The Denver Post

$ 47M more sought to battle bad air as state awaits judgment by EPA

- By Noelle Phillips

With the threat of missing another benchmark for improving air quality hovering like a blanket of summer smog, Colorado’s top environmen­tal officials are asking the legislatur­e for $ 47 million to hire more people and build better technology for monitoring unhealthy air, especially along the northern Front Range.

Colorado’s Air Pollution Control Division expects the Environmen­tal Protection Agency this year to classify the state as a severe violator of federal air quality laws after the state recorded its worst- ever ozone levels during summer 2021, division director Michael Ogletree told The Denver Post.

In 2019 the EPA declared Colorado a serious violator, forcing more enforcemen­t of air pollution controls, and a move to the severe classifica­tion would further increase those enforcemen­ts to reign in the state’s worsening ozone problem.

“We’ve heard from folks that we will be reclassifi­ed to severe in the near future,” Ogletree said. “We’re preparing for that.”

A change in its status with the EPA would force lower emissions thresholds for manufactur­ers and other industrial facilities, meaning more work for the Air Pollution Control Division, which is operating with a short staff, Ogletree said.

The division needs the $ 47 million requested from the legislatur­e to prepare for the incoming workload, and the larger budget would help put more programs in place to control greenhouse gas and other emissions that deteriorat­e the Front Range’s air quality and harms people’s health.

A more strict classifica­tion also would impact the state’s oil and

gas industry.

Gov. Jared Polis asked for the money in the budget he proposed to the legislatur­e.

As the Front Range population grows, so does the number of gasolinepo­wered cars and trucks on the road. Those vehicles are the No. 1 source of nitrous oxide emissions, which is a major contributo­r to the region’s ozone problem.

Emissions from power plants and oil and gas production facilities contribute by releasing volatile organic compounds into the air while bigger and more frequent wildfires in the West add to the problem.

During summer 2021, ozone levels at all 16 of the state’s measuring stations exceeded 78 parts per billion, above the federal health standard of 70 ppb. And scientists expect the Front Range’s air quality to continue to deteriorat­e unless immediate action is taken.

The governor is working with Democrats to create more laws that would address the worsening air quality.

Bills are pending this year that would spend almost $ 125 million to buy a fleet of electric school buses, replace old diesel trucks with newer ones that produce fewer harmful emissions, make electric bicycles more accessible and allow for free public transit fares during the worst summer ozone days.

Already the state has implemente­d new laws and regulation­s to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and improve air quality. But many of those things take years to make a difference, and Polis’ administra­tion hopes this year’s asks will have a more immediate impact, said Jill Hunsaker Ryan, executive director of the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environmen­t.

“The thing that’s probably hard for the public to understand is we’ve had so much go on in the last few years with these laws and regulation­s, but the state hasn’t seen the full benefit of these actions yet,” Hunsaker Ryan said.

The Air Pollution Control Division is operating with a permitting system that was created in the 1990s and complex air permit applicatio­ns are still filled out on paper, she and Ogletree said. They want to move everything to a digital format and create online dashboards where people can check the state’s various pollution levels in near real- time.

“We can provide transparen­cy to the community and everyone who is interested,” Hunsaker Ryan said.

The division employs 185 people, and if the budget request was approved, it would pay for an additional 106 full- time equivalent positions, Ogletree said.

One reason the Polis administra­tion wants a huge infusion of money for its air pollution division is a change in how the division is funded. The division is financiall­y supported through fees levied on industry, and, in the past, the division had to ask the legislatur­e to increase fees, Hunsaker Ryan said.

“That always was a tough thing to do and it just didn’t happen,” she said. “Politicall­y it was a tough thing to do to go to the legislatur­e and get fees raised on industry.”

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