Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘asthma’

“We have young children and elders that have respiratory problems. And this will hopefully help mitigate, clean-up, and eliminate our PM 2.5 air quality problem in Fairbanks.”

—Alaska Senator Click Bishop – Senate C

Senator Bishop means well, but we have these problems with his way of thinking:

  • Every resident is more at risk from elevated PM 2.5, not just young children and elders.
  • Fine particulate pollution causes cardiovascular harm — including strokes, heart attacks, arrhythmia, atherosclerosis, and congestive heart failure — cancers, and increased risk of premature death. Respiratory harms include lung infections, reduced lung development (in children), pulmonary inflammation, and asthma attacks.
  • Offer a bill to give the state citation authority to protect residents from air pollution violators. As it is, the state cannot ticket air pollution violators, instead they can only be taken to court one-by-one. Imagine the years of legal action needed to stop a drunk driver without citation authority.
  • Residents are making decisions NOW to remove themselves and their families from the air pollution threat. Waiting a year or longer for a gas trucking to “hopefully help“, does nothing to address the present danger to life and safety today.

Help straighten out Senator Click Bishop’s thinking:

<Senator.Click.Bishop@akleg.gov>

>> Link: KUAC Newscast with Dan Bross: Thursday 03/14/13 2:38-3:00; story on SB 23: $355 million financing to private industry for gas trucking from Prudhoe to Fairbanks.

Read Full Post »

3614 Laurance Rd, Fairbanks, Alaska on Feb 14, 2013 05.53 pm

3614 Laurance Rd, Fairbanks, Alaska on Feb 14, 2013 05.53 pm

3614 Laurance Rd, North Pole, Alaska on Feb 14 2013

3614 Laurance Rd, North Pole, Alaska on Feb 14 2013

From: Krystal Francesco (Laurance Road, North Pole) [requested name be published]
Date: Thu, Feb 14, 2013 at 10:17 PM
Subject: Boiler/Hydronic heater in North Pole
To: (60 DEC and borough agency staff, elected and appointed leaders and others – see below)

Hello,

I have attached pictures of a potential coal burning boiler/hydronic heater.  Maybe some of you can shed light on what this really is.  I can tell you what it smells like — pure toxic waste.  This is located at 3614 Laurance Road, also known as the Kids of the Kingdom Learning Center, an in-home daycare.  Not only is it horrible they could potentially be burning coal, but they’re doing it around young kids.  Driving toward it, the smell got so strong I had to hit the “re-circulate” button in my car so I wasn’t struggling to breathe.  Whatever I was smelling, it was NOT any kind of wood smell.  I can’t say I know what burning coal smells like…but I know I couldn’t stand to breathe the air around this contraption.

The other dilemma is the height of the smoke stack — it’s not even on top of the roof, so the smoke is easily able to drift into other houses surrounding the area when there is a breeze.  I strongly believe this is one of the main reasons my family (myself, my mother and my daughter) are on inhalers day and night.  Tonight, oddly enough, my daughter is beginning to show signs of labored breathing…I can’t tell you how many times this has been so far.  Her heartbeat is fast while resting, and her stomach is moving in and out at a speed faster than normal.  This is after using her inhalers and allergy medicine, which she uses EVERY day and night.

Something needs to be done about those who use machines like this, who burn coal especially.  Do the research, it’s clear the fumes from burning coal is horrible to peoples’ health.  Some might think they can “burn clean,” but that’s an oxymoron.  There’s no way you can burn coal responsibly, or without dire consequences over time.  I’ve heard of people saying “well, I don’t see smoke coming out of my smoke stack so that means I’m burning clean.”  But have they actually tested the air quality around their house??  Probably not.

For my family’s sake, my 2.5 year old daughter’s health, please…we need to take action to shut down machines like this that are spewing toxic waste into the air we breathe.

Krystal Francesco

Sent to:

