"As the mother of five asthmatic children, Charday Urey knows the drill. When an EPA air quality index tips into the "unhealthy" zone, she closes the windows, turns on the air conditioner and keeps her kids indoors.
"In the summertime, I don't even have a life," said Urey, a lifelong Washington, D.C., resident who ties some of her family's health problems to dirty air. "I need to make sure that nobody's asthma's acting up."
EPA's air quality index is grounded in part in the national standard for ground-level ozone. But whether the agency's 70-parts-per-billion threshold is truly tough enough to protect children with asthma is embroiled in a long-festering debate that will not be settled by EPA chief Andrew Wheeler's expected decision to leave it in place through 2025.
Wheeler plans to formally announce the rule keeping the status quo on the 70-ppb standard later this afternoon, capping an extraordinary push to complete work on a legally required review before the end of President Trump's current term."
Sean Reilly reports for E&E News December 23, 2020.
SEE ALSO:
"Trump Administration Keeps Existing Smog Limits, Rejecting Calls To Toughen Them" (Washington Post)