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When:
April 7, 2022 all-day
2022-04-07T00:00:00-06:00
2022-04-08T00:00:00-06:00
Where:
Brigham Young University

The sixth annual Air Quality: Science for Solutions conference will be held at Brigham Young University on Thursday, April 7th, 2022.  Air Quality: Science for Solutions is a full-day conference emphasizing scientific progress in understanding the complicated and unique air quality issues that exist in Utah and the Intermountain West.

This conference series is organized by Utah State University, Weber State University, the University of Utah, Brigham Young University, and the Utah Division of Air Quality.

Air Quality: Science for Solutions is an annual conference on air quality, especially for Utah and the Intermountain West.  It began with a pair of conferences by the same name hosted by the Utah Department of Environmental Quality, Division of Air Quality; the Program for Air Quality Health and Society at the University of Utah; and the Utah State University Bingham Entrepreneurship & Energy Research Center in 2015.

The mission of this conference is to bridge divides that separate researchers of various disciplines from each other, from professionals in the industrial and regulatory realms, and from the public, and to facilitate a cross-pollination of ideas working towards the development of solutions.

Welcome and Opening Q&A will be discussing ozone and State Implementation Plan (SIP) issues. The three person UDAQ panel is Becky Close, Sheila Vance, and Ryan Bares.  

Becky Close is the Utah Division of Air Quality Environmental Program Manager overseeing the Policy Section, which coordinates state implementation plans and administers grant and incentive programs to reduce harmful air emissions. Becky has worked at DAQ for six years, and was previously the PM2.5 coordinator. Prior to DAQ, Becky earned a master’s degree in Environmental Science from the University of Utah, and worked on legacy atomic bomb waste remediation for an environmental consulting firm in Los Alamos, NM. Growing up on the western slope of Colorado, and having lived in the intermountain west most of her life, Becky enjoys exploring the outdoors with her family while hiking, backpacking, mountain biking, running, and skiing.

Sheila Vance is an Environmental Scientist who has been with the Utah Division of Air Quality for a little over 6 years with a focus on winter time ozone pollution in the Uinta Basin. She has been a part of air quality rule development for oil and gas emission sources and research projects involving studies on the sources of VOC and NOx emissions in the Uinta Basin and impacts on the formation of ozone. She has a BS degree from the University of California Davis with majors in Environmental Toxicology and Physiology. She worked for the Hawaii Department of Health in their Hazardous Waste Division for several years and then came to Utah where she has lived for the last 25 years. Previous to working for the State of Utah, she worked for 19 years at the Tooele Chemical Demilitarization Facility where she was the Environmental Manager, and oversaw the successful clean closure of the hazardous waste incinerator and other waste management units that safely destroyed the weapons and chemical agents.

Ryan Bares’s career in air quality started while conducting research at the University of Utah in the Departments of Biology and Atmospheric Sciences.  During this time, Ryan participated in a wide array of studies looking at the convergence of anthropogenic emissions, atmospheric transport, and the resulting atmospheric chemistry.  Through this research he gained a great appreciation for policy solutions that bridge the gap between good research and real world solutions aimed at addressing our pressing air quality challenges. This appreciation led Ryan to his current position, where he serves as the State Implementation Plan coordinator for ozone pollution along the Wasatch Front.