Air Quality Emergency Action Plan
Step 2: Create Your Personal Action Plan
1) Plan How to Get Where You are Going Without Driving Alone
Register to participate in the Care to Clear the Air initiative.
- The Care to Clear the Air initiative occurring during the month of January follows the success of the Clear the Air Challenge held June-July. By registering, participants will get tools – including real-time Red/Yellow air day text alerts, special community events, weekly newsletters, freebies and more – to make it easier to use transportation strategies to help clear the air during the worst of inversion season.
Create a transportation plan in advance, so it is ready to implement on yellow or red air days.
- Walk or Bike
Determine a route to walk to work, to your child's school or your place of worship if it is within walking distance. If the weather makes it possible, use your bike, or a combination of bike and public transit to get to work. Visit UTA's Bicycle Commuting page and Salt Lake Bicycle Collective for more info.
- Public Transit
Learn public transportation routes to the places you and your family go. Use UTA's Trip Planner, Logan/Cache Valley transit, or Park City transit.
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- Have schedules and routes printed and available, along with the necessary cash/coins set aside if necessary, to avoid last minute scrambling.
- Determine the extra time you will need, so you can plan for necessary schedule adjustments.
- Carpools
Set up carpools for school, work, and your place of worship so they can be easily put into place as needed.
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- For work
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- Register at UTA's Rideshare site to find others looking to carpool.
- Ask your HR department if they can set up a carpool program within the office. There are programs for groups and employers available such as E-Rideshare and at UTA.
- For school and place of worship
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- Talk with neighbors and set up a carpool plan in advance for red and yellow air days. Visit Divide the Ride to set up your school carpool with parents you trust.
- Request that your principal and/or clergy instituting a carpool program, to make carpooling easier to set up.
2) Set up a Telecommute Plan
Talk to your employer in advance about allowing telecommuting on yellow and red air days.
3) If you Must Drive, Drive Smarter
If you anticipate that you must drive alone on yellow or red-air days, learn in advance about how to make most efficient trips possible.
- Don’t idle your vehicle
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- Turn off your car if you will be idling for 10 seconds or more and avoid idling as a way to "warm up" your engine (modern engines don't need it)
- Make sure your child's school has an anti-idling program in place, to encourage parents to turn off their cars during school pickup.
- Trip Chaining link your errands together to reduce pollution from "cold starts."
- Avoid drive-through windows.
- Avoid congested roadways by checking CommuterLink and UTA Trip Planner before you leave home.
- Use these other EcoDriving practices.
4) Plan for Reduced Outdoor Activity
- Reduce strenuous activity on yellow air quality days and avoid all strenuous outdoor activity on red air days.
- Ensure that your child’s school has the air quality recess guidelines and intends to implement them. The guidelines are available as a pdf.
- Have indoor physical activities for kids planned in advance. Some sources of ideas are Rainy Day activities from Get Kids in Action and Physical Activity Ideas for Kids from Food Link NY.
Next Step: Test & Share Your Plan