COLUMBUS, Ohio – Hundreds of Ohio kids spend their days gasping for breath, according to a new report. A first-of-its-kind analysis from the Clean Air Task Force shows how air pollution from oil and gas facilities can impact the health of communities, even those far downwind.
In Ohio, the report says the result is nearly 30,000 summertime childhood asthma attacks.
Janice Nolen, assistant vice president for national policy with the American Lung Association, explained more than 9 million tons of methane and other pollutants are released each year by the oil and gas industry, contributing to the formation of ozone smog pollution.
"You've got pipelines and engines and equipment that have historically just sort of leaked some of these volatile organic compounds and methane, and have not been recognized as being the contributor that they are," said Nolen.
The report findings also can be explored with an online interactive tool, oilandgasthreatmap.com, which displays data about the threats communities face from oil and gas industry pollution.
It says there are more than 90,000 oil and gas wells, compressors and processors in Ohio, and the state is ranked sixth overall nationally for the worst health effects related to oil and gas production.
Suzanne Fortuna is a pediatric nurse practitioner, and a mom from Lake County. Her 10-year-old son has asthma, and Fortuna said every day, she witnesses him and and other children struggle to cope with the effects of air pollution.
"The kids I see in clinic, they're literally taking their medications but they're gasping for air," she said. "I can give them asthma treatments, but we're still sending them back to their environments, where they're certainly surrounded by lots of factories and gas or coal production."
National standards for new sources of methane and ozone pollution from the oil and gas industry were recently finalized by the Obama Administration. And Fortuna contends stronger standards that apply to existing sources also are needed to protect public health.
"It's a right to be able to breathe clean air," she insisted. "And it shouldn't be that we're struggling every day and trying to teach families every day how to take care of these chronic illnesses, when we should be preventing the chronic illnesses."
According to the report, the health effects of increased ozone from oil and gas production will be felt the strongest in Cincinnati, Cleveland, Columbus, Dayton and other densely-populated areas of Ohio.
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State officials in Maine are preparing the next generation for climate change-related activism and careers.
A new state-run website helps young Mainers find ways to use their own talents and interests to counter any climate anxiety and work to build the state's climate resilience.
Abigail Hayne is Maine's youth climate engagement coordinator.
"Whether it's taking action just in your community or in your life, or exploring different climate jobs that are specific to Maine," said Hayne, "the youths can just kind of poke around and find something that makes sense to them."
Hayne said the website offers practical, localized ways young people can get active with their town or school as well as Maine's Climate Council, which currently includes a dozen youth representatives.
Maine faces simultaneous challenges. The state is warming faster than the global average and coping with an increase in extreme weather events.
It also has one of the oldest populations in the nation.
Hayne said towns statewide are developing plans to strengthen infrastructure, and the state has a responsibility to make sure young people are well-informed about these climate-related jobs.
"Soon enough, we're going to start seeing younger generations really on the front lines of climate change and community resilience," said Hayne, "and we need to make sure that they are fully prepared when they enter those roles."
More than 170 communities are utilizing state grants to identify the roads, buildings and energy infrastructure that is susceptible to climate change and begin needed upgrades.
Construction, engineering and electrical workers will be in high demand.
Hayne said the website can connect young Mainers with these new work opportunities as well as each other.
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School buses are getting cleaner in Washington state after this year's legislative session.
Lawmakers in Olympia passed House Bill 1368, which will fund the purchase of zero emission school buses.
Rep. Tana Senn, D-Mercer Island, said the program is getting off the ground quickly.
"As we work towards that long-term goal of all new school buses being zero emission, we're kick-starting this year with $40 million in grants to school districts in overburdened communities," Senn explained.
Going forward, Senn noted school districts will have to purchase zero-emission vehicles once the total cost of ownership is equal to or lower than the cost of diesel vehicles. The state is leveraging the state's Climate Commitment Act resources to fund the transition of its 10,000 school buses.
Devin Denney, director of transportation for Highline Public Schools in King County, which already has electric school buses in its fleet, said he has driven the electric buses and talked about some of their benefits from a driver's perspective.
"You're not competing against that engine noise, the kids aren't competing against the engine noise," Denney observed. "It's a much quieter bus all the way around. The major advantage, of course, is that there's no tailpipe emissions with an electric bus, so our kids' health is better protected."
Senn emphasized health studies have shown there are negative health effects from diesel vehicles for kids, and it is easy to understand why.
"If you think about kids waiting to get on their bus in front of an elementary school and you have this line of buses idling, letting out diesel fumes right at the height of a little child, it becomes obvious that this is probably not the most healthy thing for our children," Senn added.
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Today, in honor of Earth Day, climate advocates are asking California lawmakers and Gov. Gavin Newsom to rally around a plan to put a $15 billion bond measure on the November ballot.
If passed, the bond measure would fund a range of climate resiliency measures.
Sam Hodder, president and CEO of the Save the Redwoods League, said March was the tenth month in a row to break monthly heat records.
"I think Earth Day is a terrific opportunity for the broader public to recognize how nature is critical for resilience, for our quality of life, for our mental and physical health, and for our communities more broadly," Hodder outlined.
Two similar bills to put a bond measure on the ballot are under consideration in Sacramento, Assembly Bill 1567 and Senate Bill 867, but they have been stalled since last summer. The bond would finance many programs, including some to restore wetlands that guard against sea-level rise, and to remove dead wood in forests to guard against mega-fires, which Hodder noted have killed 20% of the giant sequoias in recent years.
Opponents pointed out the state already faces a budget deficit and cannot afford to take on more debt. But only 5% of California's old-growth coastal redwoods remain, mostly due to aggressive logging many decades ago.
Hodder argued the giant trees can be critical ingredients in the fight against climate change because they trap so much carbon.
"Redwood forests sequester more carbon per acre than any other forest system in the world," Hodder emphasized. "We have the opportunity to transition the redwood forest from something that is vulnerable to climate change to something that is helping to solve and address the climate crisis."
Experts blame climate change for California's wild weather over the past few years, which has been marked by extreme drought, devastating fires and flooding rain.
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