INDIANAPOLIS — Indiana schools are no longer required by law to use state test scores when annually evaluating teacher performances.
The new law, House Enrolled Act 1002, went into effect July 1 and marks a significant departure from past mandates on how teachers should be evaluated.
In 2011, Indiana lawmakers joined in a national education reform movement and implemented a new policy that ordered test scores to make up a significant portion of teacher evaluations. Some argued the 2011 change put more pressure on educators to teach to the test.
After the policy changes in 2011, the Indiana Department of Education released an evaluation rubric that districts could use, though it wasn’t required. This rubric noted math and English Language Arts teachers in fourth through eighth grade would have 20% or 35% of their evaluations based on their students’ test scores.
During the 2020 legislative session, the Indiana General Assembly reviewed this rule and determined schools should not have to build their teacher evaluation plans around tests. But districts can choose to keep them as part of teacher assessments if they choose.
This new teacher evaluation legislation arrived after a teacher shortage that’s lasted several years in Indiana and amid ongoing concerns about whether low state test scores accurately reflect students’ knowledge. Both challenges, over time, led to strained support for the 2011 policy.
Education advocates argued the 2011 law was detrimental for teachers, whose pay is tied to whether they earn a top rating when evaluated.
Educators have argued that state test scores aren’t a fair way to judge a teacher’s effectiveness because it has been shown that outside factors such as race and poverty have an effect on test scores as well.
Students in the third through eighth grade take both the math and English Language Arts portions of the state’s new ILEARN test. After only one-third of them passed both portions in 2019, lawmakers decided in February to not hold schools accountable for the low scores for two years in an effort to protect teachers and their schools.
The low scores could have negatively affected a school’s overall letter grade rating by the state, for example, which would have impacted teacher evaluations, and ultimately, their pay.
Now that teacher evaluations do not have to legally be affected by test scores, districts can create new evaluation templates that are primarily based on principals’ observations and teachers’ progress toward meeting yearly goals set by their schools.
House Enrolled Act 1002 passed through the House of Representatives unanimously, and when the legislation was read to the Senate, only Sen. Dennis Kruse, R-Auburn voted against it.
Sen. Dennis Kruse, R-Auburn. Photo by Quinn Fitzgerald, TheStatehouseFile.com
Kruse authored the 2011 law that originally changed how teachers are evaluated. He declined an interview request to explain why he opposed the new legislation.
While Kruse was the only state senator to not approve the law, he is not alone in opposing it. Groups including the National Council on Teacher Quality, or NCTQ, have opposed the legislation since it was introduced in January.
The organization stands by the idea that standardized tests offer an objective way to measure student learning and therefore increase the validity of formal teacher evaluations.
In an email statement, NCTQ President Kate Walsh said HEA 1002 walks away from almost a decade of progress the state’s schools and districts have made to improve teacher quality.
“Removing the requirement to consider objective measures of student learning in teacher evaluations is a step backward for Indiana’s teachers and students,†Walsh said.
Footnote: Hope Shrum is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.
Indianapolis teachers, school staff, and students in sixth grade and above will be required to wear face masks when they return to classrooms this year, according to guidance from the Marion County Public Health Department released Thursday.
Children in fifth grade and below are not required to wear masks or coverings under the recommendations. Other exceptions include students and staff with health conditions that make wearing a mask a risk and students who cannot remove a mask on their own. The guidance says that a face shield may be an appropriate alternative for teachers in pre-K through fifth grade if a mask is “determined to impede a student’s learning.â€
Staff and students may remove masks when necessary, such as to eat or drink.
Although face masks are recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to reduce the spread of the coronavirus, they are not required in Indiana. Masks will be required in public spaces in Indianapolis beginning July 9, Mayor Joe Hogsett announced Thursday.
The guidance offers new insight into what schools could look like as buildings reopen amid the coronavirus pandemic. Indianapolis schools typically begin in late July or early August.
In addition to requiring masks, the guidelines also recommend keeping students 3 to 6 feet apart and teachers 6 feet from students; eliminating “pod†or group table seating and facing students’ desks in the same direction; moving classes outside if possible; and grouping students in cohorts as much as possible.
In a letter posted Thursday, the superintendents of Marion County’s 11 public school districts said that they would provide additional, district-specific guidance to families.
“These guidelines are the minimum standards and therefore, individual school corporations may develop procedures that are greater than, but not lesser than, these guidelines,†the letter said.
