Health & Fitness
No Burn Alert Extended In Manhattan Beach By Air Quality District
Residents are asked to not burn any wood indoors or outside & to also not burn any wax or paper manufactured logs through 11:59 p.m. 2/9.

MANHATTAN BEACH, CA — Monday's "No Burn Alert" has been extended to also apply to Tuesday, Feb. 9 by the South Coast Air Quality Management District. The alert makes it mandatory for community members not to burn wood or manufactured logs, such as those made from wax or paper, indoors or outside. The No Burn Alert begins at 12 midnight on Tuesday, Feb. 9 through 11:59 p.m. the same day.
The alert covers the South Coast Air Basin, which includes Orange County and non-desert portions of Los Angeles, Riverside and San Bernardino counties, including Manhattan Beach.
"Do your part to help keep our air clean by not burning wood during the mandatory wood burning ban. No burn day alerts are mandatory in order to protect public health when levels of fine particulate air pollution in the region are forecast to be high. Smoke from wood burning can cause health problems. Particles in wood smoke – also known as fine particulate matter or PM2.5 – can get deep into the lungs and cause respiratory problems (including asthma attacks), increases in emergency room visits and hospitalizations," according to an SCAQMD news release.
Residents can help reduce the harmful health effects of wood smoke by signing up to receive e-mail alerts at www.AirAlerts.org to learn when a mandatory no burn day alert is issued.
South Coast AQMD's Check Before You Burn program is in effect from November through the end of February, when particulate levels are highest.
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Additional information is available at www.AirAlerts.org. For 24-hour recorded information, call (866) 966-3293. An interactive map is available at www.aqmd.gov/CheckBeforeYouBurnMap.
PREVIOUSLY: Mandatory Wood Burning Ban Issued For Feb. 8 In Manhattan Beach
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