-
North Tyneside couple urge others to check pension credit eligibility - 5 mins ago
-
Amid wildfires, police arrest man trying to start fire in Ventura - 15 mins ago
-
Blind Puppy Found Tied to Pole ‘Pleading for Help’ Before Hurricane Milton - 16 mins ago
-
Couple finds 115 stuffed animals hidden in walls during B.C. renovation - 19 mins ago
-
Powell stresses elections won’t sway Fed’s policy - 21 mins ago
-
“Falklands are British”, an unequivocal message from UK Minister for the Armed Forces — MercoPress - 24 mins ago
-
‘DWP demand to repay my carer allowance dehumanised me’ - 25 mins ago
-
South Korea President Yoon on North Korea Confrontation, Defense and Domestic Reform - 35 mins ago
-
American Airlines just made it harder for staff to kick passengers off planes - 37 mins ago
-
2024 Set to Become Hottest Year on Record, Claim EU Scientists - 38 mins ago
Mountain fire fouls the air, forcing a wood-burning ban
Friday night’s predicted low temperature of 51 degrees in Los Angeles might tempt some to light a cozy fall fire. But residents in a large swath of Southern California should refrain from burning wood Friday — the destructive Mountain fire has thrown air pollutants into a frenzy, air quality officials said.
Orange County and non-desert portions of Los Angeles, Riverside and San Bernardino counties are required to stop burning wood, including manufactured logs made of wax or paper, anywhere indoors or outdoors from midnight through 11:59 p.m. Friday, the South Coast Air Quality Management District said Thursday. It is the first scheduled no-burn day of the 2024-25 season.
Mountain communities above 3,000-feet elevation, the Coachella Valley and the high desert are exempt from the ban, along with homes that rely on wood as the sole source of heat, low-income households and those without natural gas service.
Breathing in fine particles, such as those from burning wood, can cause respiratory problems, air quality officials said, including asthma attacks. Officials suggest staying inside, avoiding physical activity and running the AC or air purifier in your home.
A smoke advisory was also set for parts of Los Angeles County until Saturday afternoon due to the Mountain fire, which has burned more than 20,000 acres in Ventura County and destroyed more than a hundred homes as of Thursday evening.
Source link