governor@alaska.gov,
larry.hartig@alaska.gov,
william.streur@alaska.gov,
mike.hanley@alaska.gov,
marit.carlson-van.dort@alaska.gov,
alice.edwards@alaska.gov,
john.kuterbach@alaska.gov,
moses.coss@alaska.gov,
robin.wagner@alaska.gov,
andrew.mohrmann@alaska.gov,
claudia.thompson@alaska.gov,
representative.david.guttenberg@akleg.gov,
representative.scott.kawasaki@akleg.gov,
representative.steve.thompson@akleg.gov,
representative.tammie.wilson@akleg.gov,
representative.pete.higgins@akleg.gov,
representative.doug.isaacson@akleg.gov,
senator.john.coghill@akleg.gov,
senator.lyman.hoffman@akleg.gov,
senator.click.bishop@akleg.gov,
senator.pete.kelly@akleg.gov,
airquality@co.fairbanks.ak.us,
mayor@fnsb.us,
gmiller@co.fairbanks.ak.us,
jconner@fnsb.us,
tthompson@fnsb.us,
assembly@co.fairbanks.ak.us,
dhutchison@fsnb.us,
nhoward@fsnb.us,
mdukes@fsnb.us,
gsattley@fnsb.us,
jdavies@fnsb.us,
kkassel@fnsb.us,
vlawrence@fnsb.us,
kdodge@fnsb.us,
lroberts@fnsb.us,
ffcfc@uaf.edu,
fflkd@uaf.edu,
djrinio@alaska.edu,
gwen.holdmann@alaska.edu,
mark@shermanengr.com,
khook@doyonutilities.com,
r10administrator-mclerran@epa.gov,
edmondson.lucy@epa.gov,
tom_moyer@begich.senate.gov,
althea_stmartin@murkowski.senate.gov,
jcleworth@ci.fairbanks.ak.us,
bwgatewood@ci.fairbanks.ak.us,
jmatherly@ci.fairbanks.ak.us,
ljhilling@ci.fairbanks.ak.us,
jseberhart@ci.fairbanks.ak.us,
citycouncilseata@ci.fairbanks.ak.us,
citycouncilseatb@ci.fairbanks.ak.us,
mayor@northpolealaska.com,
dnelson@northpolealaska.com,
msikma@northpolealaska.com,
tmcghee@northpolealaska.com,
shunter@northpolealaska.com,
rholm@northpolealaska.com,
psmith@northpolealaska.com
carrie@dershin.com

Read Full Post »

A mother’s perspective on the cost of being poisoned from the smoke from burning wood and coal.

From: Krystal Francesco (Laurance Road, North Pole) [requested name be published]
Date: Sun, Jan 27, 2013 at 3:03 PM
Subject: Smoke
To: (66 DEC and borough agency staff, elected and appointed leaders)

FNSB Real-time image 386 µg/m3 at 8 am 1/27/2013

FNSB Real-time image 386 µg/m3 at 8 am 1/27/2013

Please see the attached photos.  I would love to have a meaningful response from any of you.  This is a public health risk.  I hear more and more about people who are getting asthma, people who are taking their young children to the doctor because of breathing problems, older people who are suddenly having breathing and heart problems that they never had before, people who have a nagging cough, etc.–the list goes on and the number of people affected.

I have a personal interest in this because of my daughter, who at the young age of 2 years, 5 months, has been on the following medications due to chronic breathing problems over her short lifetime: Albuterol inhaler, Flovent inhaler, Zyrtec, Flonase…that doesn’t include over the counter cough medicine.  I’ve had to start giving her all these since early 2012 morning and night to try and prevent ER visits.  This is when I noticed how horrible our air quality was.  I didn’t even need diagrams or pictures, I could SMELL the nasty fumes in the air, and how much my daughter was coughing.  We’ve gone to the ER over labored breathing (ie couldn’t catch her breath) at least 6-7 times last year ALONE, not to mention how many other times in 2011.

I, myself, have just gone today to the doctor’s to receive steroid and inhaler treatments due to a cough I’ve had since early Dec 2012.  My own mother has had terrible coughing fits this entire winter, starting in November of 2012, where she cannot catch her breath.  She is also on inhalers and steroid treatments.

One of the reasons for this is the fact one of our neighbors is clearly burning something than other dry, seasoned wood.  We can smell the toxic fumes, and see the black smoke with our own eyes.  Their smokestack is clearly too short as well, which doesn’t help it rise above house level and drifts into surrounding houses, where we breath it in day and night.  They live a merely 2 blocks away, right off the Richardson Highway on Laurance Road.  Who knows how many other people are burning trash, carcasses, tires, etc.

I would like an answer to the following question: WHAT IS GOING TO BE DONE ABOUT THIS VERY SERIOUS PUBLIC HEALTH RISK CAUSED BY COAL AND WOOD SMOKE, AND WHAT IS THE TIMELINE? Please do something about this; this is a borough-wide problem.  It is your job–all of you, regardless of what our boroughs laws are–to do something meaningful about this.  You all need to work together at the local and state level to save the public’s health–actually do something about this and stop just talking about it.  To do otherwise is a gross negligence of the some of the most important duties of your elected position. Please respond.  I want to protect my family’s health, but I do not want to have to move in order to do it (because of family and financial constraints), so I am looking to you whose job it is to help protect my family from public health hazards.

Krystal Francesco (also living with me are my parents) North Pole, AK

Also attached to the email: graph from 48 Days of Smoke in Rectangle of Death AK 99705 [Graph]

Read Full Post »

[UPDATE 1/30/2013: FDNM article Residents concerned with air quality, plot size of Badger Road subdivision plan. What’s essential in choosing a site for a school? Health and safety. On Nov 18, 2012, Superintendent Pete Lewis wrote that Elbasan Acres should “…work well for a new elementary school….and could conceivably serve as a secondary school site….” Then gives his own ‘Heck of a job, Brownie’, “We appreciate the planning consideration and effort that went into this site development and commend you and the borough staff for the good work.” p 48 Assembly Full agenda packet]

How can the Borough fail to consider air pollution in selecting a school site?

