USC Professors Share Water Quality Prize
Photo/Sona Movsesian
Joseph Devinny of the USC Viterbi School of Engineering collaborated with Sheldon Kamieniecki of the USC College department of political science and Michael Stenstrom of the UCLA civil and environmental engineering department on the report titled “Alternatives for Stormwater Control.”
The trio received its award Oct. 20 at the board’s annual dinner at the Long Beach Aquarium.
Published in August, the report reexamined strategy for cleaning up the torrents of winter rainwater that rush into the ocean off urban Southern California via storm drains, picking up chemical and biological pollution on the way.
One highly expensive, $284-billion alternative proposed in an earlier study had involved capturing the floodwater and then building 65 new standard drinking-water treatment plants to purify it before releasing it into the ocean.
The Devinny group looked to find a less-expensive resolution.
According to the report’s executive summary, “The objective of the study was to outline a complete solution to stormwater quality problems…. The alternatives of best management practices … for control of individual pollutants [source control], and if necessary, a regional system of wetlands and infiltration facilities to provide final treatment and groundwater replenishment were chosen.”
The group estimated the cost for this multipronged approach at between $3 and $7 billion.
However, Devinny said, “this alternative will also provide new parks for recreation, improved wildlife habitat, and of particular value, restoration of groundwater resources, improved property values and preservation of near shore ocean ecosystems.”
He said the group estimated the value of these benefits at $5.6 to $18 billion.
Devinny is a member of the USC Center for Sustainable Cities, which published the report.
Directed by Jennifer Wolch of the USC College department of geography, USC CSC includes faculty from engineering, the natural and social sciences, urban planning, and environmental health sciences.
The center receives funding from the National Science Foundation and is “ based on the conviction that resolution of environmental problems demands contributions from professionals trained in a variety of knowledge fields, holding diverse backgrounds, political perspectives and environmental philosophies, who must be able to work productively with multiple stakeholder groups.”
The center’s work uses the Los Angeles metropolitan area as its geographical focus and is now working on the Green Visions project, which is an effort to develop a regional plan for the greater Los Angeles area that will develop recreational parks, wildlife habitat and stormwater infiltration multiple use facilities.
The Web site for the project is http://www.greenvisionsplan.net/.
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Scientific American featured research by Valter Longo of the USC Davis School finding that short periods of fasting could help cancer patients better tolerate chemotherapy, and may even make treatment more effective. NPR Boston affiliate WBUR-FM reported that in an animal model, 40 percent of subjects who received no food or drink except water before and after chemotherapy were cured of cancer, compared with zero percent of subjects who only received chemo. Patients in California are now trying the fasting, Longo said. The study was also covered by BBC News (U.K.), Daily Mail (U.K.), La Repubblica (Italy), Corriere della Sera (Italy), The Scientist, Agence France-Presse, The Press Association (U.K.), AOL News, Asian News International, Indian Express (India), Press Trust of India (India), Radio Santiago (Chile), Diario Digital (Portugal), EFE (Spain), Salute 24 (Italy), ANSA (Italy), ASCA (Italy), Gaianews (Italy), Republika (Indonesia) and Ihlas Son Dakika (Turkey).
The New York Times featured a joint project by the USC Annenberg Innovation Lab and IBM, analyzing public sentiment of football quarterbacks on social media. They examined Facebook and Twitter activity to determine which player had more support online. The researchers found increased support for Manning leading up to the Super Bowl. The technology was developed to help companies better understand their customers, the story reported.
ElGolfo (Mexico) featured the Oscar Senti-meter, a tool developed by the USC Annenberg School, Los Angeles Times and IBM that analyzes thousands of tweets about the Academy Awards nominees. The story noted that Mexican actor Demian Bechir received an enormous boost on Twitter the day of the nominations, with a total of 6,893 tweets mentioning him, versus 33 the day before. La Primera Plana (Mexico) also ran a story.
Los Angeles Times quoted Thomas Lyon of the USC Gould School about legal complaints surrounding the Miramonte Elementary School.
Inc. cited Edward Kleinbard of the USC Gould School about the carried interest tax break and how lobbying has kept it alive.
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