NEWS AND UPDATES

RAQC Announces Optical Gas Imaging Camera Loan Program

 

The Regional Air Quality Council (RAQC) is offering an Optical Gas Imaging (OGI) Camera to assist industry and local governments/health departments in voluntarily identifying and repairing gas leaks at oil and gas industry exploration and production facilities along the Denver Front Range and Colorado’s western slope. The camera, acquired via a Supplemental Environmental Project (SEP) grant, will be loaned to qualified users over the next two years.

How the Program Will Work: Over the course of the two-year OGI Camera Loan Program, the RAQC will coordinate and maintain a schedule of Qualified Users to whom the camera may be and has been loaned. The RAQC will also maintain a summary record of leaks voluntarily found and repaired; however, the RAQC will not attribute these entries to any specific entity.

Qualified User Certification and Training: Qualified Users – those employed by the oil and gas industry and local government/health departments -- must be Level 1 Certified by the Infrared Training Center for Optical Imaging prior to using the OGI Camera. The RAQC has scheduled a two-and-a-half day, Denver-area training course for Level 1 Certification during the week of June 25th for potential Qualified Users. A second training session will be scheduled based on level of interest.

Local government/health department staff will be offered the training for free while funding is available. Private company and consultant staff will be offered the training at a reduced cost of $1,500 per participant. This is compared to a cost of approximately $2,000, which does not include travel expenses, for individual training in Texas.

How to Participate: Potential Qualified Users should contact Gerald J. Dilley, Technical Program Manager, as soon as possible to express interest in participating in the OGI Camera Loan Program. Please include the following in your expression of interest:

  • Full name and title
  • Company/governmental entity name and address
  • Phone/fax number and email address
  • The number of persons requiring Level 1 training
  • Any questions that you may have.

A letter of interest addressed to Gerald J. Dilley, Regional Air Quality Council, 1445 Market Street, Ste. 260, Denver, CO 80202 is also acceptable.

View Program Flyer

RAQC Announces Mow Down Pollution 2013 Details

 

YOUR OLD MOWER'S DAYS ARE NUMBERED.

The Regional Air Quality Council is partnering with Suncor Energy and Black and Decker to host our annual Mow Down Pollution event on May 11th, 2013 at Dick's Sporting Goods Field Lot H in Commerce City, CO. This year, we invite you to pre-register for a new Black and Decker cordless electric lawn mower and choose whether you will bring an old gas-powered mower to recycle. We will pre-order your new mower for you and have it ready for you to pay for and pick up during a designated time window on May 11th -- the same time you may also drop off your drained, gas-powered mower. We will also be showcasing Black and Decker's electric garden tools such as trimmers and blowers, which will be available for delivery order at a discounted price.

WITH OR WITHOUT AN OLD MOWER TO RECYCLE, YOU'LL GET A GREAT PRICE.

The 18" CM1836 http://www.blackanddecker.com/outdoor/CM1836.aspx
$100 with a trade-in.  $130 without a trade-in.  This model retails for $350.

The 19" CM1936 http://www.blackanddecker.com/outdoor/CM1936.aspx
$180 with a trade-in.  $230 without a trade-in.  This model retails for $400.

TOGETHER, WE'LL MOW DOWN POLLUTION.

Gas-powered lawn mowers and lawn equipment contribute to nearly 10 percent of the Denver area's ozone pre-cursor emissions. By switching to these eco-friendly alternatives, you can make a significant impact on our air quality and health for years to come.

EVENT DETAILS:

SATURDAY, MAY 11th, Times to be assigned.  

Dick's Sporting Goods Park Lot H, 6000 Victory Way

Commerce City, CO 80022

*PRE-REGISTRATION IS REQUIRED AS SUPPLY IS LIMITED.*

*GAS-POWERED MOWERS MUST BE DRAINED OF OIL AND GAS TO BE RECYCLED.*

For more information on the Mow Down Pollution lawn mower exchange, please contact Kate Cooke (.(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)) at 303-629-5450, ext. 270.

View a Video Recap of the 2012 Ozone Season

Thanks to our Clean Air Community for doing your part to reduce ozone pollution in 2012! Check out this fab video to recap the season.

Documents Related to OzoneAware Creative RFP Now Available

Thank you to all who have expressed interest in responding to the OzoneAware creative services RFP.

The period for question submittal and the deadline for expressed intent to respond have now passed.

A list of questions submitted by potential bidding agencies and the RAQC's answers to these questions may be found here.

