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What Mama Wants - Less Toxics, More Health

  • Maya Rommwatt - Defend Our Health

    2 JUN 2023 · Maya is the Senior Market Campaigner at https://defendourhealth.org/about-us/our-victories/. Defend has just released a research report called https://defendourhealth.org/campaigns/plastic-pollution/hiddenhazards/: How the Beverage Industry's Addiction to Plastic Bottles May Prolong the Climate Crisis, threaten Human Health and Promote Environmental Racism. Maya discusses strategies for leveraging power to influence soda companies to demand cleaner plastic from the bottle producers. She also shares stories of impacted people living in communities on the fence lines of plastics manufacturing plants, suffering ill health. One resource consumers can use to check the safety of everyday products is through https://www.greenscreenchemicals.org/certified.
    35m 45s
  • Mike Belliveau - Founder, President and Executive Director of Defend Our Health

    26 MAY 2023 · https://www.linkedin.com/in/mike-belliveau-4831a617/ is the Founder, President and Executive Director of https://defendourhealth.org/, which is a national organization, based in Maine, that has advanced public health, environmental justice and clean production since 2002. For over forty years, Mike has led chemical policy reform and worked with corporations to phase out toxic chemical use. https://defendourhealth.org/campaigns/plastic-pollution/ has just released an innovative scientific paper (Hidden Hazards: The Chemical Footprint of a Plastic Bottle )which illustrates the comprehensive cost of a plastic bottle, from creation to waste. Many of the dangerous chemicals used to make PET plastic bottles are either migrating out of the bottle into the food and beverages they contain, or are polluting the waterways upstream, where the plastic is produced. Belliveau doesn't despair because he sees https://defendourhealth.org/act-now/. He says, "There's a better way of doing things, so let's put those in place. We have an obligation to future generations to make a difference."
    25m 34s
  • Madison Madden - Ayurvedic practitioner

    16 MAY 2023 · Madison Madden is an https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ayurveda practitioner, trained in California and India. She uses a detoxification practice called https://www.ayurveda.com/introduction-to-panchakarma/to help people remove toxics from their bodies, as part of an ancient medical tradition, which originated in India. ​ Madison is the author of a book called https://www.amazon.com/Mind-Body-Food-Redefining-Relationship/dp/1637921888, which tells the tale of her journey from a toxic pesticide exposure, as a toddler, through an impaired childhood. She finds yoga and Auryvedic medicine and walks a path to healing and health. Now she helps others along that path. Madison is also an expert yoga and somatic practitioner and she lives in Colorado, where she's a consultant at http://www.livewiseheal.com/. ​
    29m 30s
  • Will Chappell - President of Air and Water Quality Inc.

    11 MAY 2023 · https://awqinc.com/about-us/ is the President of https://awqinc.com/water-treatment/., a Maine-based business that helps homeowners resolve water quality concerns. Since Maine has a higher percentage of residents drinking from residential wells than any other state, it is a matter of public health to get regular testing for well water. Toxic heavy metals (https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/arsenic, https://www.maine.gov/dhhs/mecdc/environmental-health/eohp/wells/manganese.htm, https://www.maine.gov/dhhs/mecdc/environmental-health/eohp/wells/documents/uraniumresultstipsheet.pdf) and man-made chemicals (https://pfasproject.com/) can often be present in our residential well water. Because you cannot see, smell or taste these toxics, it is important to https://www.maine.gov/dhhs/mecdc/environmental-health/eohp/wells/documents/wwbrochure_web.pdf One can get started by https://www.maine.gov/dhhs/mecdc/environmental-health/dwp/imt/documents/CommercialListMaineLabs.pdf or reaching out to a water treatment business. In Maine, there are also funds available to https://www.maine.gov/jobsplan/program/free-well-water-testing-low-income-mainerss.
    26m 10s
  •  Nik Charov -President and Chairman of Laudholm Trust at Wells Reserve

