Air Quality Community Risk Reduction Plan

night time arial view of market street

Overview

Air quality in San Francisco varies throughout the city depending on geography, meteorology, and land uses. While most areas of San Francisco experience good air quality, some areas, such as those close to freeways, maritime activities, and industrial activities, experience higher levels of air pollution. Exposure to higher levels of air pollution can lead to often preventable health problems such as increased illness and premature death from asthma, bronchitis, emphysema, pneumonia, coronary heart disease, abnormal heart rhythms, congestive heart failure, and stroke.
The San Francisco Planning and Public Health Departments, along with the Bay Area Air Quality Management District, are preparing a draft San Francisco Community Risk Reduction Plan, a comprehensive and citywide plan to protect human health from these negative effects of air pollution within San Francisco. The plan will describe existing efforts and define policy and programmatic actions that will be undertaken to:

  • Reduce the extent and intensity of areas with higher levels of air pollution and prevent the expansion of these areas to new locations;
  • Reduce exposure to air pollution for existing and future residents;
  • Reduce the health impacts of air pollution citywide, particularly for vulnerable populations.

Outreach

The City and Air District conducted early outreach presentations in August 2017. The draft plan is expected to be released in Winter of 2019, after which there will be further outreach. Draft documents will be posted on this webpage as they are available.

Resources

How is the City Currently Addressing Air Pollution Exposure?

The City and County of San Francisco has long been a leader in protecting residents' public health. In 2008 (amended in 2014)  San Francisco Health Code article 38 was adopted to require new residential construction projects located in areas where models show poor air quality and pollution from roadways (the Air Pollution Exposure Zone, or APEZ) to install enhanced ventilation to protect residents from the health effects of living in a poor air quality area.

map of San francisco indicating areas of concentration

The Air Pollution Exposure Zone (APEZ)
Click here for larger, detailed map.

Other Ongoing Activities to Reduce Air Pollution and Air Pollution Exposure

In addition to article 38 and the creation of the APEZ, the City has been undertaking ongoing activities to reduce air pollution emissions and lessen air pollution exposure. Some of these activities include:

  • Construction Dust Control Ordinance: In July 2008, the City adopted an ordinance to reduce the quantity of dust generated during site preparation, demolition, and construction work in order to protect the health of the general public and onsite workers, minimize public nuisance complaints, and to avoid orders to stop work by the Department of Building Inspection.
  • Clean Construction Ordinance: In April 2007, the City adopted an ordinance requiring public projects to reduce emissions at construction sites starting in 2009. In March 2015, the City expanded the existing ordinance to require public projects to further reduce emissions at construction sites in certain areas with high levels of background concentrations of air pollutants.
  • Greenhouse Gas Reduction Strategies: The City has developed a number of plans and programs to reduce the city's contribution to global climate change and meet long-term climate stabilization goals.  The City's 2013 Climate Action Strategy is the most recent, and documents the City's actions to pursue cleaner energy, energy conservation, alternative transportation, and solid waste policies, which serve to reduce air pollution in addition to greenhouse gases. The City is currently developing an update to the greenhouse gas reduction strategy.
  • Transportation Demand Management Program: In February 2017, the City adopted an ordinance to establish at transportation demand management program, requiring developments to provide on-site amenities that support sustainable modes of transport and reduce single-occupancy driving trips associated with new development.
  • Bicycle Plan: The 2009 San Francisco Bicycle Plan contains specific proposed near-term bicycle route network improvement projects for a safe, interconnected bicycle network that supports bicycling as an attractive alternative to private auto use.
  • Better Streets Plan: The Better Streets Plan, adopted in 2006, created a unified set of standards, guidelines, and implementation strategies to govern how the City designs, builds and maintains its pedestrian environment. The plan promotes streets designed to promote walking, cycling, and transit use over single occupancy vehicle use, which will reduce local air pollution and San Francisco's contribution to global climate change.
  • Green Taxi Fleet: The green taxi program, established by ordinance in 2008, set aggressive emission standards and supported the conversion of private fleets with grant incentives. In 2012, the city exceeded the ordinance goal of reducing the average per-vehicle greenhouse gas emission by 20 percent from 1990 levels by 2012. As of 2012, 92 percent of the taxi fleet is composed of hybrid or CNG vehicles. 
  • San Francisco-Based Research on Reducing In-Home Air Pollutant Exposure The San Francisco Department of Public Health, the Air District, and the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory recently completed a study looking at reducing in-home pollutant exposure for homes near high-trafficked roadways in Bayview Hunters Point and Potrero Hill. The report used a comprehensive monitoring program to evaluate the effectiveness of ventilation devices (central forced air and standalone units) at reducing indoor air pollutant concentrations. 

Contact

Josh Pollak
Environmental Planner
1650 Mission Street, Suite 400
San Francisco, CA 94103
(415) 575-8766              
Josh.Pollak@sfgov.org