The American Lung Association Joins in Suit Against EPA Failure to Issue Air Pollution Standards
Dangerous levels of soot particles cause thousands of deaths each year
(February 15, 2012)—
The American Lung Association and the National Parks Conservation Association filed a federal lawsuit yesterday to force the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to complete the required review of the need for stronger limits on the amount of soot, smoke, and other airborne particles that endanger public health.
“Since the last review, we’ve learned a lot about how dangerous these particles are. It makes no sense to continue to base public health protections on outdated science,” said Ed Miller, Senior Vice President of Health Promotion and Public Policy for the American Lung Association in New England.
The Clean Air Act requires the EPA to review the science and update the National Ambient Air Quality standards every five years to ensure the public is protected by the best available science. The agency failed to meet the deadline in October, 2011. The EPA’s failure to update these standards means that outdated limits remain in place even though they fail to protect public health. Those particularly hard hit by particulate pollution include children, seniors, people with lung disease, heart disease and diabetes, and low income communities. Without updated standards, millions of people in the United States will face continued risk from unhealthy levels of particle pollution. Stronger standards would drive cleanup measures nationwide that could prevent thousands of premature deaths annually, according to an analysis published in 2011.
“A stronger particulate matter standard would provide more protection to people in New England from dangerous particles,” said Miller. “Strengthening the standards drives the action we can take to prevent premature deaths and asthma attacks each year in our region. The EPA needs to finish its job.”
In 2006, the EPA overruled its science advisors, who called for stronger pollution protections, and instead adopted the current weak particulate matter standards. In 2009, as a result of a separate legal challenge brought by these same health and environmental groups, a federal appeals court ruled that these standards were deficient and sent them back to the EPA for corrective action. Since then, the EPA has failed to propose new standards for particulate matter.
The lawsuit, filed by the public interest law firm Earthjustice on behalf of both national nonprofit organizations, asks the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia to impose a deadline of October 2012 for the EPA to complete its review of the National Ambient Air Quality Standards.
The health risks caused by breathing particulate matter are outlined in a recent study published by Earthjustice, the American Lung Association, and the Clean Air Task Force. The report, Sick of Soot, details how a reduction of soot in the air can prevent more than 35,000 premature deaths each year, decrease cases of aggravated asthma by more than one million, and save at least $280 billion in health care costs.
Airborne particulate matter is comprised of tiny particles of smoke, soot, metals and other chemical compounds emitted from sources like power plants, factories, and diesel trucks. Scientists say particulate matter, which can penetrate deep into our lungs, is one of the most toxic forms of air pollution. Particulate matter is also responsible for much of the haze that clouds many of our cities and parklands.
# # #
About the American Lung Association
The American Lung Association of New England is part of the American Lung Association, the oldest voluntary health organization in the U.S. Established in 1904 to combat tuberculosis, our mission today is to save lives by improving lung health and preventing lung disease. The focus is on air quality, asthma, tobacco control, and all lung disease. ALANE serves CT, MA, ME, NH, RI and VT.




