$25,000 Lebec air study released-Part Three

  • Mark Chernaik, Ph.D. (in Biochemistry from John Hopkins University). Chernaik also received a law degree. He analyzed the data about the Lebec corridor air quality samples collected by the TriCounty Watchdogs and the Global Community Monitor project.

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    Mark Chernaik, Ph.D. (in Biochemistry from John Hopkins University). Chernaik also received a law degree. He analyzed the data about the Lebec corridor air quality samples collected by the TriCounty Watchdogs and the Global Community Monitor project.

  • An aerial view of El Tejon School and the Interstate 5 freeway, showing the distance from the freeway to playing fields and school buildings is 250 to 500 feet. Analysts say emissions diminish at about 1,000 feet from such a source of emissions. [National Geological Survey ]

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    An aerial view of El Tejon School and the Interstate 5 freeway, showing the distance from the freeway to playing fields and school buildings is 250 to 500 feet. Analysts say emissions diminish at about 1,000 feet from such a source of emissions. [National Geological Survey ]

Air quality near El Tejon School called ‘serious health risk’ (This is the third in a series on the report)

Watch the video of ETUSD Trustees Steve Kiouses and John Fleming crticizing the air quality study presented by TriCounty Watchdogs and Global Community Monitor, during the July 18, 2012 special meeting of the school board. See the Op-Ed by TriCounty Watchdogs’ Linda MacKay about the encounter, the summary of results and the background to the study about air quality along the Interstate-5 corridor of Lebec.

 

By Patric Hedlund —Part Three

Mountain Community residents known as the TriCounty Watchdogs and their partner in a $25,000 Rose Foundation grant gave a report to the El Tejon Unified School District Board of Governors last month. The subject was their findings about air quality along the Interstate- 5 corridor.

Watchdogs president Linda MacKay and Jessica Hendricks of Global Community Monitor reported the results July 18 at a “special meeting” called by Superintendent Katie Kleier with 24 hours advance notice to the public. No mention of the air study report appeared on the board agenda.

The year-long air monitoring project focused on multiple sites in Lebec along the route popularly referred to as the Grapevine. The report, entitled “EXHAUST-ed!: Community Exposure to Diesel Air Pollution in California’s Transportation Corridor,” says that Caltrans estimates that 77,000 vehicles pass through the Grapevine daily. About 18,000 of those are heavy diesel-powered tractortrailers carrying freight.

Hendricks and MacKay told the ETUSD board that high levels of diesel pollution are causing “serious health risk to residents of the area, 240 school children and staff of the middle school.”

Methodology

MacKay (who had a daughter at the school) requested permission to measure air quality on the El Tejon School campus, but was denied access. As an alternative, the project found a monitoring site on the other side of the freeway (near Fort Tejon State Park). Sites near Lebec’s Flying J (Pilot) truck stop, the Lebec post office, a mobile home park and a private residence adjacent to the freeway were also used as sampling locations. Fifty-one samples were taken over a year’s time.

The primary air sample data collected was for diesel particulates 2.5 micron or larger and elemental carbon, or “black soot,” from emissions.

A community committee hosted by the TriCounty Watchdogs was given a two-day training course to be able to handle and change filters and batteries in the Global Community Monitor “bucket brigade” monitoring units that have been specially engineered for their use in similar projects around the world and across the U.S.

TriCounty Watchdogs collected 51 air samples. They maintained a careful “chain of custody” record for the filters, according to MacKay.

The elemental carbon filters were kept in a freezer until setting them in the monitoring unit, then returned to a freezer after the 24-hour monitoring period.

Used filters were sent weekly in temperature-controlled ‘coldpaks’ to an independent, certified scientific laboratory for analysis.

The raw data was then sent from the laboratory to be reviewed by Mark Chernaik, Ph.D., who has a Bachelor of Science degree in Biochemistry from the University of Massachusetts at Amherst and a Ph.D. in Biochemistry from John Hopkins University. Chernaik also received a law degree from the Oregon School of Law in 1993. His scientific work has been published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences U.S.A, and the Journal of Biological Chemistry. He has worked on litigation challenging pollution from pulp mills in the Pacific Northwest.

Summary Results

The report says that PM 2.5 levels did not exceed legal standards. The elemental carbon “soot” readings were of concern. According to Chernaik’s analysis: “The levels found in the samples represent a risk of cardiovascular and respiratory effects, including increased incidence of hospitalizations and premature death."

In the press-release issued with the written report, San Francisco-based Global Community Monitor’s Jessica Hendricks said, “Residents of the Lebec area and the Grapevine pass are disproportionately impacted by diesel air pollution.”

She said that the small mountain community area adjacent to the freeway was found to have pollution levels “comparable to a large metropolitan area.”

MacKay is quoted in the release as saying, “Children playing on the ball fields at El Tejon School have high rates of asthma and sometimes even complain that their lungs hurt when they’re running around. We wanted to know how much diesel pollution our children are being exposed to.”

“Now that we know how serious the risk is, we need action to protect our communities from impacts of being wedged into one of the nation’s largest transportation corridors.”

A U.S. Geologic Survey image of the school grounds and the freeway makes it possible to estimate that the playing fields are within 250 feet of the northbound lane of the Interstate-5. The current classroom wings begin about 500 feet from the freeway.

Recommendations

This is an excerpt from the summary report:

TriCounty Watchdogs and Global Community Monitor, based on the results from the community air monitoring project, have listed a series of recommendations including:

1. Trees should be planted near the freeway to reduce emission exposures.

According to the study, “Impacts of Noise Barriers on Near Road Air Quality” published by Atmospheric Environment, research has shown that planting trees between a major roadway and sensitive sites like school grounds can potentially reduce vehicle emissions by up to 30 percent.

2. Replant trees near businesses close to the freeway. At the location in Lebec near the Lebec Post Office, we recommend that trees that were recently removed behind the post office and antique store be replanted to reduce the emissions exposure of the residents who live near this area.

3. Electrify the Flying J Truck Stop.

Electrifying the truck stop will allow drivers to plug in instead of idling their engines overnight, thus reducing a source of emissions.

4. Ultra-fine particle analysis should be performed by the San Joaquin Valley Air Pollution Control District. Further ultra-fine particulate analysis is needed because standard PM 2.5 monitoring does not properly identify [the presence of] ultra-fine particles [which recent research shows is especially harmful to children].

This is part of the August 03, 2012 online edition of The Mountain Enterprise.

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