More than 150,000 students in Indianapolis public schools moved to remote learning in March due to the coronavirus. Districts and charter schools announced in June they would offer full-time, in-person instruction to any student who wished to attend or online learning for families who chose to keep their children home.
One of America’s Wealthiest States Might Pass Up an Opportunity to Tackle Housing Segregation
Connecticut is one of the most segregated places in the country. Despite widespread protests over racial inequities, Gov. Ned Lamont and other leaders are resisting calls to address the state’s affordable housing crisis.
On a recent Sunday, protesters marched through the center of Weston, a small, wealthy town in southwest Connecticut. They chanted “no justice, no peace†and raised handwritten signs that read “Black Lives Matter†and “Silence is Violence.â€
Somewhere in the crowd, Brian Murray hoisted his own message.
“Fact check: Weston, CT. No Black teachers. No Black police officers. No Blackboard members. No Black town of Weston government office members.â€
Murray, one of the town’s few Black residents, viewed the June 7 protest through a different lens than his white neighbors.
“It was a photo opportunity. That’s all,†said Murray, a limo driver and father of five who moved his family to the town eight years ago.
Eight days after that protest, at which elected officials urged the overwhelmingly white crowd to fight racism, Weston officials turned their attention to housing. With a unanimous vote, they adopted the town’s strategic plan, which recommends keeping most development to single-family homes on lots of at least two acres, a requirement that has resulted in a typical sale price of $660,000 — and a lack of diversity. Just 1.4% of the residents are Black. Local officials rejected a suggestion to convert the vacant property into affordable housing for seniors. Instead, they carved out a small area of land surrounding the town green for potential development.
“Fundamentally, this is who we have been for a long time,†said Ken Edgar, the chairman of Weston’s Planning and Zoning Commission, referring to the town’s large homes. “We are trying to move the ball, but there would have to be demonstrated interest before I think we move the ball further and build diverse housing on small lots.â€
Despite its liberal reputation — and Democrats controlling the legislature for the last 23 years and the governor’s mansion for nine — Connecticut is one of the most segregated places in the country. And with thousands of residents pouring into the streets this month to protest racism, housing advocates and progressive Democrats saw an opportunity to change that, calling for an overhaul of the state’s exclusionary housing laws.
That opportunity, however, appears to be fading.
At the state Capitol, Gov. Ned Lamont and legislative leaders have shelved a raft of proposals that could spur more affordable housing, after ending the legislative session early this year because of the coronavirus pandemic. Now, they are expected to return to Hartford next month for a special session to address a single reform in response to the protests: police accountability.
The limited agenda represents a stark retreat for leaders who began the year with bold pledges to tackle Connecticut’s affordable housing crisis.
Lamont in particular seemed poised to shift the debate, publicly criticizing wealthy towns, after a series of articles published by the Connecticut Mirror and ProPublica showed the lengths to which local jurisdictions have gone to block affordable housing and by extension the people who need it.
“You know, I think they are nuts not to allow their downtowns to develop a little bit, not to have more multifamily housing, not to have more affordable housing, not to allow more of their community to live where they work,†he told the Connecticut Mirror’s “Steady Habits†podcast in January.
But this month, after a Juneteenth event billed as “A roundtable on Racial Equality and Social Justice,†Lamont struck a more passive tone, telling reporters he supports leaving zoning decisions up to local officials. Asked whether some towns’ zoning regulations are shutting out minorities, Lamont said, “I’m not as interested as much in changing the laws within these†towns.
Max Reiss, a spokesman for the governor, said in a statement that the administration prefers to work collaboratively over forcing towns to allow projects that they don’t support. The state Department of Housing, he said, is currently building an affordable housing “toolkit†for local officials “to make it easier to communicate the issue to their local communities.â€
“By working together toward a common goal, we can be much more successful, and effective,†Reiss said. “Divisive policies which promote conflict and inhibit growth are at the heart of the problems in this country. We do not believe in these kinds of policies in Connecticut, and are actively working against them.â€
Any challenge to local control also faces an uphill battle in a legislature dominated by suburban lawmakers who represent communities that have fought changes for years. House Speaker Joe Aresimowicz, D-Berlin, said he doesn’t believe tackling zoning reforms is possible during a special session but is open to considering it.
