Washington quiets as Canadian smoke blankets U.S. capital
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[June 09, 2023]
By Kanishka Singh and Brad Brooks
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The shroud of polluted air emanating from Canadian
wildfires pushed further down the Atlantic Seaboard on Thursday,
blanketing Washington, D.C., in an unhealthy haze and prompting many
residents of the nation's capital to stay indoors.
Traffic was light and trains less crowded than usual as many companies
in the city told employees to work from home. Some non-essential
municipal services were suspended, including parks and recreation, road
construction and waste collection.
The Washington Nationals baseball team called off its home game, while
the National Zoo shut down for the day. The Biden administration
postponed its Pride Month event, which had been expected to be the
largest celebration for LGBTQ+ people in the White House's history.
It was the worst case of wildfire smoke blanketing the U.S. Northeast in
more than 20 years, according to private forecasting service AccuWeather.
The U.S. National Weather Service extended air quality alerts from New
England to South Carolina, as well as parts of the Midwest, including
Ohio, Indiana and Michigan. The smoke reached as far as Norway by
Thursday, according to scientists tracking the level of particulates in
Scandinavia.
Millions of Americans have been advised to stay indoors if possible to
avoid respiratory issues and other health problems that could arise due
to the high levels of fine particulates in the atmosphere.
Government data showed air quality readings above the "hazardous" level
in Washington on Thursday morning.
Marvin Binnick, who moved to Washington from Nebraska a month ago, said
watching the wildfire smoke roll into the nation's capital from his 12th
floor apartment was surreal.
"This is supposed to be a typical sunny day, but I can't see the sky or
sun or anything," said Binnick, who was sent home from his customer
service job early on Thursday. "Normally D.C. is pretty popping - but on
my way to work and on my way home today, it looked like a ghost town."
Many people wore masks outside as a thick layer of smoke veiled the
capital. The dense smog, which reeked of ash, erased the top of the
Washington Monument from view.
"This problem is likely to continue or worsen through Friday,"
Washington Mayor Muriel Bowser said in a tweet. "We urge residents and
visitors to follow precautions."
BRIGHTER SKIES OVER NEW YORK
In New York, which spent much of Wednesday covered in a sickly haze, air
remained some of the worst in the world on Thursday, with pollution
similar to that found in perennially smoggy cities such as Dhaka and
Delhi, according to IQAir, a Swiss technology company.
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People wear protective face masks as
they walk in midtown Manhattan as haze and smoke caused by wildfires
in Canada continue to linger over New York City, U.S., June 8, 2023.
REUTERS/Mike Segar
Though a smell of burning wood lingered, the skies were brighter on
Thursday morning than on Wednesday, but as evening approached, the
haze appeared to be thickening again.
After two days in which schools called off outdoor activities,
including sports practices and recess, New York's public school
system announced that its more than 1 million students would shift
to remote learning on Friday.
The smoke prompted aviation officials to halt incoming flights to
major airports in New York and Philadelphia from the Northeast,
Mid-Atlantic region and Ohio for a second day. All flights bound for
the airport in Newark, New Jersey, a major New York-area airport,
were delayed.
Smoky conditions are likely to persist until Sunday, when a new
storm system shifts the direction of prevailing winds, National
Weather Service meteorologist Peter Mullinax said.
But researchers have said wildfires will occur more often and at
higher intensity due to climate change.
"Public knowledge is a huge issue," said Keith Bein of the Air
Quality Research Center at the University of California, Davis.
"People need to realize that this is not a one-off event. These
fires are going to be the new normal."
While the conditions have disrupted daily life for millions of
Americans, the impact on the U.S. economy is likely to be limited
and short-lived, according to Ryan Sweet, chief U.S. economist at
Oxford Economics.
In Canada, where the smoke originated, the federal government gave
Toronto a "high risk" rating based on the air quality on Thursday
afternoon, while other cities such as Ottawa and Montreal were at
"low risk" as smoky conditions eased.
The country is enduring its worst-ever start to wildfire season,
with thousands forced from their homes.
The U.S. has dispatched more than 600 firefighters to Canada to help
the country battle the blazes. President Joe Biden, who has called
the wildfires another reminder of the dangers of climate change,
said U.S. officials were monitoring air quality and aviation delays.
(Reporting by Kanishka Singh in Washington and Brad Brooks in
Lubbock, TexasAdditional reporting by Tyler Clifford, Gabriella
Borter, Julia Harte, Trevor Hunnicutt, Brad Brooks, Susan Heavey,
Nancy Lapid and Dan BurnsWriting by Joseph AxEditing by Jonathan
Oatis, Frances Kerry and Alistair Bell)
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