Unique Quality Products
Make Respiratory Health A Federal Priority
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Stronger air quality standards are critical to reducing COVID-19-related deaths.
Americans are suffering because of poor air quality in major cities. The EPA’s inaction has led to air suffuse with microscopic particles linked to heart attacks, stroke, asthma, cancer and premature death 1.
Particle pollution can exist in solid, liquid or gas form. Minute particulate matter, also called PM 2.5, can pass directly into the bloodstream from the lungs, leading to serious health conditions. The Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation has linked such pollution to at least 85,000 deaths each year in the U.S. 2.
Meanwhile, deaths from the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) have topped 100,000 and are still rising in the U.S. Those with compromised respiratory systems, living with COPD, asthma or other conditions exacerbated by poor air quality, face a much higher risk of mortality 3.
In April 2020, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) retained, without changes, the National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS) for particulate matter (PM) including both fine particles (PM2.5) and coarse particles (PM10) set 8 years prior 4.
According to the EPA, this decision was made while considering “the most current available scientific evidence and risk and exposure information, and with consultation and confirmation by the agency?s independent science advisors.?
Periodic reviews of the Clean Air Act are meant to accommodate scientific discovery, leading to updated national standards for pollutants. But this isn’t how Wheeler’s EPA is running. In fact, in 2018 Wheeler disbanded the 20-person Particulate Matter Review Panel 5, which was designed to advise the EPA on particulate matter science. Wheeler has instead tapped the Clean Air Scientific Advisory Council (CASAC), which contains zero particle pollution scientists, to perform the review.
Working outside the EPA’s purview, the members of the Particulate Matter Review Panel convened in October 2019 to issue a report 6 calling for stronger air quality standards, which has been supported by the EPA’s own scientists 7. According to the EPA’s report, reducing particulate pollution in 30 U.S. cities could prevent up to 12,500 respiratory disease-related deaths yearly.
The EPA has the capacity and the responsibility to protect American lives by setting reasonable air quality standards. During the worst respiratory pandemic many alive today have ever experienced, this is more important than ever.
Sign the petition below and demand that the Clean Air Act is reviewed and strengthened as recommended by air quality scientists, and that penalties are put in place for those who contribute to dangerous particulate pollution.