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PS 20 on Staten Island is more polluted than nine out of 10 schools in the country, according to a a USA Today investigative report.
The newspaper looked at air pollution levels at schools across the country and found that hundreds of thousands of students are exposed to high levels of air pollution at the schools they attend. But the study emphasized that environmental scientists haven’t devoted much attention to determining how much pollution is safe for kids.
The report found PS 20 to be the city’s most polluted public school. But Brooklyn has it worst of the five boroughs, with the greatest number of schools ranked among the most toxic. (See the schools with the worst pollution problems in each borough.)
Some good news for New Yorkers: None of the city’s schools were among the 435 worst polluted in the nation.
The newspaper used the Environmental Protection Agency’s pollution model to rank schools on their exposure to chemical pollutants. The mathematical model uses information provided by polluters, along with weather information, to track the likely movement of toxic chemicals in a given area. Scientists and EPA officials stressed that the numbers are estimates that can best be used to identify schools for additional, on-site pollution testing.
Although the EPA sets standards for acceptable levels of pollution in the workplace, it has not set a similar standard for acceptable levels of exposure for children at school. Because children are smaller than adults and still developing, they may be more vulnerable to negative health effects of toxic chemicals. Yet the EPA has done little to assess pollution exposure at schools, USA Today reported:
The U.S. EPA, which has a special office charged with protecting children’s health, has invested millions of taxpayer dollars in pollution models that could help identify schools where toxic chemicals saturate the air. Even so, USA TODAY found, the agency has all but ignored examining whether the air is unsafe at the very locations where kids are required to gather.
Use USA Today’s searchable map to find out how your local school compares.
The ten most polluted public schools in each borough, according to USA Today:
Bronx:
Brooklyn:
Manhattan:
Queens:
Staten Island:
I think you made some good points in Features also.
These interactive maps and data are relevant to any discussion about schools and toxic.
Toxic Chemical Pollution, Children and Schools in the U.S.
http://www.mapcruzin.com/toxicrisk/index.htm
ToxicRisk.com is a Google Maps based mashup project that uses the latest EPA Toxic Release Inventory (TRI) data, released March 19,2009, and schools in the U.S. Links are provided to RTK Net for detailed chemical pollution release data and Scorecard for chemical information.
As you zoom in you will see a change in the icons of the facilities near the center of the map - these are the ones that you can click on and find the facility name, number of schools within 1 mile and number of schools within 5 miles of the facility plus a link to a database about the toxic history of the facility. You can also click on a chemical to learn more about associated risks. The schools will appear as you zoom in. As you zoom in further, you will see the school icon change - at that point you can click on the school to view its name. Click here for a graphical mini-tutorial. If you have any questions, suggestions or comments, please email me. I’d love to hear from you.
Michael Meuser and Aran Deltac, co-developers of ToxicRisk.com, have been doing interactive pollution mapping since the early 1990s. Their Santa Cruz Toxic Release Inventory was the first U.S. based interactive toxic chemical facility mapping project on the internet. It was son followed with their work on the mapping interface for the launch of Environmental Defense Fund’s Scorecard Project.
Michael works fulltime developing content for http://www.MapCruzin.com and doing Community GIS projects. Aran is programming team leader for a major internet development company.
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