Additionally, the RAQC has made the following research documents available for review by bidding agencies:

Please contact Meg Alderton, Communications Manager, for more information.

We look forward to receiving your proposal.

RAQC Issues RFP for Creative Services Related to OzoneAware

The Regional Air Quality Council (RAQC) -- the lead air quality planning organization for the nine-county Denver Metro/Front Range area -- is requesting the services of a professional creative agency to support the ongoing efforts of its comprehensive public awareness and education campaign, OzoneAware.

Please click here to dowload the official Request for Proposal, which provides an introduction to the project, a description of need, a scope of services, and details relating to submission requirements and schedule.

Questions regarding this RFP will be accepted until 5 PM on October 29th. Additionally, the RACQ requests that interested firms reply prior to 5 PM October 29th with an Intent to Respond.

The submission deadline for proposals is 5 PM on November 9th.

Front Range Motorists Offered Chance to Win $300 in Vehicle Maintenance & Repair

Maintenance Matters—a campaign to promote the impact of vehicle maintenance on air quality—is giving away $300 a week in vehicle maintenance and repair for three weeks beginning the week of October 15.

Motorists may enter to win at www.MaintenanceMatters.org, or on the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment’s Air Pollution Control Division Facebook page, https://www.facebook.com/cdphe.apcd.

 

In addition to the opportunity to win $300 in maintenance and repairs, motorists can find a coupon good for $25 toward any maintenance related service, including an oil change, at participating auto repair shops.

Maintenance Matters Coalition partners include Envirotest – Air Care Colorado, the Regional Air Quality Council, the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment, and several local repair businesses.

RAQC, Partners Announce “Put A Cap on Ozone” Gas Cap Replacement Program

This summer, motorists in the Denver Metropolitan and North Front Range areas whose vehicles are found to have faulty or missing gas caps during an emissions inspection, will receive a coupon good for the purchase of a new cap at participating NAPA Auto Parts stores. The “Put a Cap on Ozone” program, scheduled to begin Friday, July 13, is part of a continuing effort to help curb ground-level ozone pollution along Colorado’s Front Range.


“Put a Cap on Ozone” is a cooperative effort of Envirotest – Air Care Colorado, the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment (CDPHE), the Regional Air Quality Council (RAQC) and NAPA Auto Parts to help with the state’s voluntary ozone reduction efforts. Studies have shown that the simple act of replacing a faulty gas cap is the most cost-effective, immediate way to significantly reduce vehicle emissions, including those that cause harmful ground-level ozone.


In 2011, an average of 3,200 vehicles each month failed the gas cap portion of the vehicle emissions inspection process at Air Care Colorado stations. This summer the “Put a Cap on Ozone” program aims to replace up to 6,500 gas caps between July 13 and September 15, which could amount to savings of up to:


 1.5 tons per day of volatile organic compounds (VOC) – a type of pollution that can lead to ground-level ozone formation
 26,000 gallons of gasoline lost due to evaporation during hot summer months
 $100,000.00 the cost of 26,000 gallons of evaporated gasoline


Coupons for $10 toward the purchase of a new gas cap at any participating NAPA store, will be given after a vehicle fails the gas cap portion of the emissions inspection at an Air Care Colorado station; the average retail price of a new gas cap is $10 – more for specialty caps. There are more than 30 participating NAPA stores along the Front Range, with at least one shop nearby each Air Care emissions inspection station.


State air quality regulations require emissions testing stations to fail a vehicle if the gas cap is faulty, doesn’t fit properly or is simply missing. After a failing vehicle is outfitted with a new cap, it is required to repeat the entire emissions testing procedure.


Doug Decker, Mobile Sources Program Director for the Air Pollution Control Division of CDPHE, said properly working gas caps are an important component in the fight against ground-level ozone pollution.


“Evaporative emissions from faulty and missing gas caps can amount to more than 3 tons of volatile organic compounds per day,” Decker said. “The emissions reductions we expect from this gas cap replacement program are equivalent to removing 50 cars from the road for an entire year; it’s an immediate, positive impact on air quality. By replacing these caps we take an important step toward reducing emissions and combating ozone.”


Ground-level ozone is created when pollutants like nitrogen oxides and volatile organic compounds are released into the atmosphere. These pollutants react in the presence of sunlight to create ozone.