The Borough has proposed an elementary school in the SE corner of the Elbasan Acres parcel. A pollution pit, see map below.

Blue Square Marks Elbasan Acres using 1-20-2011 FNSB Map for North Pole

The FNSB Platting Board will meet Wed, Jan 30 @ 6 pm Assembly Chambers to subdivide 634 acres of Borough land in North Pole for development. “Elbasan Acres,” a new housing development of 115 homes, would go into a low-lying area near Brock Rd/Repp Rd/Hollowell Rd. The new elementary school would be built on 56 acres of adjacent land at the NW corner of the Repp Rd/Hollowell Rd intersection.

Compare North Pole with Fairbanks on the same day, Feb 16, 2011.

Blue Square Marks Elbasan Acres using 2-16-2011 FNSB Map for North Pole

PM 2.5 Concentrations in the Fairbanks Bowl, Feb 16, 2011 from 10:17 AM, Fairbanks, Alaska

Borough maps confirm what residents of the area know: the air is thick with smoke. Adding new emission sources to a pollution pit is irresponsible. Choosing to locate a new elementary school in a pollution pit is even worse. It is inhumane to endanger the health and safety of future school employees and elementary students. Knowing the harm but going ahead anyway makes the Borough and School Board legally negligent and culpable. Future injured employees and elementary school parents on behalf of their injured children will be in a position to drain the Borough’s assets to recover costs and damages.

Before going further with plans for a major new subdivision and elementary school, the Borough should add the area to its sniffer vehicle routes. The current North Pole sniffer run goes by existing schools but not the proposed site for the new elementary school.

Smoke exposure can cause asthma, COPD, chemical sensitivity, heart disease, diabetes, strokes, blood clots, and many other problems. It is implicated as a factor in Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, multiple sclerosis, ear infections, respiratory infections, pneumonia, chronic bronchitis, and influenza. It has been documented to lower IQ and to increase workplace absences, school sick days, hospitalizations, and deaths. Most of the studies have been on populations exposed to far lower levels than are common in neighborhoods here and have found a linear relationship between exposure and harm.

Proposed north pole school dec-2009-np

Blue Square Marks Proposed North Pole School Site

The proposed development falls just outside the PM 2.5 nonattainment boundary [link to nonattainment map]. Emissions from the development can be expected to flow into the nonattainment area, making meeting attainment more difficult. The closest monitor is the North Pole Fire Station.

Link 48 Days of Smoke in Rectangle of Death AK 99705 [Graph]

The Borough’s main interest is to develop the housing to offset costs of building the school. As a short-term budget scheme, it sounds like a winner. But adding new homes on top of the very stagnant real estate market in North Pole, with over a year inventory of unsold homes, will depress property values and sales yet further. Then toss in the concern that by the time the school is built, the need may no longer exist. Is a school still needed given the families relocating out of the area? This bad idea does not protect taxpayers, home sellers and buyers, teachers, or children.

Someone will say trust Alaska DEC to control the air pollution. Based on what evidence? DEC has filed a single case against a violator, the Woodriver landlords, not several as some believe. That case, 4FA-13-01205CI, may be followed on CourtView. DEC isn’t keeping the PM 2.5 nonattainment schedule; they failed to send EPA their plan to meet attainment that was due Dec 14, 2012. The state has no plan for reducing smoke pollution. Hope is not a strategy.

Borough planners may not have talked with the air quality division or seen the maps. Right hand, meet left hand. Well, they should. In 2009, EPA accepted a smaller nonattainment area than what they’d initially proposed, and now, utterly oblivious to health and safety, the Borough proposes development on the edge of the nonattainment boundary that will make meeting attainment and protecting public health more challenging than ever. If the development goes through, there will be a need to either control pollution outside the PM 2.5 nonattainment boundary or to enlarge the area, just as is needed in Moose Creek, Alaska.

The Jan 30 meeting was rescheduled from the regular Jan 16 meeting. The Platting Board is required to consider health and safety issues. Testimony is limited to three minutes per person except for the applicant.

Link: Full agenda packet pp 37-57

For more information, please contact Jeanne Olson <corvi@mosquitonet.com> 488-8800/488-2906.

Time for the Borough to take the long view instead of trying to squeeze revenue from their land when the North Pole housing market is saturated. Time to consider how this scheme risks the assets and holdings of the Borough as well as the health of elementary age children and their teachers.

Time to stop ignoring air quality, hoping a gust of wind will carry it away.

Read Full Post »

Previous studies have linked particulate matter from traffic fumes and coal-fired power stations to heart disease, asthma, bronchitis, cancer and other health problems.

