Calgary Herald

Study finds no rise in health risks in Fort McMurray homes

- LIAM CASEY

TORONTO A new study indicates dust from homes in Fort McMurray had normal levels of indoor contaminan­ts a year after a devastatin­g forest fire hit the city, suggesting residents did not face an elevated health risk in the aftermath of the blaze.

Arthur Chan, a chemical engineerin­g professor at the University of Toronto, said pollutants in house dust his team analyzed actually contained fewer toxins than homes in many other Canadian cities.

“We don’t see any cause for alarm,” Chan said. “We found that the levels are below what the guidelines considered as risky.”

The results were published last week in the journal Geophysica­l Research Letters.

Chan said he and two other researcher­s spent three weeks going house to house in July 2017, about 14 months after the blaze, using commercial grade vacuums to suck up dust from bedrooms and living rooms — areas with the highest exposure. They later analyzed what they collected in a lab.

The team went through more than 60 houses for the study.

The researcher­s were driven to perform their work after residents raised safety concerns in the wake of the massive wildfire in May 2016 that forced 88,000 people from their homes. Chan said the research was believed to be the first to look for the retention of “fire-derived pollutants” indoors.

“That’s partly because these kinds of fires are rare and it’s hard to mobilize quickly to go into the community to do the study,” Chan said.

The research team examined the house dust for levels of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbo­ns, which are found in high concentrat­ions in burned forests, and heavy metals that are found in high concentrat­ions in ashes from burned buildings.

They found trace elements of the heavy metal arsenic in house dust in neighbourh­oods that were heavily damaged by fire compared to non-damaged neighbourh­oods, but the levels weren’t above Alberta’s health guidelines, Chan said. The researcher­s found no evidence of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbo­ns in Fort McMurray house dust.

“We still don’t know why, but we think maybe people did a very good job cleaning or maybe from this event there isn’t that much of an impact indoors,” Chan said. “Whatever it is, it is minimizing the health risk.”

He said he hopes his results inform rebuilding and recovery efforts after wildfires.

Chan and his team are working on several other related studies. They have gone back to Fort McMurray three other times to look at longterm levels of pollutants inside homes as well as seasonal effects.

They are also working with a lung specialist who is conducting a parallel study looking at the residents of the same houses Chan’s team has examined.

“The idea is to compare what’s around you to what’s in you,” Chan said.

 ?? TODD KOROL/ THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Builders work on a home in Beacon Hills in Fort McMurray after wildfires in 2016 caused widespread damage. New research shows Fort McMurray homes have normal levels of indoor toxins.
TODD KOROL/ THE CANADIAN PRESS Builders work on a home in Beacon Hills in Fort McMurray after wildfires in 2016 caused widespread damage. New research shows Fort McMurray homes have normal levels of indoor toxins.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada