EPA Honors School Air Quality Programs

Washington, D.C.—School districts across the nation were honored today at EPA’s 8th Annual Indoor Air Quality Tools for Schools (IAQ TfS) National Symposium in Washington for implementing successful indoor air quality programs.

With more than 53 million children spending a significant portion of their day in the classroom, poor indoor air quality can pose health risks in schools for both students and staff and lead to asthma attacks, decreased performance or diminished concentration.

“Good indoor air quality in our schools is vital to the health and education of our nation’s children,” said Robert J. Meyers, principal deputy assistant administrator for EPA’s Office of Air and Radiation. “A clean and healthy learning environment is as fundamental as reading, writing and arithmetic.”

The Dec. 6-8 symposium will focus on the latest research and information on environmental health topics such as: radon, mold, asthma management, maintaining ventilation systems for good IAQ, green cleaning products, and best practices of high-performing schools.

The symposium will also highlight model school districts that have successfully implemented effective IAQ management programs. The EPA’s IAQ TfS Awards Program recognizes schools and school districts that have demonstrated a strong commitment to improving children’s health by promoting good IAQ.

A recently released study by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that about half of the nation’s schools have IAQ management programs in place, and that 86 percent of schools with IAQ management programs relied on EPA’s IAQ TfS program to guide their actions.

More information about the symposium is available on EPA’s Schools page.

Rate this post

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars

Join the discussion

Be the first to comment

Share this article


Join the discussion



Recently Added to General

  • Celebrate World Water Day

    We often don’t think about how much water we consume because it is an accessible resource that flows freely with the turn of a knob. In fact, the average American uses 100 gallons of water per day.

    But what if fresh …

  • Future Packaging Could Actually Think for Itself

    The art of food packaging seems to be merging into the realm of science fiction, according to a report released by AZo Nanotechnology.

    As consumers become more selective about what qualifies as fresh food, research companies around the world are experimenting …

  • Top Environmental Degrees for Less Money

    As climate change and other major environmental issues continue to weigh heavy on voters’ minds, green jobs are increasing drastically.

    In fact, clean energy economy jobs grew by 9.1 percent between 1998 and 2007, while total jobs grew by only 3.7 …

Earth911

Earth911 is an environmental services company that addresses solutions for products' end-of-life for both businesses and consumers.