“To have protracted debate and public input, I don’t believe the time frame will allow it,†he said. “The General Assembly as a whole has been struggling with this issue for years. Having a vote by early July is sort of hopeful and wishful to be honest.â€
Other Democrats disagree. On Wednesday, the state House of Representatives’ progressive caucus — representing nearly half of the party’s members in the lower chamber — announced it supports taking aim at exclusionary zoning during the special session.
“We need to take advantage of the moment that we have,†said Senate President Pro Tem Martin M. Looney, D-New Haven.
Urban legislators, many of them Black, say the police killing of George Floyd and the demonstrations that swept the nation exposed the need for systemic reforms in several areas of American life, including housing.
“If we don’t do it now, we will never get it done,†said state Sen. Doug McCrory, D-Hartford, the vice-chairman of the Housing Committee who has served in the legislature for 25 years.
“No longer do we chip around the outside and do what I call Novocain legislation,†he added. “That’s what we’ve been doing ever since I’ve been here. Just a little here. Just a little there because we don’t want to offend anybody. We don’t want anybody to be upset. No more. This is the time for the state of Connecticut to step up to the plate and be bold.â€
A coalition of land use attorneys, planning and zoning commissioners and architects — named Desegregate CT — is pressing the legislature and governor to change the laws that allow local officials to block affordable housing in small towns. The result of the so-called home rule has been a concentration of low-income units in urban areas.
In Hartford, some neighborhoods have as much as 70% of the housing units reserved for low-income residents — which, in turn, puts a strain on the town’s ability to raise enough revenue to pay for things like schools and street repairs. “I think it’s time for Connecticut to ask itself, what will these pandemics mean for our land-use regime,†said Sara Bronin, the leader of Hartford’s Planning and Zoning Commission and an expert on land use at UConn Law School. “Segregation is an urgent crisis.â€
Town officials say they’re not opposed to affordable housing in principle — but it has to fit in with what’s referred to as the “character†of their small communities. That typically means low-density projects, not multistory apartment buildings.
But civil rights leaders and developers have a name for this type of zoning — “Jim Crow Zoning†— because it allows Connecticut’s wealthier towns to shut out more affordable housing from being built, and the minorities who would live there. Developers argue that smaller projects don’t make financial sense because of the cost of the land and the construction. The rent they could charge would not justify the outlay, they say.
“The irony of BLM protests in white communities is it is these same towns that repeatedly block the development of affordable housing, which we know is an efficient way to promote integration,†said Fionnuala Darby-Hudgens of the Connecticut Fair Housing Center, a nonprofit that advocates for more desegregation.
As the Connecticut Mirror and ProPublica reported last year, more than three dozen towns in the state have blocked construction of any privately developed duplexes and apartments within their borders for the last two decades. That often locks low-income people out of educational and employment opportunities. In southwest Connecticut, for example, it costs 3.5 times more to live near the high-scoring elementary schools in Westport, Weston or Wilton than in Bridgeport, one of the most impoverished cities in the state. It is the largest gap in the country, the Brookings Institution reported.
“Segregation is one of the roots of the evil in our society, and it’s perpetuated by exclusionary zoning. Let’s just call it what it is, it’s Jim Crow Zoning,†said Richard Freedman, a developer with a history of fighting local officials to build affordable housing in high-end communities. “It’s a system of social control, an insidious, complicated system of social control, just like the old Jim Crow laws.â€
Local officials in towns that have rejected affordable housing have disputed claims of discrimination. They point to frail public infrastructure, clogged streets, a lack of sidewalks and concerns about overcrowding as reasons for denying projects.
“The challenge to our community is not just to the character of neighborhoods, but also to firefighting and police response, potentially to educational capacity, to human services support and to our tradition as a single-family home community,†Jim Marpe, Westport’s Republican first selectman, told residents in his State of the Town Address last year.
Connecticut stands out on the national stage. The suburbs surrounding New Haven are more exclusive than Silicon Valley, which is notorious for its high housing costs, according to research from Professor Robert C. Ellickson at Yale Law School. The towns of Bethany, Madison, Orange and Woodbridge designate more than 98% of their residentially zoned land solely for single-family dwellings, built on lots of at least 1 acre. In each place, less than 3% of the population is Black. In Guilford, 93% is reserved for single-family homes and requires a 2-acre minimum. Just 1% of the population there is Black.
For people of color, the experience can be isolating — and alienating.
