Community Corner
Lung Association Gives Delaware County an 'F'
Across Pennsylvania, it's not alone in its failing grade.
Delaware County's level of ozone has earned it an "F" in a new report by the American Lung Association.
The association's 2012 "State of the Air" report also found that the Philadelphia-Camden-Vineland metro area ranks among the 10 most polluted areas in the nation for year-round particle pollution.
State of the Air shows that we’re making steady progress in cutting dangerous pollution from the air as a result of cleanup efforts required under the Clean Air Act," Deb Brown, president and CEO of the American Lung Association of the Mid-Atlantic, said in a news release.
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"But millions of Americans across the country ... are still forced to breathe unhealthy levels of air pollution as a result of air quality standards that are outdated."
How Other Counties Rate
Delaware County isn't alone in getting an "F" for its ozone level. A majority of Pennsylvania's counties scored the same way.
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Only one county—Cambria—recieved a B, the highest grade in the report for Pennsylvania. There were six counties that got a "C" and five that got a "D."
Among the other findings:
- Nearly 10 percent of the county's population—54,977 out of 558,979—has asthma.
- 18,789 people have chronic bronchitis.
- 8,540 people have emphysema.
- 145,346 people have cardiovascular disease.
- 43,184 people have diabetes.
How To Change It
On the State of the Air website, the American Lung Association says that to improve Delaware County's grade, residents need to:
Drive less. Use less electricity. Support measures in your community that can cut air pollution. Tell your local and state officials to take steps to clean up air pollution. Send a message to your Senators to tell them we need them to support cleaner, healthier air and to oppose measures to block or delay the cleanup of coal-fired power plants.
Are you someone with some sort of respiratory problem? Have you noticed a change in the air? Let us know in the comments section.
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