The Denver Metro/North Front Range region is currently out of compliance with the federally set standard for ground-level ozone pollution, and the EPA has recently given the area until 2015 to meet the 2008 federal standard. This gas cap replacement program will help to reduce ground-level ozone pollution and contribute to efforts to bring the area back into compliance.


“We’re pleased to participate in and co-sponsor this program,” said Brian Marsh, general manager for Envirotest Systems in Colorado. “Not only will customers with failing caps receive an essentially free new cap, but that new cap is going to save them money in the long run. A vehicle with a bad gas cap can lose a gallon of gasoline every two weeks in the summertime through evaporation. So this program not only helps the air but also helps the motorist’s wallet.”


Program sponsors encourage all motorists to ensure that they have good, tight-fitting gas caps on all their vehicles, even if they are not due for an emissions test. Many caps will “click” when they are put back on after refueling – a sign to the motorist that the cap fits snugly. Of course, motorists whose vehicles are missing the caps entirely should replace them immediately. Evaporating gasoline is not only bad for the air, it can also be dangerous.


Funds for the gas cap program are being provided by Envirotest Systems Corp., NAPA Auto Parts and the Regional Air Quality Council, with additional support provided by the American Lung Association of Colorado and KHOW Radio. Coupons will be accepted at more than 30 local NAPA stores, most of which are within a few miles of testing stations. In addition, NAPA is offering 10 percent off of additional purchases.
WWW.AIRCARECOLORADO.COM

RAQC Schedules Ozone Modeling Forum

The Regional Air Quality Council has scheduled a Modeling Forum on August 9, 2012, 8:30 am - 12:00 pm, 2nd Floor Conference Room, 1445 Market Street, Denver. CO. An update on 2008 base case model performance evaluation and development of future (2018) base case will be provided.

  • Agenda
  • Draft Report: Preliminary Ozone Modeling Performance Evaluation for the Denver 2008 Episode, Environ, May 2012

Please contact Gerald J. Dilley at 303-629-5450, X.240, with questions.

Colorado Offers Tax Credit for Alternative Fuel Vehicles

The State of Colorado is offering an Innovative Motor Vehicle Credit of up to $6,000 to taxpayers who have purchased an alternative fuel vehicle, converted a motor vehicle to use an alternative fuel, or replaced a vehicle’s power source with an alternative fuel power source. An income tax credit of up to $7,500 is offered to those who have converted a vehicle to a plug-in hybrid electric vehicle.

Taxpayers must have purchased or converted a vehicle after December 31, 2011 and before January 1, 2016 to be eligible for the Innovative Motor Vehicle Credit.

Vehicles must meet one of the following criteria to qualify:

  • Uses or is converted to use an alternative fuel
  • Is a hybrid vehicle
  • Is a plug-in hybrid electric vehicle
  • Has its own power source replaced with a power source that uses an alternative fuel
  • Is modified to include idling reduction technology

The amount of credit allowed for each qualified vehicle is dependent upon a number of factors, which are detailed in the Department of Revenue’s (DOR) FYI Income 67 report. For more information regarding the Innovative Motor Vehicle Credit, please refer to the DOR report or contact the DOR call center at 303-238-7378.

EPA Designates Metro Area/Northern Front Range Marginal Nonattainment Under 2008 Ozone Standards

As required by the Clean Air Act, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) on April 30, 2012 announced final designations for 45 areas under the 2008 National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS) for ground-level ozone.  The nine-county Denver Metro Area/Northern Front Range was issued marginal nonattainment status under the designation. 

The EPA’s final designations are based on air quality monitoring data; recommendations submitted by the states and tribes; and other technical information including emissions, commuting patterns, population growth, weather patterns and topography.  A non-attainment area is one in which air quality does not meet the ozone standards set forth by the federal government in 2008, which is 0.075 parts per million over an eight-hour period.

The marginal nonattainment designation does not impose any new planning requirements on the State of Colorado at this time; however, the Denver Metro Area/North Front Range region must meet the standard before 2015 or new requirements may be imposed.  

Please visit our programs page to learn more about how you can help to reduce ground-level ozone and help to bring the region back to attainment status. 

EPA Intends to Support Colorado’s 2009 Ozone Area Designation Recommendation

In a December 8, 2011 letter to the Colorado Department of Health and Environment, the EPA expressed its intent to support Colorado's 2009 recommended ozone area designation and boundary for the Denver Metropolitan and North Front Range area. The EPA will continue to work with state officials regarding the appropriate boundary area in Colorado. The EPA plans to promulgate final ozone designations in spring 2012.

