Learn how small, industrial cities are leading the way in creating a clean air culture that can carry us forward into a cleaner, greener future.
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Cities For A Clean Air Future
Home Is Where The Health Is
Groups like Habitat for Humanity recognize that safe, stable, healthy homes are vital to children’s health and help provide safe indoor environments.
Pulling Heartstrings? You Bet!
Comment on the EPA’s newly proposed soot standards and let it be known that you support stronger standards and cleaner air.
The Great Lakes, Mercury, And Sen. Inhofe
Read about mercury pollution in the Great Lakes, the hazards it creates and why we need to implement the new EPA mercury standards.
My Dad, The Accidental Environmentalist
Read one woman’s thoughts about her father, a very conservative man, whose thrifty nature makes him understand that environmental conservation is important.
Mayors Stand Strong To Protect Our Children From Mercury
Read a letter from a large group of the nation’s mayors expressing support for new EPA standards limiting mercury emissions and reducing mercury pollution.
GASPing For Air In Alabama
Despite what industry tells us, learn why it benefits our health and our economy to create and implement strong ozone standards.
Blue Sky Irony
Read about Cape Cod air pollution and how we need to support the Clean Air Act that some legislators want to slash if we want to breathe clean air.
Oklahoma Senator To Stop EPA’s Mercury Rule
Senator James Inhofe (R, Okla) has introduced a bill that will allow power plants to continue polluting our air with toxic mercury. Help us stop him.
Sen. James Inhofe Seeks to Destroy Landmark EPA Ruling
Join Moms Clean Air Force and tell Sen. James Inhofe (R, Okla) to stop attacking the EPAs crucial Mercury and Air Toxics Standards.
Asthma’s Impact On The Nation
See an infographic from the CDC that describes how asthma is deadly, disruptive and expensive, affecting everyone in the nation.
Climate Change And Women: A Unique Relationship
Learn about climate change gender bias and how extreme weather tends to have greater effects on women while women have less say in public energy policy.