Current:Home > MyMore Than a Third of All Americans Live in Communities with ‘Hazardous’ Air, Lung Association Finds -FutureFinance
More Than a Third of All Americans Live in Communities with ‘Hazardous’ Air, Lung Association Finds
Rekubit Exchange View
Date:2025-04-07 00:18:16
Within five miles of Kim Gaddy’s home in the South Ward of Newark, N.J., lies the nation’s third-busiest shipping port, thirteenth-busiest airport and roughly a half dozen major roadways. All told, transportation experts say, the area where Gaddy and her neighbors live sees an average of roughly 20,000 truck trips each day.
Researchers cite the exhaust produced by all of that road travel as a major reason why asthma rates among Newark residents is about twice the national average.
“You hear of Newark every time somebody gets killed, it’s a homicide, but asthma is the silent killer—and that is a real health injustice,” said Gaddy, 60, who founded the South Ward Environmental Alliance, a local climate change advocacy group. “You know, asthma, heart attacks, respiratory illnesses—these are the things that harm our community.”
The South Ward is hardly an outlier. A new report by the American Lung Association shows how polluted air continues to place the health of millions of other Americans in jeopardy.
The lung association’s latest “State of the Air” report—an annual survey of air quality nationwide—found that more than a third of all Americans, or about 131 million people, are living in communities with unhealthy levels of air pollution.
The report also found that from 2020 to 2022, the nation experienced more days with air quality that would be classified by the association as hazardous than at any other time over the last quarter century.
While acknowledging the efficacy of a series of clean air measures that have been enacted over the last 50 years, officials with the association said that the report also underscored how the warming planet continues to worsen levels of unhealthy air.
We’re hiring!
Please take a look at the new openings in our newsroom.
See jobs“We have seen impressive progress in cleaning up air pollution over the last 25 years, thanks in large part to the Clean Air Act,” Harold Wimmer, president and CEO of the association, said in a statement. “However, when we started this report, our team never imagined that 25 years in the future, more than 130 million people would still be breathing unhealthy air. Climate change is causing more dangerous air pollution. Every day there are unhealthy levels of ozone or particle pollution means that someone—a child, grandparent, uncle or mother—struggles to breathe. We must do more to ensure everyone has clean air.”
The association’s report measured three types of air pollution: short-term particle pollution, such as the smoke and other particles from wildfires and other brief air quality changes; year-round particle pollution, such as concentrated pollution from industrial plants, vehicles and other sources; and ozone pollution.
Wildfires are making things worse and creating more short-term spikes in air pollution, said Laura Kate Bender, a national vice president at the association.
“That’s not the only source of particulate matter air pollution, but when it comes to what’s different, wildfire smoke is really the big driver of those spikes in particles that we’re seeing in these places,” said Bender. “And it’s the driver of those days on which it is very unhealthy or hazardous to breathe where we’re hitting this purple and maroon levels, which we’ve seen more of this year than ever in the history of the report.”
She added: “That is why we’re able to say that we’re really seeing the impacts of climate change showing up in this year’s report results.”
The report found that 12 percent of Americans live in areas that received failing grades for all three types of pollution. The data also showed that people of color are more than twice as likely than their white counterparts to live in communities with poor air quality in all of those measures.
For Gaddy, who is African-American, the report’s findings confirm what she and her neighbors in Newark’s predominantly Black South Ward have experienced for years. Gaddy and her three children were all diagnosed with asthma; her eldest child died of a heart attack in 2021 at the age of 32.
“It’s just the cumulative impacts of pollution is what is harming us,” Gaddy said. “And so, unfortunately, that’s what happens in our city.”
The New York/Newark metropolitan area has 1.8 million adults with asthma and 370,000 children with the disease, according to the report.
Researchers are hopeful that a series of new auto emissions standards that were announced last month by the Biden administration might significantly reduce some forms of particle pollution.
Under the newly proposed standard, by 2032, 56 percent of all new vehicles that are sold should be electric; the proposal also calls for increases in plug-in hybrid vehicles or other partially electric cars and more efficient gasoline-powered cars.
“We’ve seen the Environmental Protection Agency finalize a number of new standards to clean up the air pollution and address climate change, with more on the way,” said Bender.
“We’ve seen the tighter particulate matter standard. We’ve seen strong measures to reduce emissions from future cars and future trucks. We’ve seen measures to reduce methane and volatile organic compounds from the oil and gas industry,” she said. “And we’re calling on the administration to get across the finish line to more items on their to-do list.”
Bender said that the association hopes that the EPA will update the national ozone standard, which has not been revised since 2015.
“Sometimes people don’t realize that poor air can affect them pretty drastically,” said Amit “Bobby” Mahajan, a national spokesperson for the Lung Association. “We know that there are asthma attacks, heart attacks and strokes, but we also see increases in preterm birth, cognitive impairment and development of lung cancers in individuals who have high exposure to ozone and particle pollution.
“So not only is it important just to provide clean air, but providing clean air minimizes the number of exposures we have to these serious diseases and honestly reduces our risk of having deadly underlying conditions,” said Mahajan, who also serves as the director of interventional pulmonology at Inova Health System in Northern Virginia.
Gaddy said that she’s confident that federal officials will soon act on the recommendations of researchers and other experts to help alleviate the asthma crisis in her city.
“We know that eventually, our communities will be healed and restored to the level that they should be,” added Gaddy. “And that just because of our zip code or the color of our skin, our communities won’t continue to be these sacrifice zones.”
Share this article
veryGood! (26146)
Related
- Federal court filings allege official committed perjury in lawsuit tied to Louisiana grain terminal
- The U.S. Mint releases new commemorative coins honoring Harriet Tubman
- Keke Palmer Says She’s “Never Been So Happy” in Her Life Despite Darius Jackson Drama
- TGI Fridays closes dozens of its stores
- Trump issues order to ban transgender troops from serving openly in the military
- Thousands attend the funeral of a top Hamas official killed in an apparent Israeli strike in Beirut
- Nevada judge is back to work a day after being attacked by defendant who jumped atop her
- Live updates | 6 killed overnight in an apparent Israeli airstrike on a home in southern Gaza
- Small twin
- New study claims that T-Rex fossils may be another dinosaur species. But not all agree.
Ranking
- Pregnant Kylie Kelce Shares Hilarious Question Her Daughter Asked Jason Kelce Amid Rising Fame
- Former Guatemalan president released on bond; leaves prison for first time since 2015
- New study claims that T-Rex fossils may be another dinosaur species. But not all agree.
- 'Bright as it was in 2020' Glowing bioluminescence waves return to Southern California beaches
- New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
- This Sweet Moment Between Princess Charlotte and Cousin Mia Tindall Takes the Crown
- Survivors are found in homes smashed by Japan quake that killed 94 people. Dozens are still missing
- Embattled Sacramento City Council member resigns following federal indictment
Recommendation
Who are the most valuable sports franchises? Forbes releases new list of top 50 teams
Police in Kenya follow lion footprints from abandoned motorcycle, find dead man
Scenes of loss play out across Japan’s western coastline after quake kills 84, dozens still missing
Bangladesh opposition calls for strike on election weekend as premier Hasina seeks forgiveness
Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
Court records bring new, unwanted attention to rich and famous in Jeffrey Epstein’s social circle
Police in Kenya follow lion footprints from abandoned motorcycle, find dead man
This Sweet Moment Between Princess Charlotte and Cousin Mia Tindall Takes the Crown