Air Quality Alert Sweeps Sout

Air turned dangerous before most people even knew.

Skies looked hazy, throats burned, and headaches came out of nowhere.

Across Texas and New Mexico, families woke up to “unhealthy” and even “hazardous”

alerts that felt more like a distant headline than a local emergency.

Air quality is often treated as background noise—important in theory, easy to ignore in practice—until a day like this forces it into focus.

In cities from El Paso to Lubbock and across parts of New Mexico, more than a million people

suddenly found themselves breathing air loaded with fine particulate matter small enough to slip deep into their lungs.

For older adults, children, and anyone with asthma or heart conditions, a routine day outdoors quietly became a genuine health risk.

Behind the scenes, a familiar chain reaction unfolded: dry desert soils lifted by strong winds,

urban traffic and industrial emissions layering in, and weather patterns trapping the mixture close to the ground.

The result was a toxic haze that crossed borders and blurred the line between natural and man‑made pollution.

As agencies rushed out alerts, residents were reminded that the air they trust can change in a single day—and that paying attention isn’t optional, it’s protective.

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