHN's staff.

Makowski will be investigating the latest science and on-the-ground issues around food systems, climate change and sustainability. Keep an eye out for a story soon on climbing temperatures and the future of our crops. Contact Emily at @EmilyRMakowski.

Madeleine Turner

Madeleine Turner is also finishing up the MIT program with a Masters in science writing and comes to us with a background in ecology and evolutionary biology. She probably knows more about coast redwoods than you.

Turner will be reporting on food security, agriculture and biodiversity for EHN. First up is a look at the uncertain politics of plant-based and lab-grown meats. Contact Madeleine at @madsciwriter.

Andrew Blok

Andrew Blok comes to EHN from the greatest J-school graduate program of all, the Knight Center for Environmental Journalism at Michigan State University (As a graduate, I am just a bit biased – Go Green!). Blok recently won regional and national awards for a reporting project on algal blooms in the Great Lakes region.

He's more than likely off chasing warblers as I write this.

Blok recently wrote of a Michigan tribe's fight to set their own water regulations and is examining what old, threatened trees can tell us about climate change. Contact Andrew at @blok_andrew.

Our new advisory board 

We are also pleased to announce the creation of an advisory board to help with strategic decisions and guidance. Environmental Health Sciences, the publisher of EHN.org and DailyClimate.org, underwent a transformative change starting in late 2017, when it transitioned from a founder-led organization to executive director leadership. This is the next step in that process.

The new board:

  • Dr. Pete Myers, chair, founder and chief scientist of Environmental Health Sciences
  • Julie Jones, co-founder, Advancing Green Chemistry
  • Lina Constantinovici, founder, Innovation 4.4
  • Marty Kearns, founder, Netcentric Campaigns
  • Derrick Jackson, climate and energy fellow, Union of Concerned Scientists
  • Matt Kayhoe, CEO, Kayhoe Consulting
More information about our board is available here.

What are you reading? 

It's that time again. EHN's annual summer reading list is just around the corner. I'll spend the next few weeks bugging the staff to send in their summer book recommendations — and now I'm doing the same to you.

So, what are you reading? What would you recommend folks bring with them to the beach or park bench this summer?

Of course, books about the environment are great but we're open to submissions that really stretch for an environmental angle.

If you have a book recommendation you'd like to share, send the title and a paragraph or two about why you like it to me at bbienkowski@ehn.org. No promises, but if we like the recommendation, we'll publish your name and your write-up with our staff recommendations before the July 4 holiday.

And if you want an early start to your summer reading, check out last year's list here.

That's all for now — gotta go wrangle interns.

Become a donor
Today's top news

Mobilizing against pesticides from the ground up

Activists from two of California’s biggest agricultural regions describe the fight to protect communities and workers from pesticide exposure.

Movilizando contra los pesticidas

Activistas de dos de las regiones agrícolas más grandes de California describen su lucha para proteger a comunidades y trabajadores contra la exposición a pesticidas.

From our newsroom

California’s new pesticide notification system aims to protect public health. Will it work?

Community activists were instrumental in achieving the landmark program. But they worry it won’t go far enough to shield rural communities and farmworkers from pesticide harm.

LISTEN: Marissa Chan on solutions to harmful beauty products

“This is a systems problem — not strong enough regulations for personal care product safety, as well as social drivers and perspectives.”

El nuevo sistema de notificación de pesticidas de California busca proteger la salud pública. ¿Funcionará?

Los activistas comunitarios fueron clave para la creación de este programa sin precedentes. Pero les preocupa que no sea suficiente para proteger a las comunidades rurales y a trabajadores agrícolas de los daños causados por los pesticidas.

A la Deriva

Las comunidades en la primera línea de exposición a los pesticidas luchan por el cambio

En la primera línea de la exposición a pesticidas

A pesar de décadas de investigación que vinculan la contaminación por la liberación de pesticidas en el aire con daños a la salud, las regulaciones siguen siendo débiles y dejan a los más vulnerables con pocas protecciones.