About Us
MISSION
STATEMENT
Eastern
Panhandle Clean Air Connection serves to increase public awareness
of air pollution through education and outreach, as well as encourage
community participation in voluntary actions that will improve
air quality in the Eastern Panhandle Region.
Get
fuel when it's cool. Refueling during cooler periods of
the day or in the evening can prevent gasoline fumes from heating
up and becoming ozone.
Background
In 1997,
the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) established
a new 8-hour standard for ground-level ozone as a result of a
review of its health-related impacts. This new standard replaced
the older 1-hour standard and served to address the cumulative
impact of ground-level ozone exposure at lower levels for a longer
period of time, making it more protective of human health.
As part
of the implementation of the new standard, in June 2000, EPA requested
each state to identify potential non-attainment areas within their
borders. An area is designated as non-attainment when it exceeds
the 8-hour ozone standard more than three times over a period
of three consecutive years. At the time of EPA's request, the
Counties of Berkeley and Jefferson in the Eastern Panhandle of
West Virginia were identified as potential non-attainment areas,
due to their close proximity to the cities of Washington, D.C.
and Baltimore and their marginal exceedance of the 8-hour ozone
standard between 1997 and 1999.
A non-attainment
designation for ground-level ozone in the Eastern Panhandle would
have adverse economic and health-related impacts on the overall
community. It would allow the federal government to take punitive
actions as authorized by Congress in the Federal Clean Air Act,
resulting in decreased economic growth, loss of jobs as businesses
choose to relocate facilities, and a negative image for the region.
Moreover, failure to comply with the ozone standard would result
in poor air quality and potential health consequences for Eastern
Panhandle residents.
The implications
of a potential non-attainment designation on the region prompted
the Counties of Berkeley and Jefferson, along with the City of
Martinsburg and the West Virginia Department of Environmental
Protection (WV DEP) to commit to entering into an Early Action
Compact (EAC) - a voluntary agreement with EPA to develop a proactive
plan to reduce ground-level ozone pollution and improve air quality
in the Eastern Panhandle community. Under the EAC agreement, the
region must come into compliance with current federal standards
for ground-level ozone by 2007 to avoid a formal non-attainment
designation.
Upon the
localities' formal adoption of the Early Action Compact in December
2002, the Eastern Panhandle Air Quality Task Force was created
to develop an Ozone Early Action Plan, around which the EAC is
centered. Comprised of a broad-based group of stakeholders, the
Task Force included state and local government representatives
as well as local business and industry, healthcare, and environmental
interests. This group officially adopted seven local control measure
strategies to reduce ground-level ozone emissions in the Eastern
Panhandle and designated the Region 9 Planning and Development
Council to manage the development and implementation of this Ozone
Early Action Plan.
Eastern
Panhandle Clean Air Connection was created to serve as the public
education and outreach program for the Ozone Early Action Plan,
as well as any air quality improvement issues that may reach beyond
the EAC. Eastern Panhandle Clean Air Connection is a public-private
community partnership sponsored by the local governments of Berkeley
and Jefferson Counties and the City of Martinsburg, and managed
by the Region 9 Planning and Development Council.
We invite
you to browse our site to learn more about our mission, programs,
and outreach initiatives, as well as your role in air quality
improvement. If we work together, we can all breathe easier.
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