Hazy, smoke-filled skies prompted yet another red alert for air quality Tuesday, pushing a St. Paul Public Schools' outdoor program indoors, and sparking conversations among officials about canceling a Wednesday morning canoe trip.
It's at least the second such programming pivot the school district has taken this summer as the Twin Cities experience a protracted period of poor air quality from Canadian wildfire smoke and ozone pollution. Experts say it's likely to last all summer as thousands of kids participate in Minneapolis and St. Paul summer programs, raising safety questions for parents as air quality alerts have become a fixture of smartphone weather apps.
Dr. Keith Cavanaugh, a pediatric pulmonologist at Children's Minnesota, said most parents should watch for children running out of breath, coughing or otherwise slowing down while they play outside. At that point, kids participating in particularly strenuous activities — think soccer or other sports that require a lot of running — might want to consider taking a break or heading inside.
"The concern for children is mostly short term," Cavanaugh said, noting some kids face elevated health risks.
If the air quality index (AQI) hits the red, asthmatic children may run the risk of hospitalization. Even air that looks clear can have ozone pollution.
Shortly before 10 a.m. Tuesday, hourly air quality index readings in the central Twin Cities had reached the red category, meaning air was unhealthy for everyone to breathe, according to the Environmental Protection Agency and the private company Purple Air.
David Brown, an air quality forecaster for the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (MPCA), said two plumes combined to make the sky hazy — ground-level smoke from just north of the border in Ontario was mixing with the edge of a much larger plume from Quebec, which is lingering over a large swath of the Great Lakes region.
The MPCA issued a warning of bad air quality until midnight Thursday. So far this year the agency has warned the public about bad air on 26 days, and there have been 30 total days with damaging pollution readings — a record stretching back to at least 2000, Brown said.