For Immediate Release: May 23,
2012
West Pinal County in nonattainment for 1987
dust standard, EPA says
SAN FRANCISCO— The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency declared a
portion of western Pinal County, Ariz. to be in nonattainment for the 1987
federal PM10 coarse particulate matter
standard.
Today’s redesignation is based on EPA’s October
2010 proposal and recent air quality monitoring data for PM10.
Based on
comments in response to the 2010 proposal, EPA reduced the size of the
nonattainment area, relative to its proposed nonattainment area, by about 36
percent.
Monitoring
results showed widespread, frequent, and in some instances, severe, violations
over the last decade. In fact, western Pinal County PM10 levels are
among the worst in the country.
EPA sets national protective standards for
pollutants such as particulate matter that threaten public health. Where air
quality exceeds a health-based standard, the Clean Air Act requires the area to
be designated as a nonattainment area for that pollutant.
Particulate
matter is a serious threat to human health. Major concerns include effects on
breathing and respiratory systems, damage to lung tissue and premature death.
The elderly, children, and people with chronic lung disease or asthma are
especially vulnerable.
The
Clean Air Act requires the state to submit a plan containing measures that will
reduce airborne particulate matter until the area meets the federal air quality
standard. The plan is due within 18 months. EPA is working closely with the
Arizona Department of Environmental Quality on the plan and expects a submission
soon.
The
primary causes of dust pollution in the Pinal County area are from roads,
agriculture, feedlots, construction and industrial processes.
Particulate
matter is the term for solid or liquid particles found in the air. Some
particles are large or dark enough to be seen as soot or smoke. Others are so
small they can be detected only with an electron microscope. In 1987, EPA
replaced the earlier air quality standard with a PM10 standard. The
new standard focused on smaller particles that are likely responsible for
adverse health effects because of their ability to reach the lower regions of
the respiratory tract and includes particles with a diameter of 10 micrometers
or less (0.0004 inches or one-seventh the width of a human hair).
For more
information including a link to a map of the nonattainment area, please visit:
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