Tightening of Ozone Standard Delayed to 2013

The Obama Administration has pushed back the tightening of the federal ozone standard which lobbyists say could cost billions of dollars and hundreds of thousands of jobs.  The current standard of 75 parts per billion set in 2008 by the Bush administration will stay in effect until a review of the National Ambient Air Quality Standard for ozone pollution is scheduled for review in 2013. To see statements from President Obama and EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson, click on the links below.

Statement by President Obama

Statement by Lisa P. Jackson

New York Times Article

Come Park Your Bike for FREE at Events throughout the Summer

The Regional Air Quality Council (RAQC) has partnered with BikeDenver to offer FREE bicycle parking at several events throughout the summer. In addition, maps depicting where bike parking is located on the RAQC's mobile ozone site at m.ozoneaware.org to make it easy for people on the go.  Check out all the locations below and make sure to stop by and see us for some cool free bike gear!

People's Fair, June 4 & 5

Denver Century Ride, June 11 & 12

National Get Outdoors Day, June 11

Westword Music Showcase, June 18

Bike to Work Day, June 22

Bike From Work Bash, June 22

Civic Center Ride in Movie 1, June 26

Cherry Creek Arts Festival, July 2-4

Civic Center Ride in Movie 2, July 10

Civic Center Ride in Movie 3, July 24

Dragon Boat Festival, July 30 & 31

Civic Center Ride in Movie 4, August 7

Viva Streets August 14

Quiznos Pro Challenge, August 28

Mow Down Pollution Details

YOUR OLD MOWER'S DAYS ARE NUMBERED.

The Regional Air Quality Council is planning our annual Mow Down Pollution even for May 11th at Dick''s Sporting Goods Field Lot H in Commerce City, CO.  This year's program is brought to you through a partnership with Suncor Energy and Black and Decker. 

WITH OR WITHOUT AN OLD MOWER TO RECYCLE, YOU'll GET A GREAT PRICE.

The Black and Decker 18" CM1836 http://www.blackanddecker.com/outdoor/CM1836.aspx
$100 with a trade-in. $130 without a trade-in. This model retails for $350.

The Black and Decker 19" CM1936 http://www.blackanddecker.com/outdoor/CM1936.aspx
$180 with a trade-in. $230 without a trade-in. This model retails for $400.

Once we have reached the total number of mowers (dependent upon funding), we will close the registration process and begin assigning pick-up times.

Thanks for you participation in the Mow Down Pollution program!
If you have any questions, please call or email: Kate Cooke, Transportation Program Manager, 303-629-5450 x270 or .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)

TOGETHER, WE'LL MOW DOWN POLLUTION.

Register by completing this form.

 

 

Fuel Supply Costs and Impacts Study 2011

The Fuel Supply Costs and Impacts Study is complete and now available here. Please contact Jerry Dilley, the RAQC's Air Quality Engineer with questions at (303) 629-5450 ext. 240.

RAQC Chooses ENVIRON/Alpine for SIP Modeling

After a thorough competitive RFP process, the RAQC has chosen to move forward on a contract with ENVIRON/Alpine. The contract will include modeling to support the development of the upcoming Ozone State Implementation Plan, as well as other tasks that may arise as the result of the project. The ENVIRON/Alpine team has extensive experience in photochemical modeling throughout the West including previous work performed for the 2004 and 2008 Ozone State Implementation Plans in Colorado. 

EPA delays the final issuance of the 8-hour ozone standard until no later than July 31, 2011

EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson has announced a delay in the final issuance of the 8-hour ozone standard until no later than July 31, 2011.  According to the EPA statement below, she will “ask CASAC for further interpretation of the epidemiological and clinical studies they used to make their [60-70 ppb] recommendation.  To ensure EPA's decision is grounded in the best science, EPA will review the input CASAC provides before the new standard is selected.

EPA Statement

Under Administrator Jackson's leadership, in January the Environmental Protection Agency proposed stricter standards for smog - standards that would help prevent up to 12,000 premature deaths, 58,000 cases of aggravated asthma and save up to $100 billion dollars in health costs.

The proposed standard would replace an existing standard set during the previous Administration, which many - including the Agency's independent team of expert scientists known as Clean Air Science Advisory Committee (CASAC) - believed did not go far enough to protect public health.