    25 APR 2023 · For Earth Day, https://www.themainemag.com/nik-charov-president-laudholm-trust-chairman-wells-national-estuarine-research-reserve/, (President and Chairman of Laudholm Trust at http://www.wellsreserve.org/) thinks of Mother Earth as an "accountant, as much as a nurturer." The spreadsheet is all about living in the balance, not over-spending our resources for corporate profit or convenience. Nik thinks about the art of science communication and "climate pollution," as it relates to plastics and local climate change. Located next to a https://www.fws.gov/refuge/rachel-carson, Nik illustrates how policy changes led to a raptor comeback-- a toxics success story. He calls on us all to use our power as citizens to pressure government for environmental changes for a healthy future. ​Wells Reserve is an estuarine research center in Wells, Maine where you can connect with nature through miles of trails, festivals, speakers and so much more. ​FMI: http://www.wellsreserve.org/.
    30m 15s
  • Dianne Kopec - Research Fellow at the Senator George J. Mitchell Center for Sustainability at the University of Maine

    12 APR 2023 · https://umaine.edu/mitchellcenter/people/dianne-kopec/ is a Research Fellow at the https://umaine.edu/mitchellcenter/ at the University of Maine. Her biological research documents toxic contaminants in wildlife, such as https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mercury_in_fish (and the animals that eat them, like birds and harbor seals). Because of mercury contamination in Maine's waters, the https://www.maine.gov/ifw/fishing-boating/fishing/laws-rules/consumption-advisory.html has a posted https://www.maine.gov/ifw/fishing-boating/fishing/laws-rules/consumption-advisory.html. Since all 50 states have such advisories, the EPA also offershttps://www.epa.gov/choose-fish-and-shellfish-wisely/fish-and-shellfish-advisories-and-safe-eating-guidelines#what for fish consumption, especially for pregnant women, as exposure can cause behavioral problems and decreased cognitive performance. For decades, mercury contamination in Maine freshwater fish has denied members of the Penobscot Nation their legally protected sustenance fishing rights. Currently, Dr. Kopec's research is helping to minimize mercury exposure to tribal members. With an eye on the future, Dianne Kopec says, "We don't have to accept mercury pollution as a given." She discusses how legislation today can protect all of us from toxic exposures tomorrow, so that we might be able to fish with our grandchildren...and eat the catch. https://www.whatmamawants.org/archived-episodes/dianne-kopec
    39m 50s
  • Julie Rosenbach - Sustainability Director South Portland, Maine

    5 APR 2023 · https://www.southportland.org/departments/sustainability-office/about-team/ is the Sustainability Director for the City of South Portland, Maine. Together with Portland's Sustainability Coordinator, https://www.whatmamawants.org/archived-episodes/troy-moon, the two cities are pioneers in collaboration between municipalities in an https://www.pressherald.com/2022/10/27/south-portland-sustainability-director-receives-leadership-award/ joint climate action plan. They have led teams of citizens to createhttps://www.oneclimatefuture.org/ goals. Both cities have banned the use of fertilizers and http://www.beyondpesticides.org/, as a way to meet these goals by 2040. Another way toward becoming a more climate change resilient community is through South Portland's new "https://storymaps.arcgis.com/collections/d9d6c02faaa440f48073fa777578a6e0" initiative, which just launched in March of 2023. Julie shares her hopes for this creative program, a wonderful example of partnership with 8 collaborators and 4 funders, (including https://www.whatmamawants.org/archived-episodes/kyra-naumoff-shields). ​Julie walks the talk when she says, "Partnerships are everything!"
    24m 34s
  • Dr. Kyra Naumoff Shieldsis - Healthy Babies, Bright Futures

    24 MAR 2023 · https://www.hbbf.org/aboutis an Environmental Health Scientist at https://www.hbbf.org/, an organization known for protecting children's developing bodies and brains from neurotoxins, present in our everyday lives. Dr. Naumoff Shields is HBBF's Director of the program called https://www.hbbf.org/solutions/bright-cities, reducing toxic exposures on a community level. She discusses research and engagement the organization has done around toxic-free https://www.healthybabycereals.org/sites/healthybabycereals.org/files/2017-12/HBBF_ArsenicInInfantCerealReport.pdf, the increased incidence of developmental delays and the link between toxics and climate change.
    31m 31s
  • ​Dr. Susan Smith - Radical Gardening: practice-based research

