SlideShare a Scribd company logo
1 of 7
Air quality management district
In this file, you can ref useful information about air quality management district such as air
quality management districtforms, tools for air quality management district, air quality
management districtstrategies … If you need more assistant for air quality management district,
please leave your comment at the end of file.
Other useful material for air quality management district:
• qualitymanagement123.com/23-free-ebooks-for-quality-management
• qualitymanagement123.com/185-free-quality-management-forms
• qualitymanagement123.com/free-98-ISO-9001-templates-and-forms
• qualitymanagement123.com/top-84-quality-management-KPIs
• qualitymanagement123.com/top-18-quality-management-job-descriptions
• qualitymanagement123.com/86-quality-management-interview-questions-and-answers
I. Contents of air quality management district
==================
The Air Quality Management District (AQMD) endeavors to manage and enhance the air quality
resources of Shasta County through a balanced program of environmental oversight and
protection of public health. The AQMD functions as professional staff to the Air Pollution
Control Board regarding rule development and potential industrial and commercial development.
It also processes commercial and industrial applications to construct emission devices and issues
Permits to Operate which are renewed on an annual basis. The AQMD estimates releases of air
contaminants and maintains an emission inventory to track emissions of all permitted devices. It
also proposes mitigation strategies working cooperatively with affected emission sources,
evaluates potential health risks, and adopts air pollution control measures and regulations that
seek to attain federal and state ambient air quality standards.
The AQMD operates monitoring devices to obtain information regarding concentrations of
particulate matter (PM10 and PM2.5) and ozone air pollutants that may have an impact on the
health of the general public or may damage vegetation and other materials. It issues open burning
permits for agricultural, forest management, land clearing, and hazard reduction burning
projects.
==================
III. Quality management tools
1. Check sheet
The check sheet is a form (document) used to collect data
in real time at the location where the data is generated.
The data it captures can be quantitative or qualitative.
When the information is quantitative, the check sheet is
sometimes called a tally sheet.
The defining characteristic of a check sheet is that data
are recorded by making marks ("checks") on it. A typical
check sheet is divided into regions, and marks made in
different regions have different significance. Data are
read by observing the location and number of marks on
the sheet.
Check sheets typically employ a heading that answers the
Five Ws:
 Who filled out the check sheet
 What was collected (what each check represents,
an identifying batch or lot number)
 Where the collection took place (facility, room,
apparatus)
 When the collection took place (hour, shift, day
of the week)
 Why the data were collected
2. Control chart
Control charts, also known as Shewhart charts
(after Walter A. Shewhart) or process-behavior
charts, in statistical process control are tools used
to determine if a manufacturing or business
process is in a state of statistical control.
If analysis of the control chart indicates that the
process is currently under control (i.e., is stable,
with variation only coming from sources common
to the process), then no corrections or changes to
process control parameters are needed or desired.
In addition, data from the process can be used to
predict the future performance of the process. If
the chart indicates that the monitored process is
not in control, analysis of the chart can help
determine the sources of variation, as this will
result in degraded process performance.[1] A
process that is stable but operating outside of
desired (specification) limits (e.g., scrap rates
may be in statistical control but above desired
limits) needs to be improved through a deliberate
effort to understand the causes of current
performance and fundamentally improve the
process.
The control chart is one of the seven basic tools of
quality control.[3] Typically control charts are
used for time-series data, though they can be used
for data that have logical comparability (i.e. you
want to compare samples that were taken all at
the same time, or the performance of different
individuals), however the type of chart used to do
this requires consideration.
3. Pareto chart
A Pareto chart, named after Vilfredo Pareto, is a type
of chart that contains both bars and a line graph, where
individual values are represented in descending order
by bars, and the cumulative total is represented by the
line.
The left vertical axis is the frequency of occurrence,
but it can alternatively represent cost or another
important unit of measure. The right vertical axis is
the cumulative percentage of the total number of
occurrences, total cost, or total of the particular unit of
measure. Because the reasons are in decreasing order,
the cumulative function is a concave function. To take
the example above, in order to lower the amount of
late arrivals by 78%, it is sufficient to solve the first
three issues.
The purpose of the Pareto chart is to highlight the
most important among a (typically large) set of
factors. In quality control, it often represents the most
common sources of defects, the highest occurring type
of defect, or the most frequent reasons for customer
complaints, and so on. Wilkinson (2006) devised an
algorithm for producing statistically based acceptance
limits (similar to confidence intervals) for each bar in
the Pareto chart.
4. Scatter plot Method
A scatter plot, scatterplot, or scattergraph is a type of
mathematical diagram using Cartesian coordinates to
display values for two variables for a set of data.
The data is displayed as a collection of points, each
