In Pittsburgh

We’re exposed to plenty of invisible risks in our daily life: toxic compounds in the fabric of our couches, contaminants in our water, and pollutants in the air we breathe. A lot of the time, we don’t think too much about them.

But sometimes, the invisible becomes suddenly, acutely visible.

A journey about the air we breathe, the risks we can live with, and what it really means to become a citizen of a place. 

Featuring Susan Scott Peterson, Stella Peleato, Dr. Deborah Gentile, Rashmi Baliga, and Linda Wigington.

Susan’s ROCIS cohort, showing off their air quality monitoring equipment. Back: Preston Shimer, Dave Bernard, Rashmi Baliga, Germiane Patterson, Louise Cannon, Ann Carrick. Front: Leila Srinivasan, Emily Dale, Pam Burrett, Dianne Hall, Susan Scott P…

Susan’s ROCIS cohort, showing off their air quality monitoring equipment. Back: Preston Shimer, Dave Bernard, Rashmi Baliga, Germiane Patterson, Louise Cannon, Ann Carrick. Front: Leila Srinivasan, Emily Dale, Pam Burrett, Dianne Hall, Susan Scott Peterson, Laryn Finder, Sam Bertenthal. Not pictured: Jessica Kester.

Susan, Stella, and Sebastian. Courtesy Susan Scott Peterson.

Susan, Stella, and Sebastian. Courtesy Susan Scott Peterson.

Susan Scott Peterson had been living in Pittsburgh for just a few weeks when she smelled it for the first time. The air was a little thick, a little hazy, and it smelled like chemicals and sewage. Barefoot, she walked around the block, looking for the source of the smell: maybe an open dumpster or a burst sewer line? A reeking trash heap? She couldn’t find anything that explained it. 

But she soon learned the source of the smell: hydrogen sulfide, a sulfur-smelling gas emitted by the Clairton Coke Works, a factory only fifteen miles south of her house. The plant manufactures coke, a fuel used in steelmaking—and it’s notorious for violating local pollution regulations. 

It was Susan’s first time living with industrial air pollution, and when she realized that the air she breathed was often thick with pollutants, she was filled with regret and fear -- especially for her three-year-old kid.

But what could she do about it? 

That moment was just the beginning of a journey that would put Susan in contact with the invisible surrounding her.

Outside/In is a member-supported production of New Hampshire Public Radio.
To support work like this,
please consider a donation to the show.

Pittsburgh skyline. Credit Nick Amoscato on Flickr.

Pittsburgh skyline. Credit Nick Amoscato on Flickr.

Magenta magnolias in Pittsburgh. Credit Susan Scott Peterson.

Magenta magnolias in Pittsburgh. Credit Susan Scott Peterson.

Stella on a walk in 2020. CSusan Scott Peterson.

Stella on a walk in 2020. Credit Susan Scott Peterson.

Links and Resources

To learn ways to improve your indoor air quality wherever you are, here’s a link to the ROCIS guide.

For open-source air quality data in your location, visit the Purple Air monitoring network map.

For more on air quality in the Pittsburgh region, start with Breathe Project and the Smell PGH and Plume PGH apps by Carnegie Mellon’s CREATE Lab

To learn more about air quality activism in Pittsburgh, visit the Group Against Smog and Pollution and Breathe Project.


Credits

Susan and Stella. Courtesy Susan Scott Peterson

Susan and Stella. Courtesy Susan Scott Peterson.

This episode was written, produced, and mixed by Susan Scott Peterson, and edited by Justine Paradis with help from Taylor Quimby, Felix Poon, and Sam Evans-Brown.

Erika Janik is our executive producer. 

Special thanks to Erin Anderson, Rashmi Baliga, Germaine Gooden-Patterson, Melanie Meade, Matt Mehalik, Johnie Perryman, Albert Presto, Julianne Sato-Parker, Art Thomas, Linda Wigington, Boen Wang, and everyone in Susan’s ROCIS cohort. 

Music in this episode included portions of “Not Drunk” (mix-full-band-no-vocal) and “Not Drunk” (stem-bass)  by The Joy Drops and “Fresh Lift”  by Shane Ivers, all licensed under CC-BY 4.0.  

Additional music by Blue Dot Sessions.

Our theme music is by Breakmaster Cylinder.

Additional sounds excerpted from Sounds of Change, monica137142, and Premnath Kudva, licensed under CC-BY 4.0, and from soundbyladyv, licensed under CC Sampling +. Ambi from the Broken Spoke used with permission from Tony Domenech.

Our theme music is by Breakmaster Cylinder..

If you’ve got a question for our Ask Sam hotline, give us a call! We’re always looking for rabbit holes to dive down into. Leave us a voicemail at: 1-844-GO-OTTER (844-466-8837). Don’t forget to leave a number so we can call you back.