A news story “Wood Stoves May Cause Cancer, Heart Disease” was published on Fox News 2/7/2011.

The story was on a European study of fine particulate matter generated by woodstoves, not from wood boilers or hydronic wood furnaces which have been gathering a notorious reputation in neighborhoods and near schools locally.

The story cites professor Steffen Loft at the Department of Public Health at Copenhagen University:

The particles that come from wood smoke can certainly cause fatal heart or lung disease. In human cells that were exposed to the particles, substantial DNA damage and mutation took place.

Fox News picked up the story from the London Telegraph “Wood-burning stoves ‘can cause cancer and heart disease’” 2/7/2011. From the Telegraph article:

Professor Steffen Loft and colleagues compared the air from the centre of a Danish village with many wood stoves to a neighbouring area with few of them. They also analysed pure wood smoke particulate matter collected from a wood stove.

When scientists tested the wood-burning particles on human cells in a laboratory, they found that the particles caused more cellular and DNA damage than air without the particles.

‘The full scale of the health risk is not currently known,’ Loft said, ‘but said some people were already feeling the impact, such as those suffering from asthma.’

The original study was published by American Chemical Society’s journal, Chemical Research in Toxicology. The original study does not yet appear to be available on the website. However, a related study also by Professor Steffen Loft and colleagues is available: “Oxidative Stress, DNA Damage, and Inflammation Induced by Ambient Air and Wood Smoke Particulate Matter in Human A549 and THP-1 Cell Lines” 1/14/2011.

Read Full Post »

Outdoor Wood Boiler (OWB)

UPDATE: Manufacturers of wood-fired boilers have not shown the state of Washington that their devices produce 4.5 grams/hour or less. For this reason, wood-fired boilers continue to be prohibited throughout the Washington.

Yes. Newly manufactured indoor wood stoves are required to meet strict Washington State particle emissions standards, 2.5 grams per hour for catalytic stoves and 4.5 grams per hour for noncatalytic stoves. In contrast, tests done by the Northeast States for Coordinated Air Use Management (NESCAUM) found that the average fine particle emissions (a particularly harmful pollutant) from one OWB are equivalent to the emissions from:

* 22 EPA certified wood stoves,

* 205 oil furnaces,

* or as many as 8,000 natural gas furnaces

One OWB can emit as much fine particle matter as four heavy duty diesel trucks on a grams per hour basis. The smallest OWB has the potential to emit almost one and one-half tons of particulate matter every year. Although older style indoor wood stoves emit more than new certified stoves, they are still several times less polluting than OWBs. Due to their poor combustion conditions, it is also probable that OWBs emit proportionately more benzene, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, formaldehyde and other toxic partial combustion products which have been linked to asthma, heart attacks and cancer.

The above is an excerpt from the Washington State Department of Ecology website on air quality and outdoor wood boilers. Visit the site to learn more.  Washington State prohibits outdoor wood boilers because clean air and residential property values are defended priorities in their communities.

Read Full Post »

Santa isn’t laughing about the new hourly smoke reports for North Pole. He knows smoke is serious trouble. He and Missus Claus are getting up in years and want to be make and deliver presents for many more. Plus, he’s all about kids and elves and wants his hometown to be safe. Santa’s “Ho, Ho, Ho” sounded more like “hack, hack, hack” when he sent Clean Air Fairbanks the map of possible North Pole smoke sources you can view at the end of this post.

Real-time, hourly PM 2.5 monitoring reports from the Fairbanks North Star Borough for North Pole are now viewable online at Live Air Quality Data — FNSB AQ Monitoring. The monitoring site is at the North Pole Elementary School.

Here’s how you get the hourly AQ reports for North Pole: when the map of Alaska comes up, click your computer mouse on the blue dot over Fairbanks, then click “ClickStationInfo” to see the monitoring data for 1-hour (PM2.5L 1hr) and 24-hour (PM25L_24). While it says, “Last Received” this mini report may omit some hourly reports you can find in the monthly tables (see below).

[Difficulties? The map of Alaska will not load unless you allow web content that was not delivered securely—click “no” on security warning. Also, if it still isn’t working, try a different web browser as some do not work with this application.]

With a little more elbow grease you can even get month-long tables of hourly data at Live Air Quality Data — FNSB AQ Monitoring. Click on “Data Reports” on the left column, then beneath that click “Matrix.” In the box, select Station “North Pole Elementary” and Monitor “PM2.5L 1hr.” Then set the start date for the first day of the month you want: 12/1/2010 or 1/1/2011 both work. [Set the start date yourself; the calendar seems hinky.] Then push “GenerateReport” at the bottom of the box. These tables report the most current data every hour (without omissions unless the monitor isn’t working), the lowest PM 2.5 concentration recorded that day (Min), the highest concentration (Max), and the 24-hour average concentration (Ave).

