Alissa Cordner
alissa-a.bsky.social
Alissa Cordner
@alissa-a.bsky.social
Sociology professor @ Whitman College, co-director of the PFAS Project Lab, volunteer wildland firefighter in Walla Walla County
Reposted by Alissa Cordner
In a new report, EDGI documents the assault on the EPA currently taking place under the second Trump administration. Findings show an EPA that is swiftly being hollowed out and made to work for polluters rather than the health of the public.
envirodatagov.org/publication/...
Burning Down the EPA: Documenting the Second Trump Administration’s Historic Assault – Environmental Data and Governance Initiative
Under Administrator Zeldin, the EPA has begun incinerating many of the environmental and health protections this agency has provided for decades. Since […]
envirodatagov.org
September 3, 2025 at 6:16 PM
Reposted by Alissa Cordner
Our paper was published today in ES&T! The @pfasproject.bsky.social analyzed our Known and Presumptive #PFAS contamination datasets to learn more about where PFAS have been identified, where they might be, and how source type can impact detections in environmental media. pubs.acs.org/doi/full/10....
The Landscape of PFAS Contamination in the United States: Sources and Spatial Patterns
The scope and scale of per-and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) contamination remains unknown. Using two nationwide data sets, we provide a profile of PFAS contamination in the United States and compare site categories with groundwater PFAS detections to identify site characteristics and sources of concern. We use data from the PFAS Project Lab’s Known PFAS Contamination Tracker (N = 2219) and presumptive PFAS contamination data set (N = 79,891), developed to characterize the distribution of known and likely PFAS sources. In this data set, all categories of known PFAS contamination sites are associated with average groundwater PFAS concentrations above health-based regulatory levels (4 ppt); 94% of detections exceed this limit. Aqueous film-forming foam (AFFF) use was associated with the highest average PFAS detections in this data set, and metal plating facilities account for the greatest proportion of industrial contamination sites that likely utilize PFAS (53%), though we also identified testing gaps of non-AFFF contamination sources. We conducted spatial cluster analyses, identifying hotspots of PFAS sites at national and regional levels. These findings can support multiscale approaches to PFAS remediation, including testing, siting, permitting, and community outreach, though cautious interpretation is necessary because of data set limitations. This analysis demonstrates the utility of a presumptive contamination model.
pubs.acs.org
August 25, 2025 at 1:30 PM
Reposted by Alissa Cordner
EDGI’s 2024 Annual Report is now available! In 2024, we:

➡️ Launched the Public Environmental Data Partners
➡️ Participated in the End of Term Web Archive
➡️ Launched a public comments initiative
➡️ Worked w/groups in AK & TX to document cumulative impacts

Read: envirodatagov.org/publication/...
EDGI 2024 Annual Report – Environmental Data and Governance Initiative
LETTER FROM OUR ADVISORY COMMITTEE As 2024 unfolded, we didn’t know what lay ahead in 2025. Yet the importance of remaining consistent […]
envirodatagov.org
August 20, 2025 at 3:56 PM
Reposted by Alissa Cordner
PFAS Project Lab Co-director Alissa Cordner @alissa-a.bsky.social and Postdoc Mike Lengefeld @ml314.bsky.social presented the Lab's research at the 2025 American Sociological Association's @asanews.bsky.social annual meeting in Chicago!
August 14, 2025 at 5:47 PM
Reposted by Alissa Cordner
Curious about the claims made in the latest "100 actions" announcement from EPA's press office (link ⬇️)? EDGI’s @alissa-a.bsky.social, a #PFAS scholar with @pfasproject.bsky.social, took a closer look at the claims around forever chemicals. Here’s what she found (a 🧵):
www.epa.gov/newsreleases...
EPA Celebrates Another 100 Days with 100 More Pro-Environmental Actions | US EPA
EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin shared 100 additional environmental actions EPA has taken in the last 100 days to recognize 200 Days of providing clean air, land, and water for all Americans under Presid...
www.epa.gov
August 8, 2025 at 5:53 PM