EPA Cancels Absurd Grant To Study “Health Effects Of Wildfires”

It is very silly

From the link

Marina Vance: I’ve been working on air quality since I was an undergraduate student in Brazil — for more than 20 years. I was at Virginia Tech for eight years for my Ph.D and as a postdoctoral researcher, and then I came to the University of Colorado in 2016.

Growing up in Brazil, I’m from an island in a very humid place. Wildfires are not big where I’m from at all. And then living in Virginia, I wasn’t exposed to them either.

I remember my first summer here. From the window of the townhouse I rented, I could see a plume of smoke from a fire burning in the Flatiron Mountains. When I stepped out of my townhouse, I could see that plume far away, and I could smell the smoke. And I thought, “This is really important.”

I got a grant for $549,000 to study wildfires. I was inspired by the movie “Twister” — scientists collecting samples out into the real world. The idea was to hunt the wildfire wherever it might be.

Imagine that, the whole thing was inspired by the movie Twister. If she said that, the grant should have been killed to start with. Also, I do not remember wildfires in the movie. It was about….tornadoes.

We wanted to be in a place where folks would be sheltering in their homes. If there’s a wildfire, you’re going into your home and you’re going close all the doors and the windows. The walls, the windows, and the doors in houses act like a filter. But there’s very little data saying what happens to the distribution of particle sizes as they penetrate a home.

The size of a particle dictates where it ends up. The particles that are really, really small stick to some surface, so they’re gone from the air. The particles that are really big are more likely to settle through gravity. And then you have these particles that are in-between, hundreds of nanometers in size, that stay suspended in air longer. They’re more likely to be inhaled.

So we were thinking about finding these homes, measuring particulate matter indoors and outdoors. We were going to develop interventions that were cheap and easy for people to use — portable air cleaners, that sort of thing.

You mean like….air purifiers? Devices that have been commercially available for decades? Like the one I have at home (bigger one), and a couple small ones? Maybe we could come up with something which connects into our AC/heating systems that cleans the air. We could call them “air filters.” And, yeah, I use pretty good ones because I am allergic to dust mites.

On April 24, I was checking emails over breakfast, and there was an email from the EPA. It said, “Attached is your termination of award from the U.S. E.P.A.” It was just one .pdf file. It said, “The objectives of the award are no longer consistent with EPA funding priorities.” I had to return roughly $360,000.

I can’t imagine something more related to the E.P.A.’s mission than understanding wildfires and protecting people in their homes. That to me is frustrating and confusing. This is the kind of research that can have direct and immediate impact — not 10 or 20 years in the future, but this year, when the next wildfire hits.

This was a waste of taxpayer money. It may seem like chump change against the federal budget, but, what if we killed off all the absurd, unnecessary spending?

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3 Responses to “EPA Cancels Absurd Grant To Study “Health Effects Of Wildfires””

  1. Aliassmithsmith says:

    Teach the device you use at home does it remove participants down to a nanometer.

    The investigator was doing research into particles about 1/1000 smaller than a dust mite. Your home air filtration is more effective against mites and their sit than the smaller(est) forest fire participants.

    Her research was specially in what stead of homes did different sized particles tend to be most prevalent. That research was done on residences that already had existing HVAC systems to find areas where there was significant variables and how best to mitigate

  2. Aliassmithsmith says:

    They call it “science”

  3. Professor Hale says:

    … but, what if we killed off all the absurd, unnecessary spending?

    It isn’t absurd or unnecessary. It is the Democrats funding friends of theirs so that they can live well. If she gets enough of this on her resume, she may even get handed a position in the next Democratic party administration as EPA chief. It is all part of the Politician-Academic-Activist industrial complex, funded by your taxes. Funding research was never the point. Funding Democrats and their activist friends was always the point. It was always about the money.

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