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How To Check Your Air Quality In Moorestown
The township has 'unhealthy' air quality as of Thursday afternoon. Here's what that means and how to track the impacts of the wildfires.

MOORESTOWN, NJ — The smoke from wildfires in eastern Canada continued to travel into New Jersey, leaving the outdoor air unsafe throughout the state. While Moorestown's conditions gradually improved into noon Thursday, the air quality remained at "unhealthy" levels.
Vulnerable individuals — people with heart or lung disease, older adults, children and teens — should avoid strenuous outdoor activities, while all others should take significant precautions, environmental officials said. (What precautions should you take? Find more detail below.)
The New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection issued an Air Quality Action Day for fine particulates — a "Code Red" through the end of Thursday and a "Code Orange" for Friday. That means officials expect air quality to remain unhealthy through Thursday and remain concerning for sensitive groups the following day.
Find out what's happening in Moorestownfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
"Levels of fine particulates will remain in the unhealthy category through the daytime hours today due to the wildfire smoke from eastern Canadian wildfires," the state agency said.
The frequency, extent and severity of wildfires mark important indicators of climate change, environmental officials say. The peak of the nation's wildfire season is also occurring earlier — peaking in August from 1984-2001 and then in July from 2002-20, according to research from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
Find out what's happening in Moorestownfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
How To Monitor Your Air Quality
AirNow.gov, which reports air quality using the official U.S. Air Quality Index (AQI), has updated air-quality data from around the nation. Moorestown has an "unhealthy" level of air pollution as of noon Thursday.
Air quality alerts are triggered by several factors, including the detection of fine-particle pollution — known as "PM 2.5" — which can irritate the lungs.
Officials reported Moorestown at 170 on the AQI scale as of noon Thursday, which falls in the AQI's unhealthy range.
The AQI scale is as follows:
- Good/green: 0-50
- Moderate/yellow: 51-100
- Unhealthy for sensitive groups/orange: 101-150
- Unhealthy/red: 151-200
- Very unhealthy/purple: 201-300
- Hazardous/maroon: 301-500
AirNow partners with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), National Park Service, NASA, Centers for Disease Control, and tribal, state, and local air quality agencies.
South Jersey's conditions gradually improved throughout Thursday morning. Much of the region showed "very unhealthy" air quality at 9 a.m.:

Environmental officials anticipate air-quality issues persisting through at least Friday. But the timeline toward safer air remains difficult to predict.
Forecasters expect Moorestown's air quality to improve but remain at concerning levels, with anticipated AQI scores of 165 later Thursday (red, unhealthy) and 150 on Friday (orange, unhealthy for sensitive groups).
Guidance For Staying Safe
Air quality in "unhealthy" territory means that older adults, children, teens, and people with heart or lung disease should avoid strenuous outdoor activities, keep outdoor time short, and consider moving physical activities indoor or rescheduling them, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency says.
The federal agency advised everyone else to choose less strenuous activities (such as walking instead of running), shorten active time outdoors, and delay such activities until the air quality improves.
Burlington County officials shared tips on social media, advising the public to stay indoors as much as possible "especially those with asthma and respiratory diseases, elderly persons, infants, and young children."
There are approximately 160 wildfires burning across Quebec, part of a wider group of more than 300 fires across the country that some are calling Canada's worst fire season ever.
Quebec's fire prevention agency has said high temperatures and dry conditions have contributed to the raging fire season.
Previous fires in Nova Scotia and Alberta have sent smoke into New Jersey, prompting air quality warnings.
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