Geography is a major cause of our dirty air
The Broadway musical "The Act" includes in its signature song, "City lights," the following lyrics: "Country air means zilch to me, I won't breathe nothing I can't see."
If Liza Minnelli, who was part of the original cast in 1977, were to have come to Salt Lake City last week to sing this song, she might have turned and made a run for the country after all, gasping and wheezing all the way.
But of course, running to the country wouldn't have helped. In idyllic Cache Valley, where you certainly can "listen to the cricket, look at the rooster, smell the hay, and see the pretty little egg that the hen just laid," the air was so thick cows were bumping into each other.
Wasatch Front inversions are not for wimps. The air here, before a weekend storm was expected to bring much-needed relief, was not merely something you could see. It was something you could chew.
This annual fog fest is a public relations nightmare, and it is steeped in irony. The Wasatch Front is known for its picturesque valleys and stunning mountain vistas, with clean streets and views that stop only where the earth curves on the horizon. Yet last week we were told it had the worst air quality in the country.
Think about that for a minute.
That calculation was according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, and it was made before Barack Obama took the oath of office, for you conspiracy theorists. Martin Luther King Day was a good excuse to leave the state for some place where you could get a breath of fresh air, such as Los Angeles. According to the EPA, you could pick pretty much any place from Maine to Baja and it would be an improvement.
Every year about this time we hear about professors who are studying the causes of this mess and how we might be able to prevent it. Twenty years ago, professors in Utah County pointed to the one seemingly obvious source of smog, the Geneva Steel plant, and laid blame. The plant was causing pneumonia, pleurisy, bronchitis and asthma attacks, they said.
In 1988, a group of residents from the Provo area visited with the governor and made the assertion that most Utah County residents would rather have clean air than the jobs Geneva provided. That was a bold stand to take at a time when Utah's economy wasn't keeping up with the roaring '80s. But today Geneva Steel is long gone, and yet the dirty air remains.
Now, a Utah State University scientist has studied the air up there and determined that ammonium nitrate is to blame for up to 70 percent of the problem. What's ammonium nitrate? Well, it comes primarily from dairy and livestock farms — country stuff.
Recent comments
I believe the indians called the SL valley the valley of smoke. I...
Kevin | Jan. 26, 2009 at 6:50 p.m.
I just read the article "Geography is a major cause of our dirty...
Margret Posch | Jan. 26, 2009 at 11:57 a.m.
"My children breathe cleaner air than I ever did when I was their...
Anonymous | Jan. 26, 2009 at 9:45 a.m.
- Wanted: Bank robber with bad breath 12:40 a.m.
- Philippine police clash with clan 12:28 a.m.
- Officer responding to call killed 12:28 a.m.
- Editorial: Fine-tune state workweek 12:18 a.m.
- Let's keep energy money in the U.S. 12:18 a.m.
- How to pay for the war 12:17 a.m.
- Feast of Guadalupe nourishes soul 12:17 a.m.
- Obama's strategy is a road map 12:17 a.m.
- Letters: Huckabee is lying 12:17 a.m.
- Letters: Unusual TRAX gift 12:17 a.m.
- Y., U. to learn bowl destinations
- BYU and Utah's bowl games
- BYU professor remembered
- The forgotten ship: USS Utah
- Branch president without a congregation
- BYU basketball: Cougars crush Dons
- Utahns want health care reform bills
- Kurt Bestor: Joy for the world
- Jazz upset by Wolves
- Urn of baby rests with sailors
- Letters: Liberal because LDS
257 - Y. profs: Beck not all-knowing
214 - Hate not limited to 1 in-state rivalry
189 - Aggies shoot past Cougars
179 - N.Y. Senate rejects gay marriage
130 - George lost in rivalry hatefest
113 - TCU to play Boise in Fiesta Bowl
110 - Unbeaten BYU takes trip to Logan
105 - Ed Smart 'appalled' at testimony
97 - Harpring's NBA career is over
95
First, a big thank you to all who posted questions here for me to ask...
Sorry earlier I meant to say that tracks seems to travel at 35 miles an hour...
'Peter Frumhoff, the director of science and policy at the Union of...
The Non-BCS crowd ought to create their own title game...their own brand, and...
That's the whole of your defense of GOP resistance to badly-needed ethics...
Your criticism should hardly be focused on Bennett alone. What about all the...
'Wired's Threat Level blog reported on November 20 that Gavin Schmidt, a...
The reality of climate change is supported by multiple lines of evidence and...
I had the priviledge of staying in the LeBaron home on severl occasions as I...
So the unemployment rate has dropped to "just" 10%, huh? I wonder what that...
Ahh for the love of money...what money can buy!!!

