Health & Fitness

Wildfire Smoke Returns To WI, Bringing 'Very Unhealthy' Air Quality

The air quality in much of Milwaukee County was very unhealthy Tuesday morning amid smoke from Canadian wildfires, authorites said.

MILWAUKEE, WI — A visible haze settled over much of Milwaukee Tuesday morning as Canadian wildfire smoke plummeted air quality to unhealthy and very unhealthy levels in the region.

Southern Wisconsin remains under an air quality alert for particle matter until noon Thursday. By 10 a.m. on Tuesday, Waukesha had an air quality index of 187 with unhealthy air. Meanwhile, Milwaukee's index was at 212 with very unhealthy air, according to data from the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources.

By 2 p.m., both Waukesha and Milwaukee Counties had very unhealthy air, according to the DNR's tracker.

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You can find more information on current air quality in your region at airquality.wi.gov

State officials are encouraging people to keep their outdoor activities light and short throughout the statewide air quality advisory, which lasts into Thursday.

Find out what's happening in Milwaukeewith free, real-time updates from Patch.

"Watch for symptoms like coughing and shortness of breath as a sign to take a break or move indoors," the DNR wrote in a news release. "Sensitive groups, which include people with heart or lung disease, older adults, children, those who are pregnant, and those who work outdoors – should consider moving all events inside."

Officials said the best way to avoid wildfire smoke is to stay inside with your doors and windows closed. Run air conditioning on recirculate and use an indoor air purifier if possible.

State officials gave this advice for people who have to spend time outdoors:

  • Check air quality conditions before leaving the house and throughout the day.
  • Avoid or limit exercising outdoors.
  • Consider wearing an N-95 mask, especially if outdoors for an extended period.

Forecasters said people with heart or lung disease, older adults and children should avoid heavy exertion and consider avoiding all outdoor activities. Everyone else is asked to reduce or avoid prolonged or heavy exertion.

The heaviest surface smoke was expected in the eastern half of the state from noon Tuesday until noon Wednesday. Forecasters said they cannot rule out the chance of the index reaching hazardous levels.

The DNR said you can protect yourself from smoke and low air quality in these ways:

  • Stay indoors.
  • Close doors and windows.
  • Avoid activities that increase indoor pollution - vacuuming, frying food, burning candles or using gas powered appliances.
  • Install a high-efficiency air filter.
  • Use an N95 mask if outdoors for long periods.


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