UMPI installs “haze cam” for Micmac Environmental Health Department
A
web cam has been placed atop Folsom-Pullen Hall at the University of Maine
at Presque Isle to monitor air quality, thanks to a partnership between the
University and the Micmac Environmental Health Department.
The "haze cam," which is pointed north toward Main Street, went
live last week uploading images to the Aroostook Band of Micmacs' air quality
monitoring website. The camera is the latest tool for the MEHD to monitor air
quality in real time. The department previously had only one web cam, located
at Skyway Industrial Park, which pointed south
toward Main Street
and sometimes experienced problems with sun glare.
According
to Fred Corey, environmental director for the health department, the new haze
cam gives the department - and the public - a real time look at what's
happening in the local atmosphere. In the local area, ozone and particulate
matter can create haze problems.
The
MEHD monitors for all primary pollutants, such as nitrogen and sulfur oxides,
as well as carbon dioxide. Corey said the department has the most comprehensive
air monitoring site in the state. He said that while Maine
is thought of as having an abundance of fresh air, there are concerns, such as
the Maine Lung Association determination that Maine has one of the highest death rates
from asthma in the nation. The MEHD is funded by the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, though it is overseen by the Aroostook Band of Micmacs, and
it works closely with the Maine Department of Environmental Protection. Efforts
to establish the monitoring project began in 2003, and the monitoring program
has been in place now for about four years.
In
that time, it has worked closely with the University and its students, who have
visited the site at Skyway
Industrial Park to learn
about what the department does and about the air quality measurements it takes.
Students also have served as interns in the department's environmental
laboratory. The new haze cam is the latest collaboration for the department and
the University. UMPI officials donated their time and effort to help install
the camera and have provided a network connection for the project at no charge.
"We
were more than happy to help out with this project and give people a bird's eye
view of the city so they can learn more about air quality issues," Rick
Thibeault, the University's Manager of Technology Services, said.
Corey
is similarly pleased with the project: "We see this as another piece of the
relationship that we have between the Micmac tribe and the University. It's
been a great resource for us. We have a staff of four at the department, and we're
all UMPI alums from the environmental studies program. It's a huge asset to the
tribe both to have students who are trained locally and to keep building new
partnerships with the University."