Isabelle Munsell - Staff Editor

Isabelle Munsell - Staff Editor
Isabelle is a second-year law student from the Denver Metro area. She has a B.S. in Statistics and minors in Mathematics and Environmental Affairs from Colorado State University. She hopes to use law and policy as a way to stimulate change where environmental and social injustices are prominent. In her free time, she enjoys spending time with her partner and their dog, baking, taking care of her plants, and reading books.
Isabelle’s Articles
The growth and dependency on the mining industry during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries was critical to the United States economy. As a result, mines spread across the country without much thought to mining practices or the corresponding consequences. Today, there are an estimated 140,000 abandoned hard rock mines, with 23,000 located in Colorado, and around 23,000 that may pose environmental concerns.
The Environmental Justice Movement gained momentum in the late 1980s and early 1990s in response to a community in North Carolina being designated as the future site of a hazardous waste landfill riddled with PCB-laced waste. PCBs are a group of manmade chemicals that were used in industrial and commercial settings and were banned in 1979; yet, they do not break down easily in the environment. As a result, PCBs remain in the air, water, and soil, and likely are transported far from their point of origin.
In 1970, the United States produced an estimated 65 billion eggs annually, increasing to an estimated 110 billion eggs a year in 2023. Until about the 1960s, our eggs mainly came from hens that roamed around farms or backyards.
Chemicals have been incorporated into daily life as they serve many advantageous uses. Over time, and with rapid technological advances, it is difficult to identify items in our day-to-day lives that do not utilize or benefit from the addition of chemicals. Despite their advantages, these chemicals can pose serious hazardous risks that consumers are unaware of.