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EPA WARNS OF POOR AIR QUALITY TUESDAY FOR PORTIONS OF SOUTHERN NEW ENGLAND

Release Date: 06/08/1999
Contact Information: Amy Miller, EPA Press Office (617-918-1042)

BOSTON - With continued hot weather conditions on Tuesday, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's New England Office is predicting continued unhealthy air quality in portions of southern New England with elevated levels of ground-level ozone today throughout Connecticut, Rhode Island, and southeastern Massachusetts.

Ground level ozone, the main ingredient of smog, is unhealthy when average concentrations exceed .08 parts per million over an eight-hour period. Poor air quality affects everyone, but some people are particularly sensitive to ozone, including children and adults who are active outdoors, and people with respiratory diseases, such as asthma.

Exposure to elevated ozone levels can cause serious breathing problems, aggravate asthma and other pre-existing lung diseases, and make people more susceptible to respiratory infection. The most common symptoms of ozone exposure are coughing, pain when taking a deep breath and, for people with respiratory disease, shortness of breath.

"When ozone levels get as high as they are today, residents need to be careful about outdoor activities," said John P. DeVillars, administrator of the EPA's New England Office. "Sensitive populations such as children and adults with respiratory problems need to take special care not to over exert themselves."

Ground-level ozone (smog) is formed when volatile organic compounds and oxides of nitrogen interact in the presence of sunlight. Cars, trucks and buses give off the majority of the pollution that makes smog. Fossil fuel burning at electric powerplants, particularly on hot days, also give off smog-making pollution. Gas stations, print shops, household products like paints and cleaners, as well as lawn and garden equipment also add significantly to the ozone smog.

When air quality is forecast to be unhealthy, EPA asks the public to take ozone action. Employees and employers can help reduce ozone-smog by following certain guidelines:

    • use public transportation, bike or walk whenever possible;
    • if you must drive, car pool and combine trips;
    • go to the gas station at night to cut down on gasoline vapors getting into the air during day light hours when the sun can cook the vapors and form ozone;
    • use less electricity - turn air conditioning to a higher temperature, turn out lights and computer screens when you're not using them;
    • avoid using gasoline powered engines, such as lawn mowers, chain saws, leaf blowers on unhealthy air days.
In an effort to better inform New Englanders about "real-time" ozone levels, the EPA maintains an ozone mapping system, which shows real-time images and daily forecasts of ground-level ozone levels. The daily ozone forecast is available on the EPA's Wide Web air pollution information page at www.epa.gov/region01/oms.

Citizens can also sign up at this web address to receive smog alerts from EPA's New England office. Smog Alert is a free service provided by EPA in conjunction with the New England states that automatically notifies subscribers by e-mail or fax when high concentrations of ground-level ozone are predicted in their area. Smog Alerts are issued to notify interested persons of predicted poor air quality in specific geographical areas of New England throughout the summer smog season, May through September.