There are three major types of air pollutants that constitute a public health concern for the Bay Area - ozone, particulate matter and toxic air contaminants.
Name:
Email:
Comments or questions:
I would like a response. (Allow 5-7 business days)
The 5/16/2012 Board of Directors Special Meeting Webcast ended at 11:30am. The Webcast archive will be available approximately 24-hours after the meeting. More Information: 5/16/2012 Agenda (442 kb PDF, 8 pgs)
5/2/2012 Board of Directors Meeting More Information: 5/2/2012 Agenda (1 Mb PDF, 52 pgs)
4/18/2012 Board of Directors Meeting More Information: 4/18/2012 Agenda (4 Mb PDF, 315 pgs)
Agendas, Minutes and Media
Webcast Support System & player requirements, RSS feeds & mobile alternatives.
iTunes Audio Podcasts iTunes Video Podcasts
The summer climate of the West Coast is dominated by a semipermanent high centered over the northeastern Pacific Ocean. Because this high pressure cell is quite persistent, storms rarely affect the California coast during the summer. Thus the conditions that persist along the coast of California during summer are a northwest air flow and negligible precipitation. A thermal low pressure area from the Sonoran-Mojave Desert also causes air to flow onshore over the San Francisco Bay Area much of the summer. The steady northwesterly flow around the eastern edge of the Pacific high pressure cell exerts a stress on the ocean surface along the west coast. This induces upwelling of cold water from below. Upwelling produces a band of cold water that is approximately 80 miles wide off San Francisco. During July the surface waters off San Francisco are 30F cooler than those off Vancouver, more than 700 miles farther north. Air approaching the California coast, already cool and moisture-laden from its long trajectory over the Pacific, is further cooled as it flows across this cold bank of water near the coast, thus accentuating the temperature contrast across the coastline. This cooling is often sufficient to produce condensation -- a high incidence of fog and stratus clouds along the Northern California coast in summer. In winter, the Pacific High weakens and shifts southward, upwelling ceases, and winter storms become frequent. Almost all of the Bay Area's annual precipitation takes place in the November through April period. During the winter rainy periods, inversions are weak or nonexistent, winds are often moderate and air pollution potential is very low. During winter periods when the Pacific high becomes dominant, inversions become strong and often are surface-based; winds are light and pollution potential is high. These periods are characterized by winds that flow out of the Central Valley into the Bay Area and often include tule fog.