Ozone-pollution figures for fourteen Colorado counties were available, and the ALA's judgments are harsh: Eight of the counties get grades of "D" or "F," with only two earning an "A." We ranked the photo-illustrated results, using data in other categories as tiebreakers and giving extra credit for providing data even if the scores are iffy. Count them down below.
Number 9: Jefferson County Number 8: Weld County Number 7 (tie): Douglas County Continue to keep counting down the (mostly lousy) ozone pollution grades of nine Colorado counties. Number 7 (tie): Arapahoe County Number 6 (tie): Denver County Number 6 (tie): Boulder County Continue to keep counting down the (mostly lousy) ozone pollution grades of nine Colorado counties. Number 6 (tie): Adams County Number 5 (tie): El Paso County Number 5 (tie): La Plata County Continue to keep counting down the (mostly lousy) ozone pollution grades of nine Colorado counties. Number 4: Rio Blanco County Number 3 (tie): Gunnison County Number 3 (tie): Garfield County Continue to keep counting down the (mostly lousy) ozone pollution grades of nine Colorado counties. Number 2: Pitkin County Number 1: Mesa CountyHere's the complete State of the Air 2014 report.
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More from our Environment archive circa April 17: "Photos: Top ten solar cities in the U.S. -- and why Denver's finish isn't good enough."