In Weston, where only eight affordable housing units are reserved for low-income residents, Murray said that he and his family have experienced several instances of unequal treatment, such as when school officials expelled his eighth-grade son last year after a disciplinary incident. Murray filed a complaint with the Connecticut Commission on Human Rights and Opportunities, alleging his son was treated harshly because he is Black. The commission did not return a call seeking comment. William S. McKersie, superintendent of Weston Public Schools, and Anthony Pesco, the chairman of the Weston board of education, declined to comment on the case, saying they could not discuss individual students. But Pesco said, “The board takes allegations of racial bias and racial injustice very seriously.â€
The only way conditions will improve, Murray said, is if the town makes it possible for more people from diverse backgrounds to be able to afford to move there and serve in public office. He pays $3,300 to rent a three-bedroom home in town.
Murray holds a sign pointing out the lack of diversity in public office. (Cloe Poisson/CT Mirror)
Edgar, the chairman of the town’s Planning and Zoning Commission, attended Weston’s Black Lives Matter protest and said town officials recognize the need for affordable housing. “We’re looking affirmatively towards having more diversification in our housing,†he said, citing the town’s strategic plan, which designates the town center as a potential area for affordable housing. “You’ve got to start someplace.â€
He said residents generally oppose allowing homes to be built on smaller lots because it’s never been done. They’re also concerned that more children would move into the community, inflate school rolls and, in turn, lead to higher taxes. “Can we build a new school to accommodate the hypothetical one-quarter acre homes? It hasn’t been on the table in Weston,†Edgar said.
Enrollment in Weston schools has declined by 9% over the last 10 years and is projected to drop by an additional 4% over the next five. The district is now looking at consolidating to three schools from four.
Across Connecticut, the opposition to affordable housing in these wealthy enclaves remains stiff. Karen DuBois-Walton, president of the housing authority in New Haven and a member of the State Board of Education, said critics have hardened in recent years, evolving from being labeled NIMBY (Not in My Back Yard) to BANANA (Build Absolutely Nothing Anywhere Near Anyone).
“If we continue to subscribe to zoning policy that reinforces what we have at this point at the long end of a long history of inequity, then we will be agreeing that we are going to continue to reinforce racist policy,†she said.
The Connecticut Mirror and ProPublica reported last year that 80% of the state’s 27,000 subsidized housing units were located in struggling communities, literally erecting pockets of poverty. Section 8 Housing Choice Vouchers, designed to help low-income people find decent housing outside poor areas, have also failed; the bulk is being used in high-poverty neighborhoods because those are the only places with available rentals for voucher recipients.
Over the past month, Rodney Williams has protested at several Black Lives Matter demonstrations in New Haven in the wake of Floyd’s death. He grew up in housing projects in Brooklyn, New York, and has lived in Newhallville, a poor section of New Haven, for years.
“When the man was saying, ‘I can’t breathe,’ the truth is America has had the foot on our neck ever since we were young,†he said. “If we had access to opportunities, we could afford to live where we want to live. We should be able to live where we want to live.â€
Desegregate CT, the coalition of attorneys and local land-use officials, is developing proposals to rein in local control and clear the path for more affordable housing.
Some Democrats also want to revive legislation that died during the regular session this year. Among the proposals: expanding the jurisdiction of housing authorities so they could build in surrounding communities and starting a pilot program that would allow children to continue attending their school if they win a housing voucher and decide to move.
Much depends on Lamont, who has tread lightly; in fact, he has deferred to legislative leaders entirely on the agenda for a special session. In January, he floated tying state spending on transportation upgrades in affluent communities — such as new or renovated train stops — to local approval of more affordable housing projects. But the money was set to come from installing toll roads throughout the state, a proposal that died. Now, amid the economic downturn, the state coffers for transportation projects are nearly empty.
Aside from legislation, the governor can still influence the housing debate through the Connecticut Housing Finance Authority, where his appointees decide where to direct public funding to construct affordable housing. But even there, officials say they plan to continue using a selection process that hinges on local approval — a system that critics argue results in the warehousing of poor people in poor communities.
Under the existing system, few developers of affordable housing even propose building in wealthy towns, fearing organized opposition.
That was the case in Waterford, where Harold Foley, owner of Georgia-based HF3 Group LLC, proposed a 40-unit apartment complex on the property where Cohanzie Elementary School closed in 2008. Located in an area of single-family homes, across the street from a baseball field and playground, the proposal drew immediate protests from neighbors. Some said they feared affordable housing would not fit in with the neighborhood. Others worried about crime. Still, others cited traffic and the impact on property values. The developer ultimately walked away from the project.
