Porterville Recorder

Residents urged to avoid wood burning

Air quality officials ask residents to avoid wood burning

- THE RECORDER recorder@portervill­erecorder.com

Local air officials are advising San Joaquin Valley residents that conditions are expected to remain cold, dry and stagnant through the middle of next week, causing PM2.5 emissions (particulat­e matter pollution) to accumulate, resulting in higher pollution concentrat­ions throughout the Valley air basin. The basin includes the counties of San Joaquin, Stanislaus, Merced, Madera, Fresno, Kings, Tulare and the

Valley portion of Kern.

Strong nighttime inversions and minimal winds are trapping pollutants on the Valley floor. “Stable conditions like those we are currently experienci­ng are one of the main challenges the San Joaquin Valley faces during the winter months,” said Jaime Holt, Valley Air District Chief Communicat­ions Officer. This causes residentia­l wood smoke to stay in your neighborho­od, impacting the health of you and your neighbors,” she added.

Residentia­l wood burning is one of the Valley’s largest sources of wintertime PM2.5 emissions and can have a direct effect on neighborho­od air quality and public health. The District warns that adherence to the Check Before You Burn Program is critical to prevent air pollution from reaching unhealthy levels and asks that residents avoid heating their homes by burning wood, if possible. Refraining from the use of any outdoor wood burning devices is also urged. This includes fire pits, outdoor fireplaces and chimneys.

Check Before You Burn runs from November 1 through the end of February every year and provides daily declaratio­ns, by county, indicating if wood burning is allowed in the county that day.

Wood burning curtailmen­ts do not apply to natural gas devices. Residences in areas with no natural gas service or where burning wood is the sole source of heat are exempt. Areas where propane tanks are used are considered to be without natural gas service. Outdoor wood burning devices at all residences are still subject to daily restrictio­ns, regardless of exemption status.

Daily burn informatio­n is available by visiting www.valleyair.org/ cbyb, by calling 1-800SMOG INFO (766-4463), or by downloadin­g the free “Valley Air” app on your mobile device. In addition, residents are invited to sign up for daily email wood-burning notificati­ons by visiting http://lists.valleyair. org/mailman/listinfo/ residentia­l_wood_burning_rule

Valley residents are encouraged to participat­e in the Burn Cleaner incentive program and receive as much as $3,000 to upgrade from older, high-polluting wood stoves and open-hearth fireplaces to natural gas inserts. To participat­e in this program please visit www.valleyair.org/burncleane­r.

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