Doctors: Air-quality catastrophe looms for Utah
Utah's pollution problem has reached crisis levels, according to a group of
local physicians. On Monday, they plan to present a list of steps the state
can follow to keep the air breathable and to protect the health of all
Utahns. One doctor gave a sneak peek Friday of the group's warning to
policymakers.
Here is the philosophy behind the doctors' effort: "We believe clean air
is an inherent right for all Utah citizens and that the atmosphere belongs
to all of us. All industries, elected officials, and individual citizens
share a stewardship that compels us all to protect this most precious of
natural resources. We do not tolerate dangerously contaminated food in our
state, nor do we tolerate dangerously contaminated water. We must no longer
tolerate dangerously contaminated air."
The warning is blunt.
Air pollution has reached a crisis level in northern Utah, a local
doctors group says, and elected leaders must do more to head off a
full-blown catastrophe.
The newly formed Utah Physicians for a Healthy Environment met privately
Friday with Gov. Jon Huntsman Jr. to discuss its concerns. After telling the
governor that air pollution damages health, much the same way as smoking
does, the group recommended specific policies to address the problem.
"When people realize the air they are breathing is killing them and
their children," said Brian Moench, a Salt LakeCity
anesthesiologist who began organizing the group last winter, "then maybe
they will sit up and pay attention."
Moench's group plans a news conference Monday to detail its findings
about the magnitude of the health problems facing Utahns because of the
pollution, as well as why "Band-Aids" won't do much to clean up the air. In
their Friday meeting with Huntsman, doctors noted that Huntsman was struck
in particular by the trouble children face because of air pollution.
"Every child is affected, whether they have asthma or not," said Salt
Lake City pediatrician Shellie Ring, past president of the American Lung
Association in Utah. She explained that, compared with children who are not
exposed to air pollution, those who are never attain their full lung
function.
The doctors group is raising the alarm after a winter pollution season
when the northern Utah communities from Provo to Logan had severe episodes
of fine-particle pollution. For a few days this month, pollution levels were
worse in Salt Lake City and Logan than in any other U.S. cities.
Meanwhile, lawmakers this year decided to maintain the state's current
funding for environmental programs, even as they doled out hearty increases
to other agencies from a $1.7 billion budget surplus.
Kathy Van Dame, director of the Wasatch Clean Air Coalition and member
of the state Air Quality Board, welcomed the doctors' efforts.
She said much of Utah's past regulatory focus has been on meeting
federal air-pollution limits, not the health effects. Meanwhile, more and
more studies suggest "we're the frogs sitting in the water and the water's
getting hotter."
"These guys [the doctors] have the ability to raise the issue above
business-as-usual," she said. "They bring credibility to the issue. And they
are passionate."
Utah researchers have made some important strides in advancing
understanding about the health effects of air pollution.
Brigham Young University's Arden Pope participated in a landmark study
that showed increases in PM2.5, the microscopic soot that plagues northern
Utahns during wintertime inversions. That translates into an increased risk
of illness and even death from heart and lung ailments. Those findings wound
up being part of a U.S. Supreme Court case that allowed federal standards
for PM2.5 to go forward after a decade of controversy.
And a 12-year, 12,000-patient study Pope conducted with doctors at LDS
hospital showed people suffer more heart attacks and other coronary events
when winter pollution increases even for just a day or two. Also this
winter, a University of Southern California study of thousands of children
concluded that growing up near a freeway significantly increases the risk of
serious lung and heart diseases later in life.
Rick Sprott, director of the Utah Air Quality Division, attended the
meeting with Huntsman on Friday and called the doctors group "pretty well
informed." He said he invited the doctors to speak to the Air Quality Board
about their recommendations.
"People listen to physicians," he said. "They have a lot of credibility
with the public and with patients."
fahys@sltrib.com
Costs imposed but not paid by by the generators is, in effect, a subsidy. These other sources require no such adjustments and are well within our reach to tap in significant amounts to maintain and even enhance Utah's growth potential.