


The Way Life Should Be
The way life should be: here in maine, that is what we pride our state on. However this is not a perfect world and their will always be an issue or two to fix. In Maine one issue that is getting worse and worse is: Air Pollution. Thousands of tourist flock to Maine in the summer in hopes of seeing foliage, beaches, and fresh pine scented air. That being said the quality of Maine's air has been on a steady decline for the past several years.
The primary culprit for the mass amounts of pollution is coal fired power plants and automobiles. Ozone levels exceeded the national health standard, as well as fine particle pollution causing reason to worry. Polluted air forces many people to remain indoors on hot days in fear of asthma attacks and being short of breath. The Clean Air Act takes aim at reducing the amount of pollution being released and has been doing so for the past 40 years.
One way to significantly reduce air pollution is by producing cars that release less toxins. Recently special interest lobbyist purposed a proposal that would have blocked President Obama's Administration from enforcing the Clean Air Act to combat global warming. "Climate change is the largest threat to public health this century. Allowing tricky political maneuvers to derail science-based carbon emission reduction strategies is simply unconscionable" said Paul Santomenna, Executive Director of Maine Physicians for Social Responsibility.
The proposal which has been dubbed "The Dirty Air Act" was received with much anger by mans environmentalist. “This attack on the Clean Air Act was written by polluters for polluters. The Dirty Air Act would have a sweeping impact, blocking protections to safeguard our health as well as to reduce America’s oil dependence and move us to clean energy. Our goal is to alert constituents in Maine about this behind-closed-doors attack on our clean air protections so they can ask Senators Snowe and Collins to oppose the rollback,” said Caitlin Seeley, Federal Field Associate for Environment Maine. Hopefully with the years to come we will be able to have even more success reducing harmful emissions into the ozone.