You think the monthly tables aren’t user friendly? Be thankful Santa has them at all! Wouldn’t it be great to have more monitoring sites on-line? Limited availability of public information has hindered general understanding of the severity and primary sources of our PM 2.5. Clean Air Fairbanks continues to shine light where we can.

What’s the North Pole AQ monitoring data show? Based on the monthly tables, 7 exceedances over EPA’s 35 micrograms/cubic meter standard were recorded in December 2010 (only half the month reported data) and 2 exceedences have been recorded so far in January 2011 (thru 1/5). The highest hourly PM 2.5 concentrations recorded in Dec. 2010 at the North Pole Elementary monitoring site was 119.3 micrograms at 11 pm. Not a good time to walk Rudolph and the other reindeer. During the winter of 2009-2010, the borough sniffer vehicle recorded an instantaneous reading (not hourly) concentration of over 2,000 micrograms at Lineman Ave and Dawson Road in North Pole. When would you say is a good time for Santa, Mrs. Claus, and the elves to load up the sleigh and move?

How’s North Pole compare with Fairbanks? The FNSB Air Quality Index reported the 24-hour average at the downtown monitor (675 7th Ave) was 21.1 micrograms as of 4 pm on 1/5/2011. For the preceding 24-hour period (from 5 pm the previous day to 4 pm on 1/5/2011), the average in North Pole was 55.6, significantly higher than in downtown Fairbanks. The maximum hourly concentration recorded at the North Pole site on 1/5/2011 was 94.2.

When is it necessary to take health precautions? View Judging Particulate Levels in Your Area from EPA. According to this table, when hourly concentrations hit 81 micrograms, even healthy children should “limit prolonged exertion.” “Unusually sensitive individuals” including children with lung conditions, such as bronchitis or asthma, or heart problems should be protected at lower PM 2.5 concentrations. Recent studies have found increased mortality with short-term exposure to PM 2.5 concentrations less than 20 μg/m3, considerably below the “health-based” 24-hour standard of 35 μg/m3. [See Dr. Lori Verbrugge, Alaska Division of Public Health, 2009 Symposium Presentation.]

North Pole Elementary School Interim Principal Rosita Bryant-Wilburn and school nurse Diana Drath can now use Live Air Quality Data — FNSB AQ Monitoring to determine for any given hour 1) whether recess should be held outside or inside, 2) whether athletic practice and competitions should be held, 3) whether to take extra precautions to protect health-compromised children such as the 24 students at North Pole Elementary who have notations of “asthma” in school medical files, and 4) when it is time to turn off school air ventilation system to prevent drawing dirty air inside. The public availability of North Pole Elementary’s PM 2.5 air monitoring reports turns up the heat for school indoor air testing as indoor air is not filtered at any school in the borough. Air in classrooms and halls may be as bad as what’s outside. To raise these concerns with North Pole Elementary’s interim principal, contact her directly: Rosita Bryant-Wilburn, phone: (907)488-2286, rosita.wilburn@k12northstar.org. Tell her Santa sent you!

Find North Pole Elementary School, 250 Snowman Lane, on Google maps. Visit the North Pole Elementary School School District website. North Pole Elementary is attended by 483 students, including 24 students with notations of “asthma” in school medical files, and students are supported by 30 teachers and 34 other school district employees. The health of school district employees as well as students is at risk from elevated PM 2.5. Hundreds more students attend North Pole Middle School (585 students, 48 asthma-notations) and North Pole High School (781 students, 41 asthma notations), located within 2,000 feet of North Pole Elementary where the PM 2.5 readings are taken.

Santa knows who’s been naughty and who’s been nice so he gave us this map: Map of possible PM 2.5 sources near North Pole Elementary School (from DEC) [124KB]. The North Pole Elementary School is located near “Snowman” in the lower left hand corner of the map. The flags are color coded: Green (23) = indoor woodstove; Red (22) = Outdoor Wood Boiler; Blue (4) = Outdoor Coal Boiler. Some of the wood boilers burn coal also. The flags are not comprehensive; many areas have not been researched. Other sources of PM 2.5 such as diesel vehicles, such as idling near the school, are not shown. Contrast the number of flagged potential sources (49) with the thousands of people living nearby.

Santa promises not to give out any more lumps of coal in North Pole. Be on the lookout instead for stockings loaded with dry firewood. Santa will be in touch to let you know what you can do to get him out of smoke trouble.

Read Full Post »

Unless you have an effective home air filter, the ambient (outside) level of pollution comes inside your house, office, church, store, daycare, or school. A growing body of scientific evidence shows that exposure to increased small particle pollution (PM 2.5) causes increased health consequences, short-term and long-term.

Following is a selection of health studies and reports on the consequences of fine particle pollution, called PM 2.5, in wood and coal smoke.

