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Environmental Excellence

January 8th, 2010

The lead story in today’s New York Times is titled, “E.P.A. Seeks Tighter Rules to Cut Down Air Pollution.” It describes a new standard by the Environmental Protection Agency to lower smog levels. The new standard will set a limit for ground-level ozone of .060 to .070 parts per million compared to the widely criticized weaker level proposed by the outgoing Bush administration of .075

While the Agency estimated the cost of compliance between $19 billion and $90 billion, it also estimated savings in healthcare costs up to $100 billion per year. Currently, only 322 of 675 counties meet the .075 standard, 160 meet 0.70 and only 15 meet .060.

However, it’s far more important, in my opinion, that agency analysts predict the law will prevent 12,000 premature deaths per year from heart and lung diseases including bronchitis and asthma. How long will we place the needs of companies — the American Petroleum Institute opposes the regulation for economic reasons — ahead of the health of our citizens.

Though the article appears like very good news, I was a little discouraged to read the timeline for implementation, buried near the end of the article on page three. States must submit plans for compliance by the end of 2013, and the new rules would be phased in between 2014 and 2031, with the deadline longer for regions with more dirty air.

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