Several local elected officials attended the town’s recent Black Lives Matter protest.
Beth Sibilia, a Democrat and selectwoman, said she opposed the project because of the neighbor’s concerns but she did not weigh in publicly at the time. “I’ve always been schooled to give the zoning board their lane, let them stay in their lane.â€
“People want to stay in their lanes,†she added, “but I’m not necessarily sure that staying in your lane is the way to move ahead.â€
Jacqueline Rabe Thomas is a staff reporter for The Connecticut Mirror covering education and housing. Email her at jrabe@ctmirror.org and follow her on Twitter @jacquelinerabe.
FOOTNOTE: ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up to receive our biggest stories as soon as they’re published
The Chiefs were playing the Raiders. President Barack Obama had eliminated patriotic military flyovers at large events. A group of guys in Kansas City who do some formation flying in their own planes, decided they’d volunteer to save this tradition and pick up the slack.
They invited a couple of other groups to join them and before they knew it, they had 48 guys with their own airplanes signing up to join in. If they had more time, they probably would have gotten an even larger group as people kept joining, and a 49th was added near the event.
Be sure your speakers are turned up. Best if you watch it at ‘full screen’.
Pretty impressive and it makes you proud to be an American!
Local businessman and Henderson Kentucky, Kentucky native go County.
DOM COSBY is the owner of Trinity Tech Solutions  Dom is an authorized retailer for Dish TV, DirecTV, Hughes Nest, Vivint Home Security, and AT&T Products.  Dom has been in business since September 2017. He said, “the main thing I love about business is getting the opportunity to provide jobs to our community”.
Cosby coached tennis at Mater High as an assistant for 5 years. Â He also owns “Tennis Bandit” a company that sells tennis clothing and accessories. The profits from the sale of tennis accessories help provide a means for underprivileged children to play tennis.
Dom has dabbled in music since 2013, but recently he has spent more time in the recording studio.  He created a new song about his truck, it just so happens he drives a Ford Truck.  He just wanted to produce a song about his Ford Truck but it so happened that it sounds like a Ford ad.  This wasn’t his intention, but the way it turned out.
Cosby said, “My genre is not really a genre yet, that’ why I label it “Country Rap.â€
“Most people frown upon the genre because it’s not a traditional country.”  “People ask me all the time what makes you country I tell them that’s the way I was raised.”
Growing up we never just listen to “Hip Hop” music. I had cousins that always listened to country music, while others listen to “Rap” music. I never put myself in a one-box category. Â Being from a diverse background, I chose to make music that brings both of my lives together, both the “Rural Dom” and the “City Dom”.
Footnotes:  Song Title: Big Ol’ Truck by Kentucky Dom
Is on all music platforms such as iTunes, Spotify, Google Play, YouTube, and Amazon.
As the largest state agency in Indiana, DOC employs more than 6,400 Hoosiers, supervises almost 10,000 parolees in communities across the state, and is responsible for the safety and security of more than 25,000 adults and 450 juveniles inside our state’s correctional facilities.
There are many programs DOC does you might not be aware of. DOR explores those programs below.
Helping Animals
Did you know DOC has a program geared toward helping animals? From the Indiana Canine Assistance Network (ICAN) to the Cat Sanctuary at Pendleton, both dogs and cats are getting help from offenders who are giving back.
Let’s start with ICAN. ICAN provides children and adults who have disabilities to have more independence by pairing them with a service dog. These service dogs are trained by carefully screened adult offenders located in DOC facilities. Not only do dogs get the training needed, but the handlers gain professional and life skills to help with successful re-entry into their communities.
The Cat Sanctuary at Pendleton Correctional Facility allows offenders to foster and care for shelter animals as they await adoption. With nearly two dozen cats in the sanctuary, offenders bond with the animals and practice time management, conflict resolution, empathy, patience, and problem solving to accommodate each cat’s needs.
Giving Back to Local Communities
Offenders often find ways to raise money for local charities to give back to the community, including donating handmade quilts to the armed forces or filling sandbags to keep local communities from flooding. In Madison, offenders crocheted more than 100 hats and gloves to give to the local area schools to keep kids warm in the winter. The Wabash Valley Facility made 35 care packages to send to troops overseas. Rockville offenders took part in a two-hour walk to raise $7,000 for Riley Children’s Hospital. Not only do these activities help the community, but it gives offenders a positive connection to those outside the facility.