The American Lung Association has noted that “short-term exposure to particle pollution can kill.” This sobering statement puts our high PM 2.5 levels in context. From their 2010 State of the Air report:

Deaths can occur on the very day that particle levels are high, or within one to two months afterward. Particle pollution does not just make people die a few days earlier than they might otherwise—these are deaths that would not have occurred if the air were cleaner.

Particle pollution also diminishes lung function, causes greater use of asthma medications and increased rates of school absenteeism, emergency room visits and hospital admissions. Other adverse effects can be coughing, wheezing, cardiac arrhythmias and heart attacks. According to the findings from some of the latest studies, short-term increases in particle pollution have been linked to:

  • death from respiratory and cardiovascular causes, including strokes;
  • mortality in infants and young children;
  • increased numbers of heart attacks, especially among the elderly and in people with heart conditions;
  • inflammation of lung tissue in young, healthy adults;
  • increased hospitalization for cardiovascular disease, including strokes and congestive heart failure;
  • increased emergency room visits for patients suffering from acute respiratory ailments;
  • increased hospitalization for asthma among children; and
  • increased severity of asthma attacks in children.

Minnesota Pollution Control Agency “Health Effects of Wood Smoke” covers this topic clearly and with an excellent graphic. Fine particles, called PM 2.5, travel deep into the lungs and beyond into the body, carrying toxic contaminants on a deadly journey inside us.

Some of the smallest fine particles can go deep into the lungs and can even pass through the lungs into the bloodstream. They can trigger respiratory problems such as asthma attacks and even heart problems. Fine particles are considered especially dangerous for young children with developing lungs, and people of all ages who have asthma, bronchitis, other respiratory problems, and or cardiovascular disease.

“Woodsmoke health effects: a review” Naeher, et al (2007), recommends woodsmoke be regulated along with other ambient fine particle pollutants:

The sentiment that woodsmoke, being a natural substance, must be benign to humans is still sometimes heard. It is now well established, however, that wood-burning stoves and fireplaces as well as wildland and agricultural fires emit significant quantities of known health-damaging pollutants, including several carcinogenic compounds.

Critical Review of the Health Effects of Woodsmoke by Naeher PhD et al, 3/2005 provides a comprehensive coverage of its many health effects.

Wood Smoke Risk Assessment: Defining the Questions, Morandi, et al (2009), page 2:

(T)here is a growing body of evidence from animal and human studies that exposure to wood smoke poses a risk to human health at environmentally relevant concentrations. These adverse health effects range from irritancy to serious respiratory diseases, including chronic obstructive airway disease and lung cancer.

Globally, the 1.4 million premature deaths from biomass fuels (indoor smoke from solid fuels) annually rivals those from malaria. Source: “Wood: The Fuel that Warms You Thrice” Kirk R. Smith, MPH, PhD (2008), Figure 5.1. Smith has a new take on the old New England expression, “Wood is the fuel that warms you twice. Once when chopping, and once when burning.” Smith writes that:

Wood seems to have the potential to generate heat a third time because the smoke from its burning is a major risk factor for respiratory infections and the fever that often accompanies them.

Other woodsmoke and PM 2.5 particulate studies are available on the National Institutes of Health PubMed publication search site.

The State of Alaska Epidemiology bulletin identified an association between PM 2.5 and Fairbanks hospital admissions 8/30/2010. See also the State of Alaska Department of Health and Human Services fact sheeton the 8/2010 bulletin. Also, see the FDNM article on the 8/2010 on the State of Alaska Epidemiology study.

Examine this list of scientific studies from 1984 to 2004 on the health effects of woodsmoke and particulate matter air pollution.

Woodsmoke triggers asthma attacks. Read more on the Center for Disease Control, Asthma pages, and asthma trigger page. See also the NIH National Library of Medicine “Breath of Life” asthma publication to better understand this complex disease.

A Johns Hopkins study from 1998-2003 found a direct correlation in increased PM 2.5 levels in indoor air and asthma symptoms and medication use. According to the study, a rise in indoor PM 2.5 by 10 μg/m3 increases the number of days children were wheezing severely enough to limit their speech by 7% and the number of days children used rescue medication by 4%. 

Jane Q. Koenig, PhD, MS Professor Emeritus of the University of Washington and Koenig’s faculty profile, has a number of relevant publications including: “Indoor- and Outdoor-Generated Particles” Koenig et al 2005 and “Effect of Particulate Air Pollution on Lung Function in Adult and Pediatric Subjects in a Seattle Panel Study” Carol A. Trenga, PhD, Koenig, et al 2005.

PM 2.5 air pollution has harmful cardiovascular effects according to a growing body of evidence, according to “Growing evidence linking air pollution with cardiovascular disease: AHA” by Michael O’Riordan on RD Brook, 2010:

PM2.5 generally has been associated with increased risks of myocardial infarction, stroke, arrhythmia, and heart-failure exacerbation within hours to days of exposure in susceptible individuals. Several new studies have also demonstrated that residing in locations with higher long-term average PM levels elevates the risk for cardiovascular morbidity and mortality.

