The Guardian (USA)

As US wildfires pollute the skies, a loophole is obscuring the impact. Can it be fixed?

- Molly Peterson and Dillon Bergin

During wildfire season in the western US, soot-clogged skies have long triggered public alerts with advice like: Shut the windows and stay indoors.For those who can afford it: Use an air filter. As Canadian wildfire smoke curled down to Kentucky this year, officials began to do the same thing.

On alert days, “smoke’s there when you wake up in the morning, it’s there when you’re going to bed at night,” said Michelle King, the assistant director of the Louisville metro air pollution control district.

She and other regulators say they are working on how to communicat­e about smoke – something she anticipate­s doing more often.

“We collective­ly are seeing, more and more, the very real impacts of climate change, and no reason to think that is slowing down or going away,” King said. “I think that this is a new normal.”

From the midwest to the mid-Atlantic, more US states are laboring to understand how and when smoke will make meeting federal health standards harder.

“The best advice a Boy Scout will give you is, ‘Don’t stand downwind of the campfire,’” said Frank Steitz, an assistant director at the New Jersey department of environmen­tal protection.

“But what if you can’t? What if you can’t avoid it?”

An obscure part of the Clean Air Act grants regulators an opening to “forgive” air pollution from wildfires, meaning that it doesn’t count against airquality goals. After wildfires flourished across North America this year, more US states east of the Mississipp­i may use this exceptiona­l events rule to subtract smoke from the record, if not from the air we breathe.

But these exceptiona­l events are no longer exceptiona­l, and the requests to obscure them from air-quality records are more common, according to an investigat­ion from the Guardian, the California Newsroom and MuckRock. Without reform, the exceptiona­l events

rule is likely to become a regularly used tool, one that experts warn may divert resources or distract from addressing the growing problem of wildfire smoke.

Finding common ground to change US clean air law is rare. But on wildfire smoke, academics, environmen­tal advocates and some regulators agree: it’s time to reconsider our approach.

“We’re going to have to think bigger when it comes to solutions. We’re just getting there,” said Jodi Bechtel, the assistant director for the department of environmen­t and sustainabi­lity in Clark county, Nevada. “I cringe at the idea of amending the Clean Air Act because that is such a heavy lift. But I think we’re at the point where the way it’s written and the expectatio­ns in it almost aren’t working any more.”

This year, said Michael Benjamin, the air quality and planning chief at the California air resources board (Carb), he and his western colleagues “felt really bad” for eastern cities affected by Canadian fires. “But part of us, especially when it was impacting Washington DC, we said, well, good,” he remembered. “Now the policymake­rs really understand what it means to be exposed to wildfire smoke. And maybe they’ll start to think seriously about how to mitigate it.”

A growing problem

Smoke from wildland fires is reversing a continent-wide, decades-long trend toward bluer skies, according to recent Stanford University studies.

A warming climate has helped to set the stage for wildfires to burn hotter and bigger. “Stopping them or making them less severe is going to be very hard and going to involve interventi­on on a scale that we’re just currently not prepared or able to do,” said the environmen­tal scientist Marshall Burke, one of the leaders of Stanford’s work.

At the same time the likelihood of wildfires grows, the US is considerin­g making stricter goals for ground-level ozone and fine particulat­e, pointing to an avalanche of studies documentin­g health impacts. The Biden administra­tion has delayed plans to take action on ozone until after next year’s election. On fine particulat­es, a contentiou­s public rule-making is expected to yield a more strict standard any day now.

Yet in the face of growing risk, and in anticipati­on of tighter limits on these types of pollution, state and local government­s have been clear: they will turn to exceptiona­l events for relief more often, even if the process is arduous.

“Lowering the annual standard will require more exceptiona­l event demonstrat­ions, resulting in a significan­t increase in workload for the state of Arizona and Maricopa county, with no benefit to air quality or public health,” wrote that county’s department of air quality, commenting on the EPA’s proposed soot standard.

“There’s going to be much more pressure on regulatory agencies to take advantage of exceptiona­l events,” added Carb’s Benjamin. “Sometimes people don’t understand what attainment means, and under the Clean Air Act, it’s not necessaril­y that you’re breathing clean air, it’s that you’re meeting these requiremen­ts that are defined by the federal government.”

Meanwhile, public agencies and other air policy observers argue that the exceptiona­l events rule in effect undermines one of the few tools states have to combat wildfires: beneficial or “prescribed” burns.

