BLACK mobile logo

united states

Op-Ed: The air our children breathe shouldn’t be up for debate

July 12, 2026

Two nurses from southeast Michigan argue that state environmental officials are using regulatory loopholes to mask a serious ozone pollution crisis in Detroit rather than addressing its root causes. The Michigan Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy has issued temporary air quality warnings while simultaneously trying to exclude problematic ozone data by blaming wildfire smoke, even as Detroit's East Seven Mile monitoring station has exceeded federal health standards for a decade. The authors emphasize that chronic ozone exposure causes severe health consequences, particularly for children, including stunted lung development, birth defects, and cognitive impairment, with asthma hospitalizations on Detroit's east side nearly ten times higher than the rest of Michigan.

Who is affected

  • Residents of southeast Michigan, particularly downtown Detroit
  • Children and infants in affected communities (experiencing stunted lung development, cognitive impairment, and higher school absence rates)
  • East side Detroit residents (experiencing asthma hospitalizations nearly 10 times higher than the rest of the state)
  • Asthma sufferers in Detroit
  • Pregnant women and their babies (facing risks of preterm birth, stillbirth, and birth defects)
  • Families raising children in these communities

What action is being taken

  • The Michigan Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy (EGLE) is issuing air quality alerts warning of high ground-level ozone levels
  • The state is encouraging residents to drive less, avoid refueling vehicles, avoid using charcoal lighter fluid, and avoid using gas-powered lawn equipment
  • EGLE is appealing to federal officials to declare southeast Michigan as meeting ozone air quality standards by using a legal loophole that excludes 21 days of ozone data from six monitoring sites

Why it matters

  • This matters because Detroit residents, especially children, are experiencing serious and lasting health consequences from chronic ozone exposure that goes beyond temporary heat waves. Ozone pollution has exceeded EPA health standards for a decade at key monitoring stations, contributing to Detroit ranking as one of the most challenging cities for asthma sufferers. The state's approach of using regulatory loopholes to exclude problematic data and achieve compliance on paper does nothing to address the actual cumulative health burden residents face, while controllable pollution sources from transportation and industry remain unaddressed. Children are particularly vulnerable as ozone exposure can permanently stunt lung development and impair cognitive function, creating lifelong health impacts.

What's next

  • The nurses urge EGLE to take decisive action to reduce emissions from controllable sources including transportation corridors, freight traffic, and industrial facilities, rather than continuing to pursue reclassification efforts. However, no explicit next steps or planned actions by EGLE are stated in the article beyond their ongoing appeal to federal officials.

Read full article from source: bridgedetroit.com

Op-Ed: The air our children breathe shouldn’t be up for debate