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Southland
air district limits fireplace use
The
AQMD bans the burning of wood on high-pollution days
during
winter months, usually about two dozen days.
Curling up in front of a cozy wood fire on a nippy night will be banned
in many parts of Southern California on bad air days under new regulations
passed Friday by regional air regulators.
Citing public health concerns in the heavily polluted Los Angeles Basin, the
South Coast Air Quality Management District board voted unanimously to impose
hefty fines on homeowners who burn wood in fireplaces on high-pollution days
during winter months -- usually about two dozen days.
"This is a fair trade-off," district Executive Director Barry Wallerstein
said. "This is about trading personal rights for cleaner air and public
health."
Builders will be banned from installing wood-burning fireplaces in new homes,
and it will be illegal to buy and install one when remodeling a home. Gas-burning
fireplaces will be allowed.
Restaurants with wood-fired ovens, such as California Pizza Kitchen, will not
be affected by daily bans. Nor will homeowners who rely on a fireplace for heat,
or who have properties at an elevation above 3,000 feet.
Coastal areas that don't experience as many high-pollution days probably will
be unaffected. Beach fires and ceremonial fires used by tribes also will be allowed.
Fireplaces are used in about 1.4 million of the 5 million households governed
by the district, producing an average six tons a day of particulate soot in the
air basin, according to the air district.
Numerous studies have linked fine particulate matter, which sinks deep into the
lungs, to increased lung and respiratory problems. State officials say an estimated
5,000 premature deaths each year in the region are linked to fine particulate
exposure.
About 106 tons of fine particulate soot is directly emitted every day in the
Los Angeles area, according to the air district. The new regulations will reduce
that by an average of about 1 ton a day.
The winter wood-burning ban will apply in areas where forecasts show federal
daily limits for fine particulate matter will be exceeded. That will amount to
about two dozen days from November to March each year, regulators said.
Residents most likely to be affected by the regulation include those in the Inland
Empire and the San Gabriel Valley, where soot carried by prevailing winds is
trapped by mountains.
Many see any kind of ban as an invasion of home and hearth.
"You're not going to regulate my chimney," Stewart Cumming of San Bernardino
told the board during a heated public hearing in Diamond Bar. He vowed to continue
using his fireplace as he chose.
He and others said it made no sense for the district to pursue such a small pollution
source while its other policies allow large polluters to buy exemptions from
stiff air pollution limits.
"But you're going to come into my house and tell me where, when and how
I can burn wood in my fireplace?" Cumming asked. "I'm not really following
the contradiction here very well."
"This is personal for a lot of people," said Burten Carraher, who builds
custom fireplaces and chimneys. "Fireplaces are not used that often in Los
Angeles. But for people who do, it's a place of comfort.
"It's a place where they relax, and I cannot imagine the number of fireplaces
used for that purpose should be addressed in this major, major manner. . . .
This is a personal pleasure. It's one of the few things they can enjoy -- besides
a television I guess -- that makes it a home."
Southland regulators said federal and state laws require them to go after every
possible pollution source. More than a dozen other air pollution districts across
the state already have fireplace controls in place.
Some homeowners and health organizations wanted stricter bans, saying they were
sick of choking on neighbors' smoke, which aggravates asthma and other potentially
deadly health conditions. One Redlands woman at the hearing described coughing
and "expectorating" every evening on a regular walk through her neighborhood
when wood fires are burning.
"This is very tame; this is really the minimum we need to be doing," said
Martin Schlageter of the Coalition for Clean Air.
District enforcers said they would count on peeved neighbors as the front line
in enforcing the new rules, with inspectors responding to phone complaints of
illegal smoke. Fines will run as high as $500 per violation.
The agency removed a provision that Realtors said would have further hurt an
already sagging real estate market: requiring wood-burning fireplaces to be removed
or blocked off when a home was sold.
Colleen Callahan of the American Lung Assn.'s Los Angeles office argued unsuccessfully
that the board should restore the measure.
"When a potential homeowner is seeking to purchase a home, they're not going
to say 'Where's the wood?' They're going to say where's the clean air in Southern
California,' " she said.
Board members also granted a request by home builders to hold off on enforcing
the construction ban for a year. District officials estimate the cost of installing
a natural-gas fireplace is about $500 more than a traditional wood-burning one.
The overall ban on wood burning will begin in November 2011, to give the public
time to learn about the program and its aims.
The board also approved a $500,000 program to give cash incentives to homeowners
who trade out polluting fireplaces for cleaner natural-gas models. The district
is seeking proposals from large home improvement chains to design and implement
that program.
Salesmen for natural-gas fired hearth and barbecue grills were on hand at the
hearing and outside displaying their wares.
"This is not the end of using your fireplace by any means," said John
Crouch of the Hearth, Patio and Barbecue Assn.
Source: Los Angeles Times
March 8, 2008
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