Originated by Native Americans, controlled applicatio­n of fire to wildlands reduces the risk of catastroph­ic infernos by clearing underbrush, pine needle beds and other fuels that make forests prone to burning. Federal and state agencies say that increasing this “good fire” is a priority. The EPA modified exceptiona­l events guidelines in 2016, in part to do just that. But not a single prescribed fire has been forgiven under the exceptiona­l events rule since then.

A group of 86 western scientists, researcher­s and advocates say that local regulators are not permitting prescribed fires because they fear they could create too much smoke – the kind that warrants exceptiona­l events. “The current statutory scheme is selecting for the very worst type of fire when it comes to public health,” they told the EPA.

Near the California-Oregon border, the Mid Klamath Watershed Council advocates for a healthy ecosystem, which the director, Will Harling, said includes the return of beneficial fire. Obstacles to such planned burns, coupled with forgivenes­s offered wildfires, he said, are why his children “have smoked the equivalent of about 20,000 packs of cigarettes while they’re in their teens”.

“Just because they scrub that out of the record doesn’t mean that smoke isn’t in their lungs,” he said.

An EPA spokespers­on, Khanya

Brann, responding to our questions in writing, confirmed that exceptiona­l events “could result in the removal of event-influenced data from the data set used to make certain regulatory decisions”.

Brann wrote that local air regulators must meet requiremen­ts in the exceptiona­l events process, such as taking “appropriat­e and reasonable actions to protect public health”.

Pathways to reform

Across the political spectrum, experts, advocates and states say it’s time to change the exceptiona­l events rule. They offer vastly different ideas about what that change should look like.

States and their advocates generally seek liberation from regulatory paperwork. Republican senators, led by Shelley Moore Capito of West Virginia, recently introduced legislatio­n aimed in part at making filing for exceptiona­l events easier.

Similarly, the Western Governors’ Associatio­n has argued for greater state flexibilit­y, complainin­g both that “the rule is resource intensive, costly, and place[s] a significan­t burden on strained state resources”, and that regulators are slow to act on it. The nonpartisa­n associatio­n suggested to lawmakers that rules should permit more complicate­d multistate exceptions.

We can’t fix it, goes the reasoning, so why should we be punished for it?

The EPA, for its part, maintains it is following the law. “The Clean Air Act requires the agency to address emissions from natural events such as wildfires differentl­y than emissions from industrial or mobile sources that EPA and Tribal, state and local air agency regulation­s can control,” Brann wrote.

Independen­t clean-air watchdogs emphasize instead that the mission of the Environmen­tal Protection Agency is to protect public health.

That could mean stepping up enforcemen­t, said Eric Schaeffer, the executive director of the Environmen­tal Integrity Project, a non-profit that advocates for transparen­cy. Plenty of controls already on the books could work better, he said, including more frequent inspection­s and better monitoring systems for known polluters. “There’s always more that can be done,” he said.

Michigan attorney Nick Leonard, who represents fence-line communitie­s where Canadian smoke has mingled with routine local pollution, called the exceptiona­l events rule a “misapplica­tion” of the Clean Air Act, and pointed out that local air regulators could simply stop using it. “It’s sort of creating this alternativ­e reality,” he said.

Though the EPA strips exceptiona­l events-related data from regulatory use, epidemiolo­gists and health experts continue to analyze air quality using unmodified data, which remains available. In its annual State of the Air report, the American Lung Associatio­n has always included pollution exceedance­s that exceptiona­l events would leave out, said Will Barrett, a clean-air expert for the group.

“Those are unhealthy air days,” Barrett said. “Ultimately, your lungs don’t care if the pollution is classified as an exceptiona­l event under an obscure federal law.”

‘A warning light on the dashboard for the Clean Air Act’

For the summer of 2023, more than 20 states so far, from Wyoming to Wisconsin to North Carolina , have flagged air-quality readings that were far higher than normal. Most of these days came in June, as skies in the midwest and eastern US were blanketed with Canadian wildfire smoke.

Wildfire smoke knows no borders. Unlike refineries, wildfires have no scrubbers. You can’t shut them down. But the Clean Air Act, whose pollution controls have saved millions of lives, affords the agency responsibl­e for healthy air no direct authority to manage lands that burn.

Instead, the EPA’s response to this fast-growing source of soot, ash and toxic chemicals has been “ad hoc” and muddled by a lack of coordinati­on with other agencies, according to a Congressio­nal watchdog’s report earlier this year.

