
By Shaanth Kodialam
Jan. 8, 2025 4:29 p.m.
Despite claims to the contrary, UCLA’s air quality sensors are accurately reporting that campus air quality remains within healthy levels, said Yifang Zhu, a UCLA professor of environmental health sciences. She said the campus’ physical sensors are programmed to record the most relevant pollutant when it comes to air quality harmed by wildfires, attributing the healthy ranges to winds blowing from the north that were temporarily shielding UCLA.
“We’re blessed by the northern wind at this point” she said. “With the wind starting to die down, it’s eventually gonna shift back to normal, we’re gonna expect to see bad air coming towards us.”
Kodialam was a News senior staff reporter and a Quad and Enterprise contributor. They were previously the 2022-2023 features and student life editor and a 2021-2022 News reporter for national news and higher education and features and student life beats. They were a fourth-year communication and geography student from the Bay Area, California.
Kodialam was a News senior staff reporter and a Quad and Enterprise contributor. They were previously the 2022-2023 features and student life editor and a 2021-2022 News reporter for national news and higher education and features and student life beats. They were a fourth-year communication and geography student from the Bay Area, California.
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