Canadian wildfire smoke remains draped over the New York metro area, but some clear skies are on the horizon.
The National Weather Service, along with state environmental officials in New York, re-issued an air quality alert Friday afternoon that covers New York City, Long Island and the Mid-Hudson region. This warning currently runs through Saturday night, and it cautions people in sensitive groups to wear masks and limit outdoor activity as the air quality index, or AQI, could surpass 100.
โThe sensitive folks โ those most vulnerable, the seniors, very young, those perhaps with some pre-existing respiratory problems, asthma, should probably limit their time outdoors; certainly any strenuous activities outdoors,โ said Dominic Ramunni with the National Weather Service.
As more smoke arrived Thursday afternoon, the AQI moved from this orange zone to red โ or โunhealthyโ for some members of the general public. The air quality stayed there overnight and through Friday morning.
Thatโs also when the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection and the NWS extended a similar warning for the Garden State. Air quality has been consistently worse there compared to New York City. The New Jersey advisory runs through Friday night. It covers most of the state โ stretching from the northeast, including Essex, Bergen, Union and Passaic counties, down to Cape May.
But a near-surface smoke forecast, compiled by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, predicts the air will start to clear as afternoon moves into evening on Friday.
Some brief stints of haze may sweep through Saturday, but if the smoke prediction holds, those periods will not be as bad as ones in recent days.
The AQI forecast, which New York Gov. Kathy Hochul tweeted Friday afternoon, called for a return to orange (unhealthy for sensitive groups) for the eastern portions of New York and a drop to moderate for central and western locales.
Weather forecasts also call for rain across the…
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