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United States Earth News

Air Quality in San Francisco is So Bad that Uber Drivers Are Selling Masks Out of Their Cars (recode.net) 204

California's devastating wildfires are causing unhealthy air conditions for locals breathing in harmful fumes. From a report: In San Francisco, which currently has the second-worst-rated air quality out of any city in the world, one driver was spotted selling N95 respirator masks for $5 apiece. That's significantly above market rate. Right now you can buy a 10-pack of similar masks for about $13 on Amazon. But considering the masks are sold out at many local stores, riders may be willing to dish out the cash for immediate access to the protective gear. Further reading: California needs to reinvent its fire policies, or the death and destruction will go on.
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Air Quality in San Francisco is So Bad that Uber Drivers Are Selling Masks Out of Their Cars

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  • will uber blacklist drivers who sell them? force them to sell though the uber app?

    • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 )

      will uber blacklist drivers who sell them? force them to sell though the uber app?

      Why? This proves they're contractors. Normal employees would get fired if they tried to do a side job on the clock.

    • by qubezz ( 520511 )
      It's one guy. One stupid picture of one guy offering a Home Depot mask for $5 taped to his seat gone viral, and the echo chamber of lazy news goes crazy.
  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Friday November 16, 2018 @06:08PM (#57658162)
    most of the land that's going up in smoke is Federal. As has been pointed out in previous threads the Fed needs to fund clearing dead trees, but that's expensive and those tax cuts don't pay for themselves (no, they really don't).
  • Come on, I would think that regulations should be used to stop all of that bad air. Issue solved.
    • by bob4u2c ( 73467 )
      I'm sure the state can easily come together, draft a law stating that wildfires are not allowed to produce bad air, then pass it into law. Done and done, no more bad air in California.
    • Come on, I would think that regulations should be used to stop all of that bad air. Issue solved.

      I agree. Regulations should be used to stop all of that bad air, starting with building codes. It should be illegal to build a flammable house. Steel building, earth bag, rammed earth, compressed straw bale, cob, adobe... we have available to us numerous functional methods of construction which do not produce flammable structures, some of which are thousands of years old. They are literally as old as civilization.

      Some of the first laws in California prohibited the starting of forest fires. But that was how

  • by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Friday November 16, 2018 @06:37PM (#57658300)

    Actually San Francisco has finally opened the portal to Hell it has been trying to summon for ages by sacrificing homeless people and using Poop-Magics.

    • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 )
      While the Hellmouth is in California, everyone knows it's not in SFO.
    • by bob4u2c ( 73467 )
      That . . . would . . . be . . . AWESOME! Please let it be true.
      • Please let it be true.

        How else do you think Salesforce found room for a new tower? They are first to grab some of that coveted Hellscape.

        And truth be told, it smells better down there than in Mission, plus the eternal fires are like the ULTIMATE in renewable energy.

        Also say what you will about the Devil but at least Hel-train runs cars on time.

  • All the way out here in Wisconsin, as it was the last time CA lit on fire, my allergies are going nuts. That's odd considering the temperature but the smoke particles legitimately travel this far!
  • by Kjella ( 173770 ) on Friday November 16, 2018 @08:34PM (#57658860) Homepage

    In San Francisco, which currently has the second-worst-rated air quality out of any city in the world, one driver was spotted selling N95 respirator masks for $5 apiece. That's significantly above market rate. Right now you can buy a 10-pack of similar masks for about $13 on Amazon.

    Truth is, under most circumstances you'd always buy shit cheaper at a supermarket or whatever and often in volume if it's non-perishable. Which means there's very little point at selling something at 30% or 50% mark-up. I've paid 5 euros at a camping grounds on the weekend for a pack of batteries that would normally cost 1 euro. How often would that happen, maybe once a month? You're not going to get rich making 4 euros/month selling batteries. They still wouldn't sell well for 2 euros/pack. At some point you have to cease looking at "rational" cost and look at lost opportunity costs. I was there, out of batteries, the nearest proper store was far away and the alternative was probably to not buy batteries at all. It wasn't a trap or anything like that, it was just a duuuuuuuh moment as I realized all the batteries were dead.

    Honestly, I feel that this is sometimes the exact opposite of the sunk cost fallacy - we've spent tons of money to get here but then we're going to skimp on the last dollars to actually take advantage of it. Like you go to a foreign country with airplane tickets and hotel and whatnot but then it's like should we really go out to eat or just grab some snacks from the local store. And I'm like the opportunity cost of going out to eat at a fancy Greek restaurant is just the cost of going out to a fancy restaurant, we've already paid for everything else. Yes in isolation we can go to McDonald's and it's a lot cheaper, but in total we're then paying a ton of money for the same shitty experience we could get at home. If we ever wanted to do it later, we'd have to re-sink the cost of going to Greece so the opportunity is "cheap" here and now. So... if you're about to step of out the taxi and see smog hell, is $5 worth it? I think yes.

  • by WillAffleckUW ( 858324 ) on Friday November 16, 2018 @08:56PM (#57658962) Homepage Journal

    Every trip you take with Uber or Lyft increases the miles per person travelled by 40-60 percent, on average.

    Solution: use public transit, an e-bike, or an e-scooter, and buy a good air mask. And, based on the months we lived amongst forest fire smoke in Washington State, some goggles (the ski goggles help). Also, add some blinky lights, because smoke reduces visibility.

    If you do drive, turn your air onto "recirculate" - you're just sucking in microparticles that aren't screened with auto air conditioning filters. You're going to need to replace your air filters as soon as this ends, by the way.

  • They sell out almost immediately. I've been trying to buy for the last three days. I've been to seven stores. Nobody has them. I could order them online but I need one now, not next week. When you figure what overnight shipping costs, $5 for a mask isn't a bad deal.

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