Administrator Jackson proposed that EPA select a standard in the range that CASAC indicated would be protective of Americans' health. As part of EPA's extensive review of the science, Administrator Jackson will ask CASAC for further interpretation of the epidemiological and clinical studies they used to make their recommendation.  To ensure EPA's decision is grounded in the best science, EPA will review the input CASAC provides before the new standard is selected.  Given this ongoing scientific review, a final standard - which will be in the range recommended by the CASAC - will be set by the end of July, 2011.

In addition to this standard, EPA is moving forward with a number of national rules that will significantly reduce pollution and improve public health for all Americans.  These include rules designed to reduce harmful emissions from cars, power plants and other industrial facilities that contribute to ozone formation.  Taking additional time to complete the scientific review of the ozone standard will not delay the public health benefits of these rules.

4th Maximum Ozone Values Table (ppb) through September 30, 2010

Click here to view the updated table.

The ozone standard set by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is calculated using a rolling three-year average of the fourth (4th) maximum 8-hour ozone concentrations. An official violation occurs when the rolling three-year average meets or exceeds 75 parts per billion (ppb), a standard set in 2008. The table above shows current monitoring data for the Denver metropolitan region including 1st, 2nd, 3rd and 4th maximum values as well as data for 2008 and 2009 to calculate the average for three years. The region is currently designated as a "non-attainment" region by the U.S. EPA. A new, stricter ozone standard is expected in August 2010.

The Voluntary Ozone Reduction Program began in 1999 in response to unusually high ozone levels in the summer of 1998. The RAQC’s ozone education campaign – "Let's Take Care of Our Summer Air" – includes issuance of Ozone Action Alerts, advertising and community events. In addition, the RAQC posts information on the campaign and asks citizens to Join Our Clean Air Community on the Pledge page of the web site.

For additional information on ground-level ozone, please visit the "What is Ground-level ozone?" page on the site or the RAQC’s Web site at http://www.raqc.org or call (303) 629-5450, ext. 220.

EPA delays the release of the final ozone NAAQS

EPA announced it is delaying the release of the final ozone NAAQS until approximately October 31, 2010. A status report filed by EPA with the court announcing this new date is available here: http://airweb.timberlakepublishing.com/rc_files/5042/ENV_DEFENSE-ozone_08_--_Second_Abeyance_Status_Report.pdf

2008 Ozone SIP Approved by EPA

On July 21, 2010, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) published the Proposed Rule for approval the 2008 ozone state implementation plan (SIP) in the federal register (Vol. 75 , Number 139, July 21, 2010).  For the final SIP and supporting documents, please click here.

4th Maximum Ozone Values Table (ppb) through August 15, 2010

Click here to view the updated table.

The ozone standard set by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is calculated using a rolling three-year average of the fourth (4th) maximum 8-hour ozone concentrations.  An official violation occurs when the rolling three-year average meets or exceeds 75 parts per billion (ppb), a standard set in 2008. The table above shows current monitoring data for the Denver metropolitan region including 1st, 2nd, 3rd and 4th maximum values as well as data for 2008 and 2009 to calculate the average for three years. The region is currently designated as a "non-attainment" region by the U.S. EPA. A new, stricter ozone standard is expected in August 2010.

The Voluntary Ozone Reduction Program began in 1999 in response to unusually high ozone levels in the summer of 1998. The RAQC’s ozone education campaign – "Let's Take Care of Our Summer Air" – includes issuance of Ozone Action Alerts, advertising and community events. In addition, the RAQC posts information on the campaign and asks citizens to Join Our Clean Air Community on the Pledge page of the web site.
For additional information on ground-level ozone, please visit the "What is Ground-level ozone?" page on the site or the RAQC’s Web site at http://www.raqc.org or call (303) 629-5450, ext. 220.

 

2010 Video Contest deadline extended!

The OzoneAware campaign is launching its first-ever video contest to help promote all the ways citizens can help to reduce ozone pollution throughout the Denver region.  The deadline for submissions has been exteded to Tuesday August 31, 2010. Check out the VIDEO of the contest rules read by the RAQC's own Sarah Anderson. 

Clean Air Needed.  Advocates Wanted.

Summer is ozone pollution season, which means it’s time to refresh our knowledge of this harmful pollutant and strengthen our commitment to Clean Air. It’s critical that you have current information and all available resources to engage and motivate your community. Join the Regional Air Quality Council, special guest speaker meteorologist Mike Nelson of KMGH 7 News, as well fellow leaders in health, transportation and the environment. Important presentations will be made on the state of our metro area’s summer air. We’ll also share more about the critical nature of volunteer efforts and the Ozone Aware campaign’s 2010 launching of the Clean Air Community. You’ll leave with the knowledge and tools necessary to promote Clean Air in your Community.

