As New York City became engulfed in smoke from Canadian wildfires Wednesday, city and state elected officials were unified in their messaging: New Yorkers should stay indoors as much as possible to avoid the hazardous air outside.
During a press conference Wednesday afternoon, Gov. Kathy Hochul described the situation as a โhealth and environmental crisis,โ and urged New Yorkers to wear N95 masks when stepping outside. One hour later, Mayor Eric Adams echoed the governorโs message, calling the crisis โclimate change in action.โ
The messaging from elected officials came after a day of images of an orange-tinted New York City flooded social media. Throughout the day Wednesday, airports announced shutdowns while government agencies and event venues rolled out cancellations due to the smoke. Some criticized the mayor for not being better prepared for the situation.
On a state level, Hochul said more than 1 million masks would be made available through the state with 400,000 at state facilities and another 600,000 at state Homeland Security stockpiles for local governments to pick up. Jack Caravanos, a clinical professor of environmental public health sciences at NYU, told Gothamist N95, a KN95 masks can help filter the particles in the air.
The state is also offering fire rangers to Canada to help get the fires under control.
Hochul said the latest forecast showed the smoke moving westward and would reach Buffalo and Western New York on Thursday. She repeatedly asked New Yorkers throughout the state to avoid going outside.
โOutdoors is dangerous in just about every part of our state. Not just vulnerable communities but literally everyone โ we normally are accustomed to talking about children, babies, people with compromised immune system senior citizens, but this is something that’s having an effect on everyone,โ Hochul said. โWe’re recommending that people cancel their outdoor activities. You don’t need to go out and run tonight. You don’t need to go…
Read the full article here
Leave a Reply