|
Not only has the percentage of good air days grown worse since this report, its gotten way worse. We have NE winds today but most days we get no clean air ever . Two years ago we had many more. Everyone is silent. The Phillyblog censures me and 6abc.com censures me. This is our dependence on dirty fuel disel and coal? Why? Not only do we lose our health where this no going back we have to pay close to 4 bucks a gallon for this poison . The air pollution threat may be invisible, but it is real-we know it can sicken, and we know it can kill," said Carolyn Wisniewski, Vice President for the American Lung Association of Pennsylvania. Wisniewski estimated that about 400,000 persons with chronic lung disease and nearly 900,000 people with heart disease were at special risk from air pollution in the 5-county Southeastern Pennsylvania area. "A large study released this month in the New England Journal of Medicine documented that children living in polluted areas have a five fold greater risk of decreased lung function," said Dr. Joel Chinitz with Philadelphia Physicians for Social Responsibility. "This impairment occurred independent of asthma or smoking." "Eighty-eight percent of Pennsylvanians live in areas that do not meet the federal government's basic air quality standards," said Arthur Stamoulis, Policy Analyst for Clean Air Council. "If we really want to protect the health of our children, power plants must be required to install modern pollution controls." "I am the mother of two young sons, both asthmatics. I may not be a scientist, but I do know this-the health rooms in each of our district schools has cabinets devoted to just inhalers; all alphabetized, because there are so many," stated Lisa Graves Marcucci of Jefferson Action Group, Inc. Marcucci challenged all elected officials and regulators "to let science and medical facts dictate policy instead of corporate money." "The high levels of ozone and particulate matter in the Pittsburgh area and statewide should act as an alarm to our state and local government officials," said Elizabeth Rosemeyer, policy and outreach coordinator for Group Against Smog and Pollution (G.A.S.P.). "This report points to the need for strong regulations to protect the health and welfare of our residents." "President Bush is shortchanging the health of Allentown residents with the breaks he keeps giving to big business, especially the power plants and other polluters. Allentown residents need to send a strong message to Washington that the health of our children is not for sale," said Alisa Bauman, Chair of the Lehigh Valley Sierra Club. "Danger in the Air: Unhealthy Levels of Air Pollution in 2003" is PennEnvironment's fifth annual analysis of air quality based on a survey of environmental agencies in all 50 states and the District of Columbia. For the first time, the report examines levels of fine particle "soot" pollution in addition to ozone "smog" pollution. Key Pennsylvania findings include the following: - Pennsylvania ranked fourth nationwide for the worst year-round soot pollution and second for the most spikes in soot pollution in 2003. Pittsburgh and Philadelphia ranked fifth and 13th respectively for the highest year-round soot pollution among major U.S. cities in 2003. Lancaster, York-Hanover, Harrisburg-Carlisle, Reading, and Allentown
|
| |
| |
----- Original Message ----- From: "mcs" <mcsantpollution@yahoo.com> Newsgroups: talk.environment,ne.politics,pa.politics,alt.lawyers Sent: Monday, April 07, 2008 6:38 PM Subject: We are being poisoned, losing our lives literally no one cares
"The high levels of ozone and particulate matter in the Pittsburgh area and statewide should act as an alarm to our state and local government officials," said Elizabeth Rosemeyer, policy and outreach coordinator for Group Against Smog and Pollution (G.A.S.P.). "This report points to the need for strong regulations to protect the health and welfare of our residents."
Join G.A.S.P. and do something about it.
|
| |
| |
|