June 8, 2010
Denver Metro Chamber of Commerce
1445 Market Street, 4th floor board room
9:30 – noon
Please RSVP by June 4th to Rebecca Chazin or 303-629-5450 x204

VIEW INVITATION AND AGENDA

Mike Silverstein's Presentation

Pat Reddy's Presentation

Sarah and Stephanie's Presentation

 

Leaders to Convene For Air Quality, Transportation and Land Use Workshop

Contact: Ken Lloyd

Executive Director

Regional Air Quality Council

(303) 629-5450 ext. 250

Leaders to Convene For Air Quality, Transportation and Land Use Workshop

DENVER – On June 4, the Regional Air Quality Council will convene and co-host a meeting of leaders from across the community and the Country to advance the region's understanding of ways to improve air quality, through such efforts as connecting transportation and land use planning – all aimed at reducing vehicle use and Colorado ozone air pollution. The meeting, 9 a.m. at the Oxford Hotel in Denver, is being co-hosted by the office of Gov. Bill Ritter, the Denver Regional Council of Governments, the North Front Range Metropolitan Planning Organization, the Metro Mayors Caucus and sponsored by the Governors' Institute on Community Design. Peers and experts from around the U.S. with experience tackling these issues will participate in this important discussion.

Recognizing a formidable challenge before Colorado, Gov. Ritter has charged the Regional Air Quality Council with developing an effective plan for reducing ozone concentrations along the Front Range. The EPA is expected in August of this year to finalize a requirement that would reduce the 8-hour ozone air quality standard from .075 parts per million to .06-.07 parts per million.

“In order to achieve the new ozone standard, we will need to consider strategies for reducing emissions from stationary sources, such as power plants, transportation vehicles and other sources,” said Gov. Ritter. “This means considering all options for reducing vehicle miles traveled that reduce ozone precursor emissions, including those options involving principles of sustainability and land use, as well as options involving vehicle and fuel technology and industrial air pollution sources.”

Andy Spielman, Regional Air Quality Council Chairman agreed, stating, "We have a big job before us and are eager to hear from our partners here at home and from other communities about creative ways to tackle these tough problems together."

Former Maryland Gov. Parris Glendening, president of the Governor’s Institute on Community Design and Bill Mosher, Managing Director of Trammel Crow in Denver will be among the speakers at the workshop. Ken Weil, Gov. Ritter’s deputy chief of staff for policy and initiatives, will represent the governor at the meeting. Representatives from the oil and gas, automotive, transit and real estate development industries will be present, as well as the environmental community, executive directors from the Colorado Department of Public Health and the Environment, Transportation and Local Affairs, as well as local and regional elected officials.

Topics at the workshop will include “connecting transportation and land use with Clean Air Act planning needs at the regional level” and “how the state can support innovation in transportation and land use planning to meet air quality goals.”

For more information about the Regional Air Quality Council and to access the meeting agenda, visit its Web site at www.raqc.org .

To download a pdf version of this press release, click here.

Mow Down Pollution Update

Mow Down Pollution lawn mower exchange event on May 1, 2010 was a huge success!  The RAQC traded in old mowers for deep discounts on new, earth-friendly Neuton brand alternatives.  There are still mowers available by clicking through to the RAQC's dedicated Mow Down Pollution page.


For more information about RAQC or the Mow Down Pollution event, please call Sarah Anderson, communications manager, at 303-629-5450 x 220 or visit OzoneAware.org.

About Regional Air Quality Council (www.RAQC.org)

The Regional Air Quality Council (RAQC) is the lead air quality-planning agency for the seven-county Denver-metropolitan area. In existence since 1989, the Council’s main purpose is to develop plans and programs to keep the region in compliance with federal air quality standards, with significant input from area citizens, businesses and local governments. The RAQC also oversees the development and implementation of air quality outreach and education programs throughout the region. The RAQC has partnered with the RidgeGate development for the Mow Down Pollution event to help raise awareness of air quality issues in Colorado and provide the residents of Colorado with cost effective earth-friendly lawn care options.


The event RidgeGate development is a mixed-use sustainable community that will eventually span more than 3,500 acres in Lone Tree, Colorado. For more information on RidgeGate, please visit www.ridgegatecolorado.com.