The Columbus Dispatch

Region’s air continues to improve

- By Kimball Perry

Take a deep breath. Twenty years ago in central Ohio, that wasn’t so easy.

Today, after two decades of air-quality improvemen­ts and education, central Ohio’s air is in good shape, an 11-page report released last week shows.

“It’s a real clear and strong signal that things are getting better,” Brooke White said of the study. She is the airquality coordinato­r for the Mid-Ohio Regional Planning Commission, which issues daily air-quality forecasts and alerts about unhealthy air.

MORPC produced the report, which covered air quality from November 2016 through October 2017 and focused only on particle pollution — pollutants from diesel trucks, wood-burning fireplaces, buses and power plants — and ground-level ozone pollution, the main ingredient in smog.

In 1998 and 1999, the report notes, central Ohio air wasn’t as breathable. In each of those years, there were 68 days when ground-level

ozone was almost 70 parts per billion. Those numbers, though, began declining after that. Last year, it was two days — and it was that high thanks to Mother Nature hundreds of miles away.

Central Ohio’s worst breathing days in the year studied were Sept. 5, 2017, when winds blew smoke from wildfires in the Pacific Northwest over central Ohio, and Nov. 8, 2016, when smoke from fires in the Great Smoky Mountains dirtied our air. Those were the only two days when the area reached the official “unhealthy for sensitive group” levels, when

smog levels exceed 100 parts per billion.

Cleaner air is important, White stressed, especially for the young, the elderly and those with respirator­y issues. She noted that Franklin County has about 21,000 children and 97,000 adults with asthma.

Air quality, White said, “involves almost every aspect of our lives.”

Kelly Ard, a professor at Ohio State University’s school of environmen­t and natural resources, agreed, adding that it affects more than respirator­y, cardiovasc­ular and other health issues.

Poor air quality “strains the health-care system, keeps people home from work and school, and often negatively impacts household finances,” Ard said. “A healthier population means healthier consumers and workers, which means a more vibrant economy.”

That’s partly because businesses or industries doing business in central Ohio don’t have to worry about restrictio­ns that come with having to deal with unhealthy air, said Nick Gill, assistant director of MORPC’s transporta­tion department.

“If you’re in violation of standards, there are actions that have to be taken,” Gill said.

There could be restrictio­ns on products sold, equipment that could create pollution and how businesses spend money solving transporta­tion problems. Transporta­tion and vehicle emissions are the biggest driver in determinin­g air quality, White said.

“It’s an important selling point for the region,” Gill said. “Our region can grow without that worry.”

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