Insights from My Summer at ANTHC: A Reflection on Coastal Contamination and Community Resilience

A coastal road leads to a contaminated site in a rural Alaska Native community.

My summer at the Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium (ANTHC) provided a unique opportunity to merge academic research with real-world environmental policy work. As both a graduate student at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies and a Program Coordinator at ANTHC, I was able to engage with Alaska Native communities on the frontlines of climate change, deepening my understanding of coastal contamination and resilience. Reflecting on these past months, I’m grateful for the mentors, colleagues, and community members who made this experience so impactful.

What did you accomplish with your host organization? What was the impact of your work?

This 2024 summer, I led the research on the Impact of Sea Level Rise on Alaska’s Coastal Contaminated Sites, which focused on evaluating how rising sea levels threaten contaminated sites across Alaska’s coastline. Understanding their vulnerabilities is critical for future mitigation efforts.

Through field visits and community meetings, I was able to document firsthand accounts of how these sites have changed over time. Residents spoke of shorelines that had receded by dozens of feet, abandoned infrastructure slowly being swallowed by the ocean, and concerns about contaminants entering subsistence food sources. Using data from the Alaska contaminated sites database and sea level rise projections from the IPCC, I identified high-risk sites.

How did this experience benefit you professionally and personally?

Professionally, this experience reinforced my passion for environmental health and policy, particularly in the context of Indigenous and rural communities. Working with ANTHC allowed me to see how public health, environmental science, and climate adaptation intersect in ways that are both complex and deeply personal. I had the opportunity to collaborate with experts in environmental remediation, climate resilience, and community outreach, strengthening my ability to engage in interdisciplinary problem-solving.

On a personal level, the experience left a lasting impact. I was able to meet with Alaska Native community leaders who shared their lived experiences of environmental degradation and resilience. These conversations were humbling and inspiring—reminders that climate change is not an abstract policy issue but a lived reality for many. Seeing both the challenges and the strength of these communities reinforced my commitment to community-centered environmental work.

Did this experience lead to any unexpected discoveries or moments of self-reflection?

One of the biggest takeaways from this experience was recognizing how deeply historical contamination still affects Alaska’s communities today. Many of the contaminated sites I visited—rusting barrels along the beach, abandoned schools with asbestos, landfills eroding into the ocean—date back decades, yet they continue to pose significant health and environmental risks. The urgency of addressing these issues became even more apparent when speaking with residents who rely on the land and water for subsistence.

Additionally, I was struck by the resilience of the people I met. Despite the challenges posed by contamination, erosion, and climate change, Alaska Native communities are not simply waiting for outside solutions. They are actively advocating for resources, developing adaptation strategies, and finding innovative ways to protect their lands. Their leadership and determination reinforced my belief that environmental solutions must be community-driven to be truly effective.

As I look ahead, this summer at ANTHC has further solidified my commitment to addressing environmental injustices and ensuring that impacted communities have a voice in decision-making processes. The work continues, but I’m grateful to have been part of an effort that seeks to protect both the health of Alaska’s ecosystems and the people who depend on them.

Looking back on my summer with Washington Maritime Blue

The view of Rainier looking south from the beach of Discovery Park (my happy place this past summer)

My work was mainly in supporting the operations of the Joint Innovation program. I had a diverse set of projects I was supporting from coding key participant feedback to be integrated into a report to supporting a cooperative of kelp growers go after a planning grant.

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Sustainable Maritime Fuels, Joint Innovation, Collaboratives, and Kelp


Washington Maritime Blue is an organization that has an outsized impact compared to its staffing footprint. This summer, I had the invaluable opportunity to see how they achieve this. Through my work supporting the Joint Innovation program, I gained insights into how the organization effectively manages priorities, partners’ interests, and collaborative agreements, all while seeking new opportunities for progress.

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As the Summer Ends…

Sadly my summer internships have come to a close and I will use this final blog post to reflect on my experience.

What did you accomplish with your host organization? What was the impact of your work?

I am very proud project I completed with the Conservation Alliance for Seafood Solutions. I created a master list of relevant laws and conventions concerning social responsibility in the seafood/ fishing industry. I then completed a document of detailed findings where the laws were defined, and a synthesis of findings was created to identify areas in the industry where more work needs to be done, and to also highlight the legality or lack there of on the varying topics relating to socially responsible seafood (Human rights, worker rights, gender rights, child protection, human trafficking, seafarer and ocean safety, social responsibility, and food security and nutrition). This document will be used by the Alliance to educate and orient member organizations to the relevant laws and conventions they should be aware of.

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3 weeks into my internship at Environmental Defense Fund

If you’re wondering why I’m in my wetsuit with a laptop, this is a pretty good representation of my work-from-home life that started on 1 June 2020 as a Climate Science Intern at the Environmental Defense Fund. Despite not being able to work in the San Fransisco office this summer, I managed to find a good work-life balance that keeps me in a good headspace. A quick morning surf helps me jumpstart my day filled with research, report writing, and meetings.

I hit the ground running assisting in three projects of the RAD (Research and Development) Team: conducting a literature review to find a defensible reference point for Indonesia’s blue swimming crab fishery, developing a climate profiling tool in the Gulf of Mexico, and updating the Framework for Integrated Stock and Habitat Evaluation (nickname FISHE). These seemingly separate projects all share common themes of fish stock assessment and climate change.

Three weeks in, I feel extremely fortunate to be working with such a RAD team (haha) that is knowledgable and supportive. Coming to the end of June, I plan on wrapping up the Indonesia blue swimming crab project. At this point, I have examined the different stock assessment methods and their applicability to Indonesia’s blue swimming crab fishery in terms of biological, ecological, economic, and social considerations. The next step will be writing up recommendations for the Indonesian team at EDF and the Ministry of Maritime Affairs and Fisheries in Indonesia. Be on the lookout for the post. Till then!