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In the ongoing effort to support our local, county, and state partners, IEMA will provide information and specifics to coordinate current information:
 

  • Presidential Disaster Declaration for Cook, Fulton, Henry, St. Clair, Washington, Will, and Winnebago Counties in Illinois for severe weather in July 2024
  • Presidential Disaster Declaration for St. Clair County in Illinois for flooding for 2022
  • Presidential Disaster Declaration for Cook County in Illinois for severe weather in June/July 2023
  • The State of Illinois Disaster Proclamation for the Asylum Seekers in Illinois

New Radon Website Feature Provides More Information about Radon in Illinois

Press Release – Friday, January 25, 2013

Test results from 118,477 homes find more than 40 percent

With high radon levels

SPRINGFIELD – Radon tests from 118,447 homes across Illinois found more than 41 percent had radon levels above the recommended level for taking action.  Information on tests conducted by professional radon measurement contractors from 2003 - 2011 is now readily available on the Illinois Emergency Management Agency’s (IEMA) radon website (www.radon.illinois.gov).

 

IEMA recently updated the website to provide more information about radon testing and mitigation done by professional contractors.  Visitors to the site can easily access information about the number of radon tests conducted in their county and their Zip code, the number and percentage of homes above the action level, as well as the average for each. 

 

The site also includes information about the number of radon-reducing systems installed in homes from 2005 – 20011 by county and Zip code.  Those numbers are further broken down by the type of systems installed – active soil depressurization or radon resistant new construction.

 

The Illinois Emergency Management Agency (IEMA) is highlighting the new website feature as part of Radon Action Month throughout January.

 

“We recently added thousands of professional test results that provide a better picture of radon in most parts of Illinois,” said IEMA Director Jonathon Monken.  “We plan to add results from do-it-yourself tests conducted by homeowners in the near future.  It’s obvious that radon is a problem throughout Illinois, and we encourage everyone to test their homes.” 

 

Monken noted that results from individual homes are not accessible through the website.

 

Radon is a colorless, odorless, tasteless radioactive gas that comes from the radioactive decay of naturally occurring uranium in the soil.   Radon is the second-leading cause of lung cancer in the U.S., and the leading cause among non-smokers.  It’s estimated that nearly 1,200 radon-related lung cancer deaths occur each year in Illinois.

 

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) has established 4.0 picocuries per liter of air (pCi/L) as the action level for radon. 

 

More information about radon, including lists of IEMA-licensed measurement and mitigation contractors, is available at www.radon.Illinois.gov or by calling the Radon Hotline at 800-325-1245.