For Immediate Release -- September 2, 2011
Contact: Oliver Bernstein, 512-289-8618
'Clean Air Will Have to Wait' – Obama Delays Smog
Protections until at least 2013
Pressure from Polluters Leads to Missed Opportunity to
Protect Our Kids from Dirty Air and Asthma
Washington, D.C. – Today, President Obama announced that he has requested
that the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) withdraw the draft Ozone
National Ambient Air Quality Standards that would have protected Americans from
air pollution.
In response, Michael Brune, Executive Director of the Sierra Club,
issued the following statement:
"The Sierra Club condemns the Obama administration's decision to delay
critical, long-overdue protections from smog, an acidic air pollutant that when
inhaled is like getting a sunburn on your lungs. By putting the interest of coal
and oil polluters first, the White House seems to be saying that 'clean air will
have to wait.'
"A healthy economy requires clean air and healthy people, and these
protections from smog would have improved our communities and saved billions of
dollars in health costs. Half of U.S. families live in places where it is
literally unsafe to breathe the air, and kicking the inhaler down the road will
do nothing to protect our children.
"We thank the scientists and public health professionals at the EPA for
their commitment to science, and we look forward to the day when strong clean
air protections will prevent thousands of premature deaths and tens of thousands
of asthma attacks. The Sierra Club and the millions of Americans who have
suffered through orange and red-alert air quality days this record-breaking
summer will continue to push the Obama Administration to improve this protection
in order to save lives and clean up our air."
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Oliver Bernstein
National Communications Strategist
Sierra Club
Phone: 512.477.2152 x102
Cell: 512.289.8618