Editorials
Hope is a real thing
As someone who works on air pollution issues, I get to hear stories from a lot of people. People have shared stories about kids with asthma, parents who got cancer from exposures at work, neighbors who got nauseous from the unavoidable accident at the plant down the street, employees who participated in illegal dumping, and just questions from average people about whether or not it is safe for them to take a walk in the morning.
Fresh ideas - and a fresh attitude, too?
Texas environmental officials are once again planning . . . to clean Houston's air.
Meetings will be held on March 22 and March 27 to discuss traffic, rail, construction and other such sources. Pollution from industry and smaller fixed point sources will be discussed at meetings on April 19 and May 24.
Don't stay inside
- submitted to the Houston Chronicle (but not published)Â
"Stay inside until the smell is gone, or until the air isn't so heavy." That's what Rosaria Marroquin, one of our constituents, tells her children when they want to go outside to play with squirt guns. Parents should be urging their children to go outside, but in the industrial east end of Houston, the toxic air creates a daily parenting challenge.
Similar concerns have been voiced in a project sponsored by Mothers for Clean Air and funded by EPA. The Southeast Houston Project is addressing the problem of air quality by bringing together elected officials, universities, regulatory agencies, residents and local industry at monthly meetings. Residents are monitoring the air using organic vapor monitoring devices at 23 stations.

Recent comments