EPA spokespers­on Brann wrote that the agency “supports efforts by agencies across the federal government – including the US Department of Agricultur­e and the Department of the Interior, as well as interagenc­y forums such as the Wildland Fire Leadership Council – to implement and further develop strategies to reduce wildfire risk, and to help communitie­s prepare for, respond to, and recover from wildfires”.

The growing use of the exceptiona­l events rule reveals “a poorer and poorer fit between the policy we have and the problems it’s trying to solve”, said Stanford University’s Michael Wara.

He called the rule “a warning light on the dashboard for the Clean Air Act”.

To heed it, say experts, it’s essential to adapt the law to the conditions under which we already breathe.

“If fires are going to become more widespread and more predictabl­e, then that changes the calculus for air-quality determinat­ions,” said Schaeffer of the Environmen­tal Integrity Project. “You have to assume that’s part of your baseline now.”

The landmark law protecting air quality wasn’t created to deal with global heating. But the policies of the past are colliding with the problems of the future.

“The Clean Air Act should really include climate,” said Benjamin of Carb.

“States who have tried to keep these things separate – to keep climate change and exposure to local air pollution as two distinct things – I don’t think they’re going to be able to maintain that indefinite­ly,” he said.

A key assumption of air pollution policy, said Wara, has been that we are in control: “Climate change is kind of making a mockery of that.”

The obligation to protect people from polluted air remains, he added: “That’s really what the Clean Air Act is supposed to do, is keep people safe.”

While he was in college, Moiz Mir lived under an orange sky in Sacramento, California, for weeks because of the Camp fire; some of that pollution was forgiven in nearby Nevada county as an exceptiona­l event. His neighbors didn’t understand the risks of smoke then, or know where to get masks. He began to warn them, to educate himself, and to learn from other fire-prone communitie­s how to cope.

Smoke, he said, “made a permanent and lasting impact” on his psyche and life path. Now 26 years old and a grassroots climate activist, he points out that “in crisis, people look to authority for answers”.

They’re still looking, as the smoke thickens.

“We were thinking like the impacts of climate change were distant,” Mir said. “But now, it’s quite literally the air that I breathe.”

Smoke, Screened: The Clean Air Act’s Dirty Secret is a collaborat­ion of the California Newsroom, MuckRock and the Guardian. Molly Peterson is a reporter for the California Newsroom. Dillon Bergin is a data reporter for MuckRock. Andrew Witherspoo­n is a data reporter for the Guardian.

and @RashidaTla­ib to remove @SpeakerMcC­arthy, a REPUBLICAN SPEAKER.”

Gaetz, who led a historic motion to oust McCarthy following his cooperatio­n with Democrats on a bipartisan bill to avert a federal government shutdown earlier this month, apologized for the email.

“I sincerely apologize to Mike Lawler and anyone else who felt targeted by this ill-conceived email message. I will make changes to ensure this does not happen again,” Gaetz said.

“I intend to heed Speaker-Designate Jordan’s call to not attack fellow Republican­s

as we work through this,” he added.

This is not the first time Lawler has been critical of Gaetz.

Last week, following hours of closed-door meetings amongst Republican­s in attempts to decide on a speaker, Lawler told CNN’s Manu Raju: “Matt Gaetz is frankly a vile person. He’s not somebody who’s willing to work as a team. He stands up there and grandstand­s. He lies directly to folks.”

McCarthy also chimed in on Gaetz’s latest fundraisin­g email, with the former House speaker telling Raju shortly before Wednesday’s second round of votes: “We’re going in, we want to elect Jim Jordan, and if Jim’s numbers drop, it’s a lot of that is due to Gaetz’s email that he put out last night.”

He added: “Did you guys see that, the fundraisin­g email he put out, accusing Republican­s of working with certain Democrats when he had worked with every Democrat and then the crazy eights worked with him? That is infuriatin­g.”

 ?? Composite: The Guardian/Getty Images ?? Without reform, the exceptiona­l events rule is likely to become more regularly used, and distract from the growing problem of wildfire smoke.
Composite: The Guardian/Getty Images Without reform, the exceptiona­l events rule is likely to become more regularly used, and distract from the growing problem of wildfire smoke.
 ?? Bloomberg/Getty Images ?? A resident sprays water on hot spots near a house during a wildfire in Celista, British Columbia, Canada, on 19 August. Photograph:
Bloomberg/Getty Images A resident sprays water on hot spots near a house during a wildfire in Celista, British Columbia, Canada, on 19 August. Photograph:

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