Canadian smoke bathes U.S.; climate change ‘only getting worse,’ says White House
WASHINGTON — A hazy, acrid shroud lingered over some of America’s largest cities Wednesday as Canadian wildfire smoke continued to drift south, touching off “code red” air quality alerts from Massachusetts to North Carolina.
In New York City, a dense, orange-tinted fog settled among the skyscrapers of Manhattan, forcing athletes and older Americans alike to take shelter indoors. Schools across the region cancelled outdoor activities.
In low-visibility areas, motorists were urged to stay off the roads, while the Federal Aviation Administration ordered temporary ground stops at major airports in New York and Philadelphia.
The sky was “yellow and grey,” said Michael Gerrard, director of the Sabin Center for Climate Change Law at New York’s Columbia Law School, who spent the day working from his suburban home in Westchester, north of the city.