Making Products and Providing Services
Indiana Correction Industries (ICI), formerly known as PEN products, manufactures goods and provides services through offender labor. ICI makes a range of products from hand sanitizer, furniture to vehicle wraps. Below are a few more examples:
Bike racks
Bunk beds
Classroom furniture
Offender uniforms and jumpsuits
Printing and design services
Signs
Tables
Participating offenders develop a strong worth ethic and learn valuable social skills to obtain lasting employment in today’s challenging workforce and leads to a lower recidivism rate.
Saving Taxpayer Dollars
Most Hoosiers are not aware of how the DOC helps save tax dollars. The Offender Work Crew Program out of Edinburg is just one example of how DOC is doing just that. The crew is assigned to cleaning up Indiana’s state parks with routine trash pick-up, cleaning facilities, and landscape maintenance. Additionally, these crews help with roadwork to maintain and improve Indiana’s roadways, which is a significant saving over hiring additional employees.
Rejoining the Workforce
Did you know the State of Indiana spends roughly $20,000 per year to incarcerate one offender? Fortunately, more than 12,000 offenders are released from Indiana prisons each year, but when the individual remains unemployed their chances of returning to the system increases by 60%. However, some Hoosier employers are historically reluctant to hire clients with a criminal history. The Hoosier Initiative for Re-Entry (HIRE) was created to help current and recently-released offenders successfully reintegrate into society by creating career paths to improve their lives in a long-term way through work—specifically, HIRE works with local businesses to place individuals who have completed certification training into employment. Since its conception in 2012, HIRE has had an 85% success rate.
Other DOC Programs:
In 2019, 4,642 certifications were earned by 2,617 offenders within various other vocational programs DOCÂ offers to offenders, including:
Right Jab And Middle Jab And Left Jab†July 05, 2020
“Right Jab And Middle Jab And Left Jabâ€Â was created because we have a couple of commenters that post on a daily basis either in our “IS IT TRUE†or “Readers Forumâ€Â columns concerning National or International issues.
The majority of our “IS IT TRUE†columns are about local or state issues, so we have decided to give our more opinionated readers exclusive access to our newly created “LEFT JAB and Middle Jab and RIGHT JAB† column. They now have this post to exclusively discuss national or world issues that they feel passionate about.
We shall be posting the “LEFT JAB†AND “MIDDLE JAB†AND “RIGHT JABâ€Â several times a week.  Oh, “LEFT JAB†is a liberal view, “MIDDLE JAB†is the libertarian view and the “RIGHT JAB is representative of the more conservative views. Also, any reader who would like to react to the written comments in this column is free to do so.
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The Indiana Department of Environmental Management (IDEM) has issued an Air Quality Action Day and is forecasting high ozone levels for Sunday, July 5, 2020 in the following areas:Â
Central Indiana – Marion, Bartholomew, Boone, Brown, Delaware, Hamilton, Hancock, Hendricks, Johnson, Madison, Monroe, Morgan and ShelbyÂ
Southeast Indiana – Clark, Floyd, Harrison, Jackson, Jefferson, Scott and Washington
IDEM encourages everyone to help reduce ozone while remaining safe during the COVID-19 health crisis by making changes to daily habits. You can:
Walk, bike, or work from home when possible
Combine errands into one trip
Avoid refueling your vehicle or using gasoline-powered lawn equipment until after 7 p.m.
Turn off your engine when idling for more than 30 seconds (e.g., at a bank or restaurant drive-thru)
Conserve energy by turning off lights or setting the air conditioner to 75 degrees or aboveÂ
Air Quality Action Days are in effect from midnight to 11:59 p.m. on the specified date. Anyone sensitive to changes in air quality may be affected when ozone levels are high. Children, the elderly and anyone with heart or lung conditions should reduce or avoid exertion and heavy work outdoors.
IDEM examines weather patterns and current ozone readings to make daily air quality forecasts. To learn more about ozone or sign up for air quality forecasts, visit www.SmogWatch.IN.gov.
Ground-level ozone is formed when sunlight and hot weather combine with vehicle exhaust, factory emissions and gasoline vapors. Ozone in the upper atmosphere blocks ultraviolet radiation, but ozone near the ground is a lung irritant that can cause coughing and breathing difficulties.Â