Danger
in the Air
The Lehigh
Valley Group of the Sierra Club Pennsylvania Chapter and the Chapter’s
Clean Air Committee appreciate this opportunity to explain the necessity
for community & state action for air pollution control.
Sierra Club
and its 28,000 members join with these national organizations, ‘Clear
the Air’ and ‘Penn Environment’, to proclaim the inherent
need for change in the way that PA & this nation approach the control
of dangerous air pollutants.
Pennsylvania
continues to be the perpetrator and the victim. We possess a large number
of coal-fired power plants with minimal controls, polluting both locally
and hundreds of miles downwind. We are a component of the huge east coast
mobile source corridor for vehicular transportation air pollution. Therefore,
our greatest problems are with car-trucks-buses and power plant emissions.
For the Allentown area, mobile sources make up about 86% of the entire
cancer risk from emitted air pollution locally. We are far too polluted
here in Allentown, and across Pennsylvania. The Environmental Defense
‘Scorecard’ ranks Allentown & all Lehigh County as having
a lead (Pb) risk to 3700 homes. We have 4 Superfund sites here. Our county
contains 312,090 people that face a cancer risk more than 100 times the
goal set within the Clean Air Act. But from power plant emissions and
large industrial sources, our Lehigh County scores among the worst 10%
in nation for VOLATILE ORGANIC CHEMICALS (ozone smog) emissions, and the
top worst 20% for NITROGEN OXIDES (ozone smog), fine particulate matter
soot PM 2.5 (inhaled into lungs causing lung irritation & inflammation),
and SULFUR DIOXIDE emissions (acid rain).
The "Danger
in the Air" report of September 2004 chronicles the unhealthy pollution
levels within our local Lehigh Valley Group's area and emphasizes that
Pennsylvania ranks 4th in the entire nation for unhealthy levels of ground
level ozone smog.
Of the largest
of our metropolitan areas in Pennsylvania, our neighbor to the south -
and upwind - Philadelphia ranked 6th overall for the number of smoggy
days and exceedances of 8 hour and 1 hour ozone health standards in large
metro areas in 2003. Pittsburgh ranked 20th.
Of medium
sized metropolitan areas in Pennsylvania, Erie ranked 33rd overall for
the number of smoggy days and exceedances of 8 hour and 1 hour ozone health
standards in medium metro areas in 2003. Harrisburg, Lancaster, Scranton-Wilkes-Barre
and York ranked 43rd.
Of the smallest
metropolitan areas in Pennsylvania, DuBois, State College and Williamsport
ranked 36th overall for the number of smoggy days and exceedances of the
8 hour and 1 hour ozone health standards in these smallest metro areas
in 2003. Altoona, Chambersburg ranked 42nd. Gettysburg, Johnstown, and
New Castle ranked 63rd nationally.
Most significantly,
so far in 2004, the Allentown-Bethlehem-Easton MSA ranked second this
year nationally for the number of ozone smog days and the exceedances
of the 8 hour ozone standard.
While we
have successfully reduced some air pollution nationally over the last
12 years since implementation began after November 15, 1990 - the nation
and Pennsylvania have far to go. We have targeted for reduction about
only ¼ of all nitrogen oxide emissions - making ozone smog –
here in PA. We have a significant problem yet to correct for the sake
of our families' health, and all our futures.
The current
Clean Air Act (CAA) law should be allowed to do its job. The Bush administration
has focused on reducing the legal obligations of regulated industries
rather than to protect the health of people living in Allentown, and throughout
PA.
We are a
nation of people that take energy for granted; we waste energy every day.
Without changing lifestyle, we call on all people living in Allentown
and across PA, to stop wasting energy in their homes. Turn off lights
when you leave a room. Stop wasting energy in your vehicles. Turn off
your gasoline engine while you visit the post office or talk to a friend.
Energy conservation through first taking the easy step of NOT WASTING
ENERGY will absolutely help reduce air pollution, and help the Clean Air
Act to do its job of cleaning up local air pollution. It isn't just power
plants and idling trucks and buses that are at fault. We all share in
a measure of blame for producing air pollution personally.
That said,
the Bush administration must focus on air pollution reduction for the
protection of human health, and not offer both legislation and regulation
that is entirely constructed to avoid a significant majority of current
CAA law. The Bush administration should:
- Substantially
strengthen, accelerate and finalize its proposal to cap smog and fine
soot forming pollutants from power plants in the eastern U.S. to the
level that will adequately protect human health.
- Designate
all areas where people breathe unhealthy levels of fine particles as
nonattainment areas, and then propose and finalize a strong rule to
bring these areas into compliance with CAA health standards by the end
of this decade, as required by the current CAA law.
- The
Pennsylvania State DEP should continue to reject the Bush administration's
"Clear Skies" plan, which would replace the successful Clean
Air Act's power plant cleanup programs with regulations that are far
weaker and favorable to regulated industries.
- PADEP
should adopt a comprehensive program to reduce emissions of Nitrogen
oxides (ozone smog), particulate matter (PM) fine soot, carbon dioxide
and mercury.
- Additionally,
Pennsylvania should reverse its rejection under Governor Ridge that
would not allow PADEP the authority to promulgate pollution controls
more stringent than federal minimums. We can and must do better.
Thank you.
Nancy Parks
Chair, Clean Air Committee
Pennsylvania Chapter, Sierra Club
Additional
Contacts:
Alisa Bauman
Lehigh Valley Group Chair
Pennsylvania Chapter
Sierra Club
610-965-2237
Barbara
Benson
Lehigh Valley Group Conservation Chair
Pennsylvania Chapter
Sierra Club
215-282-3611
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