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Air quality in Fresno improved last year. It’s still among the most polluted in the nation

A tractor works a harvested melon field on the windy westside near Firebaugh last October. Among the San Joaquin Valley Air Pollution Control District’s programs is one to replace older tractors with newer ones that emit less air emissions.
A tractor works a harvested melon field on the windy westside near Firebaugh last October. Among the San Joaquin Valley Air Pollution Control District’s programs is one to replace older tractors with newer ones that emit less air emissions. Fresno Bee file

More than 98% of Californians live in a community earning a “failing grade” for air pollution, according to the American Lung Association’s 2023 State of the Air report.

Though Fresno and other California cities recorded their fewest days of high ozone pollution in the report’s 24-year history, the report concludes residents across the state “still face the most difficult air pollution challenges in the nation.”

While the Fresno metropolitan area saw improvements in the number of days and levels of short-term pollution, year-round particle pollution and ozone pollution, it remains among the top five most-polluted regions in the nation, according to the report.

The Fresno-Madera-Hanford region ranked as second most-polluted in short-term or daily particle pollution, third in year-round particle pollution and fourth in most ozone-polluted cities. The most polluted metro regions include Bakersfield, Visalia and Los Angeles.

“Certainly the San Joaquin Valley had the most difficult particle pollution challenges in the nation,” said Will Barrett, the American Lung Association’s national senior director of clean air advocacy.

“For farmworkers in particular, we know this is a challenging area,” Barrett said. “We know that this is an ongoing challenge and risk factor for outdoor workers and farmworkers, especially, that need strong state attention.”

Air pollution poses health risks in California

The American Lung Association defines particle pollution as a diverse mix of solid particles and liquid droplets suspended in the air that are harmful when inhaled.

The association states exposure to particle pollution, even at low levels, can be deadly because particles of all sizes are harmful to health when inhaled. This type of air pollution can increase the risk of heart disease, lung cancer and asthma attacks plus interfere with the growth and function of the lungs.

Some of these particles can be visible to the naked eye — like soil, dirt, pollen, smoke and soot — while others are microscopic. Though air pollution can mostly be perceived outdoors, the association said indoor air can also contain particle pollutants.

Fuel combustion from vehicles and equipment, unpaved roads and construction activities are some of the main sources emitting pollutant particles. Natural events like wildfires, droughts and desertification — made more intense and frequent by climate change — also increase atmospheric particle pollution, the association said.

Mariela Ruacho, clean air advocacy manager for the ALA in California, said the state “needs to move quickly and consistently,” when addressing wildfire prevention efforts, public education and leadership against climate change.

“Key to these efforts are widespread changes in the state’s transportation system,” she said. “We also need to build a healthier transportation system. We can’t continue to invest public funds in highway projects that increase harm.”


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Despite gains in air quality engineered by the Valley Air District, wildfires can create a tremendous amount of pollution. Here is how downtown Fresno appeared in late September 2020 when smoke from the Creek Fire put the area under a pall.
Despite gains in air quality engineered by the Valley Air District, wildfires can create a tremendous amount of pollution. Here is how downtown Fresno appeared in late September 2020 when smoke from the Creek Fire put the area under a pall. Fresno Bee file

Low-income, communities of color most impacted by pollution

Despite some improvements to local air quality, California cities remain among the nation’s most polluted, Ruacho said.

Nationwide, eleven counties received failing grades for all three measures of pollution: Fresno, Kern, Kings, Los Angeles, Madera, Riverside, San Bernardino, Stanislaus, Sutter, and Tulare in California and Pinal in Arizona.

“Nearly 120 million people, more than one in three, live in counties that had unhealthy levels of ozone or particle pollution,” said Katherine Pruitt, the American Lung Association’s national senior director of policy and health education.

That’s 17.6 million fewer people nationwide than last year and an “indicator of overall improvement” in national air quality, Pruitt said. “But the improvements were unequally distributed.”

Although people of color are 41% of the overall population of the U.S., they are 54% of those 120 million living in counties with at least one failing grade.

In the counties with failing grades for all three pollution measures, the study reports 72% of residents affected are people of color, compared to the 28% who are white.

“Sadly, those most severely impacted are our low-income communities and communities of color with nearby sources of diesel exhaust from trucks, trains or ships,” Ruacho said. “The report shows that California has again seen improved clean air progress, but even more work must be done to bring clean, healthy air to all communities.”

The full 2023 State of the Air report is online at stateoftheair.org.

This story was originally published April 19, 2023 at 5:30 AM.

CORRECTION: This story has been updated with corrected quotes from the American Lung Association.

Corrected Apr 19, 2023

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Laura S. Diaz
The Fresno Bee
Laura S. Diaz is the engagement reporter for The Fresno Bee’s Education Lab. She previously was The Bee’s COLAB Latino communities reporter. Before working in Fresno, Laura covered social justice, local government and accountability issues for The Stockton Record, and began her career working for CBS News and the Associated Press Elections Center in New York City. She grew up in Mexico and graduated from New York University with a B.S. in media communications and journalism.
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