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Rocky Mountain Clean Air Action
Clean Air for Healthy Children, Healthy Communities |
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NEWS RELEASE
Stronger Particulate Standards Needed EPA Turns Back on Science, Leaves Thousands to Die Prematurely
For Immediate Release: September 21, 2006
For More Information Contact: Jeremy Nichols, Director, Rocky Mountain Clean Air Action (303) 454-3370
Denver--As many as 64,000 people die prematurely every year due to particulate pollution in our skies, yet the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has refused to strengthen standards for particulate pollution. The impacts of this decision threaten the health of communities throughout Colorado.
The EPA announced today that it would not strengthen annual limits on fine particulate pollution, or particulates that are 2.5 microns in diameter or less--1/28th the size of a human hair. Particulates are released from smokestacks and tailpipes. The EPA retained an annual standards of 15 micrograms per cubic meter, despite recommendations from its own Clean Air Scientific Advisory Committee that the standard be as low as 12 micrograms per cubic meter to protect health and save lives.
"The EPA has sadly turned its back on the health of our families and children," said Jeremy Nichols, Director of Rocky Mountain Clean Air Action. "For many, this really is a matter of life and death. Sadly, the EPA chose death."
If, as scientists recommended, the annual standard was set at 12 micrograms per cubic meter, the Denver metro area would be on the verge of being unhealthy. On several occassions, fine particle monitors in Denver have exceeded 12 micrograms per cubic meter.
The EPA also made only small changes to daily fine particle limits, lowering the standard from 50 to 35 micrograms per cubic meter, and chose to retain standards limiting fine particle pollution from mining activities, agriculture, and within rural communities. The agency had previously proposed to exempt rural communities from protection from particulate pollution.
Particulate matter remains a threat to public health. Those most at risk are members of all our families: children, seniors, those with asthma, with emphysema, and other lung diseases, those with stroke, heart disease, and those with diabetes. They face increased risk of dying early, having severe asthma attacks, heart attacks, stroke, and lung cancer as a result of particulate pollution.
"While improvements are better than nothing, EPA's modest revisions cannot be justified," said Nichols. "With our children's future at stake, we can't settle on a middle ground."
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Rocky Mountain Clean Air Action has joined forces with WildEarth Guardians. Contact us: (720) 563-9306 1536 Wynkoop, Suite 302 - Denver, CO 80202 - (720) 563-9306 jnichols@wildearthguardians.org Copyright Rocky Mountain Clean Air Action. All rights reserved. |
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