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Public Health to Monitor Air Quality in
Boulder County

April 2006 - Boulder, CO – Boulder County Public Health (BCPH), will begin monitoring forty air toxics at five locations throughout the county beginning this winter, thanks to a grant from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. The last monitoring study in Boulder County, conducted in 1996, provided monitoring of just three air toxins at one Denver and two Boulder County locations.

This previous study found that concentrations of the pollutants studied were significantly higher in Boulder than in Denver. The study’s authors believed that formation of secondary pollutants from chemical reactions caused by sunlight might be leading to an even greater number of toxins being formed as the pollutants were dispersed by wind and weather patterns along the Front Range.

“Because Boulder County sits at the point where the heavily urbanized City of Denver and the rural wilderness of the Rocky Mountains meet, a complex air quality environment is created that can intensify organic trace gases,” said Pam Milmoe, BCPH Air Quality Coordinator. “This study will help us to continue to better understand and assess local air quality and develop management strategies.”

The study is in collaboration with researchers at the Mechanical Engineering Department and an analytical laboratory at INSTAAR (Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research) at CU Boulder. Sample collection will be performed over 24 hours every sixth day. Ozone will be monitored at all stations continuously, with one-hour time resolution. Analysis will also look for “indicator” pollutants that will help us roughly estimate the sources of pollution.

The study is also intended to evaluate the air quality impacts of industrial activities, oil and gas exploration, and vehicle emissions. It will define concentrations of local air toxics and build on the findings of previous studies.

“From a human health standpoint, this study will give us the data to address community concerns and support evaluations of health effects,” said Milmoe. Specifically, BCPH will provide information to better evaluate the findings of two health consultations conducted by the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry.

The forty organic gasses will be monitored over a one-year period. The proposed locations for monitoring include Niwot Ridge, the city of Boulder, the city of Longmont, the city of Lyons, and South Boulder Creek. Each location has been specifically selected to provide information about particular environmental factors such as traffic, agricultural burning, oil and gas development, and airflow. (View Map)
 

Locations

Monitoring Locations

Select map to enlarge


Air Toxics

Understanding Air Toxics and Pollutant Sources (PDF 1722 KB)

2005 Community-Scale Air Toxics Monitoring Grant Proposal (PDF 180 KB)


Contact Air Toxics

Air Quality Program, 3450 Broadway, Boulder, CO, 80304
(303) 441-1564

 


Air Quality Program, Environmental Health Division,
Boulder County Public Health (BCPH)
3450 Broadway, Boulder, CO 80304
(303) 441-1564, www.BoulderCountyAir.org

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