Sunday newspaper insert Parade published an article “The Surprising Link Between Air Pollution & Diabetes” 11/7/2010. The article refers to a study published in Diabetes Care which found “a strong association between PM2.5 exposure and diabetes prevalence, suggesting that ambient air pollution may contribute to the increased prevalence of diabetes in the adult U.S. population.” This conclusion was published in “Association Between Fine Particulate Matter and Diabetes Prevalence in the U.S.” by John F. Pearson, BS, et al in Diabetes Care10/2010.

Given a hypothetical population of 1,000,000 people, our model suggests that for every 10 μg/cubic meter increase of PM2.5, there could be a resulting increase of ∼10,000 diagnosed cases of diabetes or an overall increase in diabetes prevalence of ∼1%/10 μg/cubic meter.

According to the 2009 US Census Bureau, the Fairbanks North Star Borough population estimate was 98,660, with 8.4% under the age of 5 and 26% under 18. In our community a 10 microgram increase in the annual average PM 2.5 level would be expected to result in an additional 900 to 1,000 individuals developing diabetes. Pearson’s article concludes:

…(E)vidence based on this study and others suggests that current limits [EPA annual limit of 15 μg/cubic meter] on particulate matter exposure may not adequately mitigate the public health consequences.

The Indo-US Collaboration on Environmental and Occupational Health, recommendations and abstracts, 2008 grimly portrays the effects of air pollution. One study, on page 32, lists the common short-term air pollution exposure effects [and symptom(s) associated with that effect]:

  • mortality (cardio-respiratory)
  • hospital admissions (cardio-respiratory)
  • emergency room attendees (cardio-respiratory)
  • primary care visits (upper and lower respiratory)
  • respiratory symptoms (cough, phlegm, wheeze)
  • use of medications (asthma drugs)
  • lung function (restrictive and obstructive)
  • blood (increased viscosity, fibrinogen)
  • heart (increased heart rate variability, arrhythmia)

Another abstract in the Indo-US publication goes beyond the short-term effects, see page 53-54:

(The) WHO estimates 1.6 million premature deaths from indoor air pollution (twice that from outdoor air pollution) [800 thousand]…. Chronic exposure to biomass smoke causes genetic damage, cardiovascular disease and stroke.

Brains as well as bodies are put at risk. A recent US study found lower IQ in children of mothers exposed to higher levels of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAHs), the main toxins in woodsmoke. After controlling for variables, IQ was 5 points lower, about 4%, than children of mothers with lower PAH exposure. Study: Prenatal Airborne Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbon Exposure and Child IQ at Age 5 Years published in Pediatrics7/2009.

A current study found an association between childhood autism and residence proximity, during pregnancy and near the time of delivery, to freeways and major roadways as a surrogate for air pollution exposure. The study was published in the journal Environmental Health Perspectives “Residential Proximity to Freeways and Autism in the CHARGE study12/16/2011 and also summarized in the LA Times “Proximity to freeways increases autism risk, study finds12/16/2011.

The New South Wales (Australia) Government’s “Action for Air” 2009 acknowledges PM 2.5 particles are particularly dangerous and that there is no safe exposure level:

Health research identifies particles of less than 2.5 micrograms (PM2.5) as a particular concern because their smaller size means they can be inhaled deeper into the lungs, and because there is no safe threshold level to use for setting standards.

Read Full Post »

The “Rectangle of Death” in North Pole is the neighborhood where the highest PM 2.5 pollution concentrations were recorded by the Borough at the intersection of Lineman Ave and Dawson Road during the winter of 2009/2010: over 2,000 micrograms.

Submitted by a North Pole resident to the FNSB Air Pollution Control Commission, 12/7/2010.

I am very concerned about the smoke in the Hurst, Newby, Lineman, and Dawson area of North Pole (as well as the Borough-wide smoke problem). The smoke is so bad that I cannot walk my dog for any length of time like I used to two winters ago. (The smoke was horrible last winter, too, making it impossible for me to walk outdoors.)

I enjoy the outdoors, and I want to enjoy getting out with my dog again, as well as with my children, instilling in them a love for nature—summer, spring, fall, and winter.  This winter (and last), my children cannot go outside, as it is too smoky for them. We all know that it is very healthy for children to get outdoors in all seasons (when the air is not poisonous, of course).  Keeping them indoors is my only option right now, though. 

However, even in my home, my family and I are affected by the wood and coal (and whatever else people are burning) smoke in this area. My children, my husband, and I cough; I can even taste smoke when I cough. Our eyes burn. I also have mild asthma that is triggered by the air quality in and out of my home, but I am reluctant to use my inhaler as often as my lungs would like, since I am nursing my infant daughter and I do not want to introduce her body to unnecessary chemicals/medications. I am further concerned that my daughter will succumb to SIDS.

