CDOT Pledges To Track Air Quality As Part Of I-270 Rebuild, But Pollution-Choked Commerce City Residents Are Skeptical


The two agencies have installed a series of sensors along the often-congested interstate in anticipation of its planned reconstruction and expansion. CDOT wants to expand the highway’s capacity and upgrade aging structures that weren’t designed to carry modern-sized trucks. The project could get underway in 2023 and last until 2026. 

The sensors will provide the state with enough detailed data to answer a “big burning question” for Pierce.

“What’s the air quality like before versus after construction?” 

Answering this question is especially critical for the southern end of Commerce City, which is adjacent to several pollution-generating highways and large industrial sites like the Suncor refinery. CDOT officials hope to use the data to come up with methods to offset any spike in pollutants during and after construction.

Local residents who say they’ve been living with pollution and its side effects for years with little protection from state authorities are skeptical of the effort. The median household income in the area is about $10,000 less than the Denver metro as a whole, and more than half of the community’s residents are Hispanic. 

“I don’t feel that we’ve had people really looking out for us,” said Maria Zubia, a Commerce City native and community activist. “People who should have been really keeping an eye on our community when it came to the air quality, when it came to the water quality, when it came to the basics.”

Nathaniel Minor/CPR News
Two solar-powered air quality monitors hang on a post off the shoulder of Interstate 270 in Commerce City, Colo. on June 23, 2021.

CDOT says it’s had a ‘sea change’ in how it approaches the environment.

The department’s current expansion project on Interstate 70 in north Denver was highly controversial. CDOT has faced multiple lawsuits over its environmental impacts.

Rebecca White, CDOT’s director of transportation development division, said the direct mitigation measures the department took — including new windows and air conditioning units for more than 200 nearby homes — pushed the agency into new territory. 

“We’d never done those types of investments before,” White said. “It kind of set a precedent for having those conversations and we’re ready to have them on future corridors.” 

That includes the I-270 corridor, where White said CDOT will collect air quality data, consult with community members, and then act on it.

“It’s not a situation where we get more data and we say, ‘well, that’s interesting,’” White said, adding that mitigation possibilities include walls, vegetation and increased transit service. 

A new state law also requires CDOT to measure and mitigate air quality impacts of large construction projects on nearby communities.

“It’s definitely a sea change,” White said. “And it’s a good one.”

Nathaniel Minor/CPR News
Traffic on Interstate 270 as seen from the York Street bridge, Aug. 27, 2021.

Some Commerce City residents said they need more than just data. 

Zubia, the community activist and a local school board member, grew up and has raised her three children in south Commerce City. She described it as a calm, nice place to live — with the exception of the poor air quality. 

“Two of my three kids have had asthma since they were three months old,” she said.

New air quality data collected by the state health department in the spring and summer of this year showed levels of fine particle pollution, which comes from local sources like vehicle exhaust and Suncor and distant sources like wildfire smoke, reached levels high enough to cause health problems for some people. 

State health officials have also found that area residents go to the emergency room for asthma at a much higher rate than residents elsewhere in Colorado. They’re also less likely to have health insurance. 

The recent spate of wildfire smoke has given much of the Front Range a little taste of what life is often like in Commerce City, Zubia said.

“If you can imagine that stuff all the time, over your household, over your schools, over your churches, over your grandparents’ home, would you be satisfied with that? Would you be happy about that?” she said.



Read More:CDOT Pledges To Track Air Quality As Part Of I-270 Rebuild, But Pollution-Choked Commerce City Residents Are Skeptical

2021-08-30 10:05:05

Get real time updates directly on you device, subscribe now.

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish. Accept Read More

Get more stuff like this
in your inbox

Subscribe to our mailing list and get interesting stuff and updates to your email inbox.

Thank you for subscribing.

Something went wrong.