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Joaquin Valley Air Pollution Control Article
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Ins and Outs of the Pollution Control Board
from:The world is full of news about pollution on Earth, both good and bad, and involves an exceptionally wide range of pollutants. This requires the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and its Science Advisory Board to provide advice and recommendations within this area, using their pollution control board. If something requires a specific regulation, this EPA board establishes a Federal advisory committee for advice on that subject. Many areas of discussion are involved within the EPA pollution control board—acid rain, water, air, pollution is different countries and areas, topics and issues of global warming, ecosystems, wetlands, urban, mobile sources, indoor air pollutants, and radon. In addition to the EPA Science Advisory Board are the National Advisory Council for Environmental Policy & Technology and the Environmental Financing Advisory Board.
Pollution has become a sign of the times, with the pollution control board of the EPA going clear back online to 1994. Not a simple thing to research any information unless you have a focused destination, the EPA offers over 30 specific pollutants and hundreds of departments for each one—plus the state involved, 13 different issuing offices, and over 16 subject matters—all within one pollution control board. Preventing pollution is considered as "reducing or eliminating waste at the source", a counter-effect to their online statement regarding pollution--"The United States of America annually produces millions of tons of pollution and spends tens of billions of dollars per year controlling this pollution." This requires several steps set forth by the EPA pollution control board as a key policy in national environmental protection activities as follows:
• Modifying production processes
• Promoting the use of non-toxic or less-toxic substances
• Implementing conservation techniques
• Re-using materials rather than putting them into the waste stream
The laws of the United States are passed through Congress which govern our country, with the EPA's pollution control board and other governmental agencies creating and enforce certain regulations to follow those laws. By periodically assessing new information as it comes in, the EPA may find that a regulation is not needed or news need to be developed. Issues are abandoned and alternative courses of action may be required, such as using their 30 voluntary partnership programs that improve environmental management for specific aspects. Other areas are economic incentives and technical assistance.
The EPA motto seems to be doing "whatever it takes" as they go beyond the traditional governmental "command and control" regulations, creating unique approaches to solving problems within their pollution control board by utilizing those with degrees in business, statistics, sociology, education, and public policy. The EPA uses public involvement for many of its pollution issues, set up by the National Center for Environmental Innovation, an area which utilizes their outreach department, defined by its interaction purpose and the level of involvement with those involved. Three other public areas used by this are information exchange, recommendation, and agreement—all governed by the pollution control board specializing in that particular pollutant area.
Joaquin Valley Air Pollution Control Specific links
Joaquin Valley Air Pollution Control News
Dusty wind prompts San Joaquin Valley air alert
FRESNO, Calif. (AP) — Gusty winds have prompted air officials in the San Joaquin Valley to warn of a potential health hazard from blowing dust. The San Joaquin Valley Air Pollution Control District issued the warning on Wednesday for San Joaquin, Stanislaus, Merced, Madera, Fresno, Kings and Tulare counties and parts of Kern County. Winds there may produce areas of localized blowing dust that ...
Read more...Dust Warning Issued For San Joaquin Valley
Gusty winds have prompted air officials in the San Joaquin Valley to warn of a potential health hazard from blowing dust.
Read more...Gusty Winds Hit The Valley; Blowing Dust Possible
Local air-pollution officials are advising people in the Valley to be careful because gusty winds are expected in the area through Wednesday evening.
Read more...Increase in mining traffic heightens Valley air pollution worries
Kathy Omachi was eating at McDonald's in Reedley recently, and she counted 51 gravel trucks pass by -- all in the time she finished a hamburger and fruit smoothie.
Read more...Earth log: Time to heed bad-air warnings
So far in 2012, the Valley has nearly three times the ozone violations it did at this time last year, when more wind and stormy weather kept the air cleaner.
Read more...


