Spring Open Burn Season Fouls the Air, Casts a Pall over the Grand Valley

 

The Grand Valley’s springtime air is fouled with smoke from open burning

It’s springtime and open burning season is upon us once again, giving Grand Valley residents sore throats, burning eyes, runny noses, headaches and asthma attacks. Beautiful spring days that dawn clear and bright are soon fouled by dense plumes of smoke that drift across the valley forcing people to close their doors and windows and grab their inhalers. KKCO 11 News on March 16 said, “Add in an early allergy season and you have a recipe for a breathing disaster.”

And a disaster it is, for many people, and not just for their health, but for their property, too.

Open burning of fields and yards also cause property damage. So far this burn season the archaic practice has destroyed a barn, caused a large brush fire on Orchard Mesa, and a brush fire along Highway 50 at 23 Road. On Thursday, March 16, a field on fire alongside Highway 50 in Whitewater got out of control and crossed onto a neighbor’s property, burning ten acres and coming perilously close to traffic on the busy road. The person who started the burn may soon face charges of arson.

A dense plume of smoke hugs the ground as it drifts from a field causing neighbors difficulty breathing

A legitimate question is whether the cost of burn permits is enough to cover the cost of sending out the fire department to respond to the many open burns that get out of control and threaten people’s lives and property. Another legitimate question is whether this practice continues to be worth it at all, given how many people suffer from it.

For the low cost of a burn permit, landowners can pump unlimited amounts of pollution into the valley’s air

The air is a commons. We don’t have a peeing section in the Lincoln Park Pool, and we shouldn’t allow a few Grand Valley residents to set fire to their fields and send their charred weeds up into the air for the rest of us to breathe.

Out-of-control fire in Whitewater belches black smoke into the air and threatens motorists.  (Photo Credit: KKCO 11 News/Gray TV)

 

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