We/I have all of these complaints, despite running an air cleaner. It is a good one: it senses the air quality around it. Last night, for instance, it kicked up several notches because the air in our home was so bad. This happens most days—and evenings, especially: it kicks up a notch or more.

I cannot believe this situation is allowed to continue, especially when the harm smoke causes is well-known. Moreover, it is well-known that it does not just stay outside: it travels inside very easily (to which my air cleaner can attest). If our clothes stay in the dryer (which vents outside) for any length of time, they smell of smoke. My dog smells of smoke every time I let her back in from a potty break. People enter my home smelling of smoke, bringing it with them from outside.

I have pictures of the smoky roads (attached). They were taken at about 1:30 pm on October 20, 2010 and at about 11 am on November 3, 2010. I have not been able to get any more as it is usually dark when I am on the road these days, but my air cleaner assured me that there is plenty of smoke outside and inside my home most of the time. 

Please do something about this situation. My children’s health, and my husband’s and my health are at stake: ALL people’s health is at stake, as well as our pets.

Sincerely hoping this will not last long,

XXXX XXXXXX

November 3, 2010: Dawson (1st picture) and Newby Road (2nd picture) at the corners of Lineman Ave.

October 20, 2010: Dawson Road at the Corner of Lineman Ave. (3rd Picture)

Dawson and Lineman, North Pole, 11/3/2010

Intersection of Newby and Lineman, North Pole 11/3/2010

Dawson Road at the Corner of Lineman, North Pole 10/20/2010

Read Full Post »

On behalf of students and staff at Randy Smith Middle, Watershed Charter, Woodriver Elementary, and throughout the district, 10 parents testified to the FNSB School Board Tuesday, 10/19/2010 to request action to protect children and staff in district schools. They supported improving air filtration inside the schools and requested help in urging Alaska DEC to enforce existing regulations against violators of 18 AAC 50.110.

Read Dermot Cole’s FDNM: “Parents ask school board to address air pollution at Woodriver” 10/19/2010.

Listen to the audio of the 10/19/2010 testimony to the school board. (Testimony begins 11:40 into the recording.) 

Five of the parents described impacts that smoke had caused themselves, their children, or both. A School District employee at Woodriver testified seeing smoke in the halls 1 to 3 days a week &  about her son’s chronic bronchitis infections. As part of her job, she is required to accompany the children on bus and recess duty and related the complaints from the children about the smoke. She described her own health ordeal, including the loss of hearing in one ear due to a chronic sinus infection, likely need for surgery, and low blood oxygen levels  which Dr (Richard) Raugust had diagnosed as belonging to those of a smoker. But the district employee explained, she’s an aerobic instructor & never smoked, just breathed the air at work.

A mother of a son with asthma at Woodriver spoke about how important recess is to every child’s social and learning development but expressed dismay that her son often couldn’t be allowed to go outside with the other kids due to smoke in the playground. She wanted the air quality to be safe and healthy at school, inside and out.

A North Pole father with two young boys said he may have to move in order to prevent further attacks of severe bronchitis like his sons both had last winter. He installed filters in his own home “as they should in the schools” and asked the district to “force the state to move on it.” He said current school MERV 3 filtration needed to be raised to HEPA.

The mother of a 9-year-old daughter at Woodriver made careful note of the fact that children are especially sensitive to air pollution and urged the district to be “proactive” and have the air monitored inside the schools.

Jerry Norum, former school district teacher, Assembly member, and City Council member, thanked the school board for their interest in the issue. He reminded them the district is the tenant of the borough buildings. He said, “The winds have changed direction. And I won’t say we’re in a state of confusion; its a state of reassessment.” Mr. Norum described his own bout of breathing difficulties caused by local air pollution. He said fixing the problem “takes breaking the inertia.”

A local nurse and mother of two children with reactive airway issues urged the school board to actively track lung problems, educate students about air pollution causes & effects, and highlighted that resources are available to help nonattainment areas. She supported better air filtration for the schools if an assessment showed it would effectively control the smoke pollution. She answered a question about Randy Smith, saying that it too has problems.

A Watershed mother held up a visual representation showing relative scale of emissions from an outdoor wood boiler (OWB) vs other sources of residential heating. She testified that OWBs emit 72 grams per hour of particle pollution. She also testified that she’d reviewed air quality data collected at Watershed using the RAMs trailer which showed 48% of the days measured were above EPA’s catagory of “unhealthy for sensitive groups” and that 65% of the winter days measured at the downtown station were “unhealthy for sensitive groups.” She asked the school board to recognize that all children are in the “sensitive groups” category. She referred to the FMH retroactive public health study 8/2010 showing significant increased rates of hospitalization during episodes of higher pollution in the community.



After the testimony, school board members questioned Superintendent Pete Lewis, new to town and the district this year. Superintendent Lewis agreed to get back to the board with proposals.

Read Full Post »

Older Posts »