How and why we installed air monitors in Cicero
In short, we wanted to know more about the quality of the air we breathe in Cicero. In 2021, Microsoft installed air quality sensors throughout Chicago but none in the surrounding suburbs. After we published an earlier project about Chicago air pollution in 2022, Microsoft installed one of its sensors in Cicero for a few months last summer.) Residents repeatedly have voiced their concern about air pollution, especially in Cicero’s industrial zones near the Morton Freshman Center and Unity.
In March 2023, the Cicero Independiente partnered up with MuckRock — a nonprofit, collaborative news site — to install air quality sensors on volunteers’ homes. These sensors are installed in three locations in Cicero: near 51st Court and 14th Street, 54th Court and 31st Street and 54th Court and 31st Street. (Click on the links to see the real-time readings from each of these sensors.)
The sensors help measure particulate matter in the air, often abbreviated as PM, which can range in size. Larger particles, like dust, usually have a size of 10 micrometers or PM10. Our bodies protect us by sneezing or coughing as a way to eliminate those particles when we breathe them in. The sensors that we installed measure smaller particles, with a size of 2.5 micrometers or less, called PM₂.₅. Our bodies do not have a natural defense against particles this small, and they are small enough to enter the bloodstream.
PM₂.₅ in the air comes from lots of different places. Some are familiar, like smokestacks. Others, like trains, trucks or stovetops, may seem less obvious.
As a rule of thumb, EPA’s current Cicero sensor, which takes readings once every six days, records slightly lower readings than our low-cost PurpleAir sensors, said Stacy Montgomery, a climate researcher who, while at Northwestern University, studied air pollution hotspots in the Chicago region. But the close similarity of air quality readings across three different types of devices — EPA’s regulatory stations, Microsoft’s now-shuttered Eclipse monitors and our PurpleAir community sensors, which we compared to each other — suggests Cicero’s comparably poor air quality is a cause for concern, she said.
For more information on our sensors and to explore the data, click on the GitHub repository here
Support for this project came from the Data-Driven Reporting Project, which is funded by the Google News Initiative in partnership with Northwestern University’s Medill School; the Rita Allen Foundation; the Reva and David Logan Foundation; the Healthy Communities Foundation; and the Donald W. Reynolds Journalism Institute at the University of Missouri.
Reporting and writing for "The Air We Breathe" is by Richie Requena for the Cicero Independiente, Luis Velazquez of the Cicero Independiente and Derek Kravitz and Dillon Bergin of MuckRock. Data analysis is by Karen Wang and Dillon Bergin of MuckRock and Columbia University’s Brown Institute for Media Innovation. Sensor installation is by Sanjin Ibrahimovic of MuckRock. Graphics and illustrations is by Brian Herrera for the Cicero Independiente and MuckRock and Kelly Kauffman of MuckRock. Editing is by Derek Kravitz of MuckRock and April Alonso, Irene Romulo and Luis Velazquez of the Cicero Independiente.