What it means: Burning wood is prohibited on beaches in Los Angeles County and neighboring counties. Burning charcoal in fire pits is still allowed under the conditions enumerated below.
[AQMD] – An Orange County Superior Court judge rejected a motion Friday by Friends of the Fire Rings for a preliminary injunction to stop implementation of the South Coast Air Quality Management District’s measure governing beach fire rings.
In his decision, Judge Robert J. Moss specifically addressed health risks posed by wood smoke and found that “The AQMD has presented enough evidence to show that wood burning can be harmful to the health and that it had a rational basis …” to adopt its rule.
In rejecting the preliminary injunction, the judge found that: “Petitioner has not met its burden as it fails to establish by competent evidence either irreparable harm or a probability that it will prevail on the merits.”
The judge’s ruling recognized that the rules had been crafted to avoid interfering with the public’s use and enjoyment of fire pits: “the change in the Rules does not require removal of the fire rings, does not mandate the configuration or specific placement of the Fire Rings, allows unfettered burning of charcoal and liquid fuel, does not place any burden or responsibility on the owners of the Rings, or mandate the City take any action.”
As a result of the judge’s ruling, Barry Wallerstein, SCAQMD’s executive officer, said “This measure protecting public health from the harmful effects of wood smoke will move forward.”
Friends of the Fire Rings filed a lawsuit in Orange County Superior Court on Nov. 26, 2013 seeking to invalidate SCAQMD’s Rule 444 – Open Burning. After filing the complaint, Friends of the Fire Rings filed a motion for a preliminary injunction to prevent SCAQMD and the City of Newport Beach from implementing the rule until the case could be decided.
The SCAQMD adopted the fire-pit rule on July 12, 2013, imposing modest restrictions for the approximately 765 beach fire rings in Los Angeles and Orange counties. The overwhelming majority of pits will not be affected. Effective March 1, 2014, fire pits can remain if:
* They are located at least 700 feet from the nearest residence; OR
* They are at least 100 feet apart (If a city has 15 or fewer fire pits, they must be separated by at least 50 feet) and
* Air quality for fine particulates (PM2.5) in coastal areas is not forecast to exceed 100 on the Air Quality Index. (This is expected to occur infrequently under special meteorological conditions.)
Air monitoring initiated by SCAQMD in March 2013 showed smoke from beach fires was impacting air quality in nearby residential areas. Concentrations were found to be up to 10 times background levels for short periods of time in beach parking areas and up to three times background levels at nearby residential locations.
The particulate emissions rate per minute from one beach bonfire is equal to that from:
* Three average big-rig diesel trucks; or
* The secondhand smoke from 800 cigarettes. Wood smoke contains many of the same toxic chemicals as secondhand cigarette smoke.
Fine particles in wood smoke contain cancer-causing chemicals as well as common combustion pollutants such as nitrogen oxides. Numerous health studies during wildfires, and in communities where large amounts of wood or other biomass is burned, show that wood smoke causes respiratory irritation and an increase in hospital admissions for respiratory problems. Fine particles also can aggravate chronic heart and lung diseases and are linked to premature deaths in people with these conditions.
SCAQMD is the air pollution control agency for Orange County and major portions of Los Angeles, San Bernardino and Riverside counties.
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2 Comments
Yea! Clean Air. Boooo! There goes another freedom for us Californians. Wake up call just made.
Next they’re going to ban camp fires in camp grounds.
CALIFORNIA SUX!