Your monitor can’t measure ultra fines. You are measuring PM2.5 at best (fine) and PM10 (coarse). Ultra fine are PM 0.1 |
It's not a handful of neighborhoods and these aren't necessarily blighted industrial areas either with little residential housing, but nice residential affluent areas far removed from airports. |
Not the only study saying the same thing. Also found the worst areas to be 10 miles up or down which you are no doubt |
If the green canopy is eating up fine particles why can't it eat up ultrafine? You want to get rid of carbon, it's what the trees and plants do. Anyway, not sure why you are arguing with me, I am very much against these highways in the sky for many reasons. I am also not a rural type of person and always lived near the cities, so exposed to pollution from highways, cars, and lots of cell towers. If I want clean living I have to move far away from any major metro area. I don't think it's an option for many people. |
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Tons of studies from different airports. In fact, shouldn’t Palisades fund one of these instead of complaining incessantly within the community and resident-only mail serve and mocking people here trying to tell how it is? Then you’ll know for sure just how bad it is.
https://ehjournal.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12940-020-00690-y |
Truly not trying to argue. Just to spread the knowledge because it’s really much different just a bit outside the flight corridor. You are correct about the noise, but the health effects are under appreciated. |
There is a no fly zone over the WH I am sure, but yet planes fly over the National Mall. There must be a no-fly zone of the CIA, but loads of planes fly in lines over Mclean close to CIA. You are just lucky and they don't send planes your way, but who says this will never change? Clearly presence of high security objects isn't an obstacle for the flights to go nearby. |
Health effects of everything are underappreciated. We are constantly exposed to radiation from wireless tech, cell towers, home devices, etc. We are eating poor quality modified foods that contain harmful substances, most of the modern products we have around us are hazardous to our health. Airline pollution just adds to it. But highway pollution had been around forever and is still probably a lot worse than pollution from the distant airplanes. |
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The costs are high: https://academic.oup.com/restud/article/83/2/768/2461206
We link daily air pollution exposure to measures of contemporaneous health for communities surrounding the twelve largest airports in California. These airports are some of the largest sources of air pollution in the US, and they experience large changes in daily air pollution emissions depending on the amount of time planes spend idling on the tarmac. Excess airplane idling, measured as residual daily taxi time, is due to network delays originating in the Eastern US. This idiosyncratic variation in daily airplane taxi time significantly impacts the health of local residents, largely driven by increased levels of carbon monoxide (CO) exposure. We use this variation in daily airport congestion to estimate the population dose-response of health outcomes to daily CO exposure, examining hospitalization rates for asthma, respiratory, and heart-related emergency room admissions. A one standard deviation increase in daily pollution levels leads to an additional $540 thousand in hospitalization costs for respiratory and heart-related admissions for the 6 million individuals living within 10 km (6.2 miles) of the airports in California. These health effects occur at levels of CO exposure far below existing Environmental Protection Agency mandates, and our results suggest there may be sizable morbidity benefits from lowering the existing CO standard. |
Here is the prohibited airpace map (for commercial flights): https://www.flyreagan.com/about-airport/aircraft-noise-information/dca-reagan-national-aircraft-procedures |
^^ you know what? If you want to make a case that airline highways are going to kills us, I will sign your petition whether I fully believe it or not. I just want these to go away or be designed better where paths are more numerous and not concentrated. |
Do you understand that even if you are not directly under any of the red or blue paths you can still hear the noise? National mall is prohibited, but you can hear planes loud and clear and see them nearby, a distance of 1 mile is nothing for airline noise. We aren't under a path according to this map, but the paths near us, even if mile away would be audible and annoying. Also, I don't think all planes fly along the river, because I visit DC all the time and walking around the riverfront I don't hear planes in constant lines. I think this map might be inaccurate? |
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What had always stopped me in my tracks is the number of residents who are fighting tooth and nail against the issue being addressed. That’s the case in the Palisades where they’d rather mock and discredit than invite an objective study and produce stats that could give them a fighting chance. In Brussels 400 households brought a civil suit over this. I bet you won’t find 20 in the Palisades.
Same for the Spring Valley. It was the neighbors affected by that horror that are the biggest obstacles to a solution and it being a well known issue. True story: we know someone who tested soil from a “clean” house there in 2 labs just to have peace of mind at closing. It turned up high arsenic and other things that gvt measured; but that wasn’t the worst. The worst were things they don’t measure but must know are there; heavy metals like Thalium, the most toxic heavy metal known to man and not in small concentrations. They close entire industrial sites over this but people happily carry on and gaslight in DC. What is it? Why? |
this is 2018 though. It will be slightly worse over Arlington and slightly better over DC (mostly Georgetown and Foxhall) now due to the waypoint changes implemented in 2020. https://www.flyreagan.com/sites/flyreagan.com/files/legacyfiles/faa_presentation_holtb_rnav_sid.pdf |
For a neighborhood with as may big law partners and lobbyists as the palisades/kent/etc, it actually is insane that they cant get a single serious legal challenge or environmental study going. Hell, even the McMillian idiots got some traction. And those people were actually idiots, but they still delayed stuff for a decade plus. Nobody actually cares if you think about revealed preferences. (I.e. putting money where your mouth is). Everyone knew this was a problem when the moved in, but some people just like to complain. We all know people like that. |