    17 MAR 2023 · ​Dr. Susan Smith talks us through her faculty https://pfasproject.com/2022/09/16/this-maine-artists-work-is-laden-with-pfas-on-purpose/ called Radical Gardening: practice-based research, 2022, which is on display in https://umaine.edu/art/lord-hall-gallery-page/ until March 17, 2023. Her https://www.newscentermaine.com/article/tech/science/environment/mobile-maine-art-lab-raising-awareness-about-pfas-contamination-environment/97-27ee4155-e6da-434f-914b-cb3d4c9567ad display unit is focused on soils, water and plant matter gathered from https://www.ewg.org/interactive-maps/pfas_contamination/ Inspired to stop using toxics in her artwork, Dr. Smith strives to creating her art with sustainable materials from the earth, found, grown and recycled. https://intermedia.umaine.edu/people/susan-smith/, is an Associate Research Professor of Art and serves as the Coordinator for the Graduate Art Program in Intermedia at the University of Maine in Orono, ME. Find her on Instagram@slsmithstudio.
    38m 48s
  • Mike Garfield - Greenwashing

    9 MAR 2023 · https://www.ecocenter.org/about-us/people/michael-garfield is the Director of the https://www.ecocenter.org/about-us in Ann Arbor, MI. Established in 1970, the Ecology Center works on https://www.ecocenter.org/our-work/ending-lead-poisoning, https://www.ecocenter.org/our-work/air-quality, https://www.ecocenter.org/our-work/climate-action-energy-equity. It is also the home of the https://www.ecocenter.org/our-work/healthy-stuff-lab. Mike discusses https://www.nrdc.org/sites/default/files/chemical-recycling-greenwashing-incineration-ib.pdf and how it relates to the plastics industry. Presently, the oil and petrochemical industries are promoting the idea of "https://www.ecocenter.org/bad-news-chemical-recycling-greenlit-michigan?eType=EmailBlastContent&eId=80cf3107-4931-41d8-94ce-d623604849d2" (aka catalytic pyrolysis of plastic waste or "depolymerization") which means melting plastic and making it into solid, liquid and gaseous fuel products. Twenty states have already changed laws to relax regulations against pyrolysis and gasification, even though such incinerators create huge amounts of https://www.nrdc.org/sites/default/files/chemical-recycling-greenwashing-incineration-ib.pdf and a https://globuc.com/news/ghg-emissions-from-pyrolysis-are-higher-than-in-mechanical/
    27m 24s

What Mama Wants is a program that considers how Mother Earth is impacted by toxic chemicals. It is designed to inform and inspire. Interviews with scientists, legislators, citizens and educators...

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What Mama Wants is a program that considers how Mother Earth is impacted by toxic chemicals. It is designed to inform and inspire.

Interviews with scientists, legislators, citizens and educators are delivered in a way that is straight-forward and not too overwhelming. What Mama Wants shares ideas about possible solutions and how to engage with the community to work toward a healthier planet and population. Each episode is roughly 30 minutes. Each guest's stories inform the public health conversation about PFAS and other toxic pollutants in our daily lives.

Kate Manahan is a Licensed Clinical Social Worker and came to her environmental activism against toxics through her practice with children and families. Realizing what children were being exposed to felt like a three-alarm fire. She wanted to inform wider audiences and inspire action toward less toxics and more health for all. Thus, What Mama Wants was born in March 2022.

Kate has a certificate in audio documentary studies from The Salt Institute. In 2019, her former show called New Mainers Speak, won the second-place award from the Maine Association of Broadcasters for Best Public Affairs Show. Kate is the founder of Thumbprint Audio.
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