Ambient Air Asbestos Trends at All EPA Staten Island Landfill Stations
The map below shows the locations of EPA air monitoring stations at the Staten Island Landfill. Select a station to view a chart of ambient asbestos values over time. These charts are also available as large format Adobe Acrobat PDF files.
Each chart shows how much asbestos EPA measured in the air at a given site, on the dates shown. Daily summaries of this data and how it compares to the level of concern for public health are also available. |
Each chart shows how much asbestos EPA measured in the air at a given site, on the dates shown. Data for each asbestos station and daily summaries of this data and how it compares to the level of concern for public health are also available. The information presented on this page is also available in a large format Adobe Acrobat file.
In evaluating data from the World Trade Center and the surrounding areas, EPA is using a protective standard under AHERA, the Asbestos Hazard Emergency Response Act, to evaluate the risk from asbestos in the outdoor and indoor air. This is a very stringent standard that is used to determine whether children may re-enter a school building after asbestos has been removed or abated. It is based on assumptions of long-term exposure. EPA has chosen to use this standard because it is the most stringent and protective, even though it is unlikely that the public will be exposed to asbestos from the World Trade Center site for extended periods of time.
To determine asbestos levels, air filters are collected from monitoring equipment through which air in the school building has passed and viewed through a microscope. The number of structures material that has asbestos fibers on or in it is then counted. The measurements must be 70 or fewer structures per square millimeter before children are allowed inside.
There is also a federal standard for asbestos exposure under OSHA, the Occupational Safety and Health Act, which is used to protect workers on-the-job. The standard is .1 fiber per cubic centimeter averaged over an eight-hour day. To be as protective as possible, EPA is using the school re-entry standard in tests around the World Trade Center.
Levels above 70 structures per square millimeter do NOT imply an immediate health threat. Asbestos exposure becomes a health concern when high concentrations of asbestos fibers are inhaled over a long period. Illness is very unlikely to result from a single, high-level exposure, or from a short period of exposure to lower levels.
For more information on this level of concern see: Benchmarks, Standards and Guidelines Established to Protect Public Health.
Summary Statistics for Staten Island Landfill Air Asbestos Monitoring




Landfill 12c - 1 sample collected on 10/23/01, Asbestos Not Detected (< 8.75 s/mm2)
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