Skip to main content

Chicago maps out air quality reform agenda 

Move follows disturbing report from the city's Department of Public Health
By Ben Spencer August 6, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
A breath of fresh air is set to blow through the Windy City (© Curtis Heideman | Dreamstime.com)

Chicago is to clean up its act, with Mayor Lori Lightfoot announcing a reform agenda aimed at improving air quality in the US city. 

The agenda will ground the city's environmental policy in data provided by a report carried out by the Chicago Department of Public Health, which looked at pollution levels and underlying social and health issues faced by communities.

Urban mobility will be included, as the report singled out "parts of the city bisected by major highways".

It found issues like ozone and particulate matter remain a challenge citywide while communities facing inequities like poverty and unemployment are more likely to experience poor health outcomes. 

Mayor of Chicago Lori Lightfoot says: "This new initiative will work hand in glove with our ongoing commitment to ensure public safety by addressing the unequal burden of pollution that communities of colour on our city's South and West Sides face while also creating create good, sustainable jobs in neighbourhoods that need them the most."

Chicago's Department of Public Health commissioner Allison Arwady, says: “As the Air Quality and Health Report makes clear, Chicago’s residents face inequitable burdens from air pollution based on neighbourhood characteristics. By focusing on the communities at greatest risk, the changes described in the report will help prevent chronic disease and, ultimately, move us toward closing those inequities.” 

Part of the agenda includes an ordinance that changes the city's zoning code to amend where manufacturing and other polluting sites may be located throughout Chicago.

These changes are expected to ensure that activity provided by industrial and manufacturing uses will remain sufficiently separate from homes and small businesses. The ordinance will be introduced at the September City Council meeting and will be voted upon one month later. 

Angela Tovar, Chicago's chief sustainability officer, says: “This report lays out a clear vision for air quality reforms, including amendments to the city’s zoning code, its existing air pollution rules, as well as the air pollution inspection and enforcement system. We can, and we must, find a way to mitigate the pollution issues faced by our most environmentally overburdened and historically underserved communities and work to improve our environment overall.”  

Additionally, the city will create am environmental equity working group in which community representatives and environmental leaders will advise Tovar and the administration in pursuit of its environmental reform agenda. 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • New York launches work zone safety campaign
    April 10, 2014
    New York City’s Department of Transportation (DOT) has launched its new and improved Zone Watch program as part of National Work Zone Awareness week, which runs from 7-11 April. The enhanced program will include nine camera-equipped trailers designed to better document and deter reckless driving through work zones and aligns with Mayor de Blasio’s Vision Zero initiative to make streets safer. In addition to the nine custom trailers, DOT will also purchase additional camera equipment that can be mounted t
  • Autumn budget: EV charging infrastructure fund and higher tax rates for diesel vehicles
    November 23, 2017
    Chancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond has announced a £400m ($532m) charging infrastructure fund for electric vehicles (EVs), an extra £100m ($133m) investment in Plug-In-Car Grant, and a £40m ($53m) in charging R&D in the UK’s Autumn Budget 2017. He added that laws need to be clarified so that motorists who charge their EVs at work will not face a benefit-in-kind charge from next year.
  • Low-costs solutions to improve pedestrian safety
    May 8, 2015
    David Crawford welcomes low-cost safety initiatives for pedestrians in America. Some 10 people die each week in accidents on crosswalks in the US, that’s more than 10% of all pedestrian fatalities in road traffic incidents - the number of which is running at a five-year high. Ensuring crosswalks are safe is key in supporting the growing enthusiasm for walking as a travel mode. In the last decade of the 20th century, numbers walking to work in the US fell by 26%; while, as recently as 2012, Americans were e
  • Swiftmile e-scooter hubs arrive in Miami 
    June 24, 2021
    Swiftmile says it hopes to roll out 100 charging hubs for 800 vehicles by end of 2022