having the value of one variable determining the position
on the horizontal axis and the value of the other variable
determining the position on the vertical axis.[2] This kind
of plot is also called a scatter chart, scattergram, scatter
diagram,[3] or scatter graph.
A scatter plot is used when a variable exists that is under
the control of the experimenter. If a parameter exists that
is systematically incremented and/or decremented by the
other, it is called the control parameter or independent
variable and is customarily plotted along the horizontal
axis. The measured or dependent variable is customarily
plotted along the vertical axis. If no dependent variable
exists, either type of variable can be plotted on either axis
and a scatter plot will illustrate only the degree of
correlation (not causation) between two variables.
A scatter plot can suggest various kinds of correlations
between variables with a certain confidence interval. For
example, weight and height, weight would be on x axis
and height would be on the y axis. Correlations may be
positive (rising), negative (falling), or null (uncorrelated).
If the pattern of dots slopes from lower left to upper right,
it suggests a positive correlation between the variables
being studied. If the pattern of dots slopes from upper left
to lower right, it suggests a negative correlation. A line of
best fit (alternatively called 'trendline') can be drawn in
order to study the correlation between the variables. An
equation for the correlation between the variables can be
determined by established best-fit procedures. For a linear
correlation, the best-fit procedure is known as linear
regression and is guaranteed to generate a correct solution
in a finite time. No universal best-fit procedure is
guaranteed to generate a correct solution for arbitrary
relationships. A scatter plot is also very useful when we
wish to see how two comparable data sets agree with each
other. In this case, an identity line, i.e., a y=x line, or an
1:1 line, is often drawn as a reference. The more the two
data sets agree, the more the scatters tend to concentrate in
the vicinity of the identity line; if the two data sets are
numerically identical, the scatters fall on the identity line
exactly.
5.Ishikawa diagram
Ishikawa diagrams (also called fishbone diagrams,
herringbone diagrams, cause-and-effect diagrams, or
Fishikawa) are causal diagrams created by Kaoru
Ishikawa (1968) that show the causes of a specific
event.[1][2] Common uses of the Ishikawa diagram are
product design and quality defect prevention, to identify
potential factors causing an overall effect. Each cause or
reason for imperfection is a source of variation. Causes
are usually grouped into major categories to identify these
sources of variation. The categories typically include
 People: Anyone involved with the process
 Methods: How the process is performed and the
specific requirements for doing it, such as policies,
procedures, rules, regulations and laws
 Machines: Any equipment, computers, tools, etc.
required to accomplish the job
 Materials: Raw materials, parts, pens, paper, etc.
used to produce the final product
 Measurements: Data generated from the process
that are used to evaluate its quality
 Environment: The conditions, such as location,
time, temperature, and culture in which the process
operates
6. Histogram method
A histogram is a graphical representation of the
distribution of data. It is an estimate of the probability
distribution of a continuous variable (quantitative
variable) and was first introduced by Karl Pearson.[1] To
construct a histogram, the first step is to "bin" the range of
values -- that is, divide the entire range of values into a
series of small intervals -- and then count how many
values fall into each interval. A rectangle is drawn with
height proportional to the count and width equal to the bin
size, so that rectangles abut each other. A histogram may
also be normalized displaying relative frequencies. It then
shows the proportion of cases that fall into each of several
categories, with the sum of the heights equaling 1. The
bins are usually specified as consecutive, non-overlapping
intervals of a variable. The bins (intervals) must be
adjacent, and usually equal size.[2] The rectangles of a
histogram are drawn so that they touch each other to
indicate that the original variable is continuous.[3]
III. Other topics related to Air quality management district (pdf download)
quality management systems
quality management courses
quality management tools
iso 9001 quality management system
quality management process
quality management system example
quality system management
quality management techniques
quality management standards
quality management policy
quality management strategy
quality management books

More Related Content

What's hot

Quality management systems definition
Quality management systems definitionQuality management systems definition
Quality management systems definitionselinasimpson2501
 
Quotes on quality management
Quotes on quality managementQuotes on quality management
Quotes on quality managementselinasimpson331
 
Methods of quality management
Methods of quality managementMethods of quality management
Methods of quality managementselinasimpson2001
 
Iso 9001 and 14001
Iso 9001 and 14001Iso 9001 and 14001
Iso 9001 and 14001porikgefus
 
Iso 9001 qualification
Iso 9001 qualificationIso 9001 qualification
Iso 9001 qualificationjondarita
 
Iso 9001 14001
Iso 9001 14001Iso 9001 14001
Iso 9001 14001jomharipe
 
Iso 14001 9001
Iso 14001 9001Iso 14001 9001
Iso 14001 9001jomritagu
 
Quality management conference
Quality management conferenceQuality management conference
Quality management conferenceselinasimpson311
 
Iso 9001 work instructions
Iso 9001 work instructionsIso 9001 work instructions
Iso 9001 work instructionstagujomri
 
Quality management definition
Quality management definitionQuality management definition
Quality management definitionselinasimpson0101
 
Quality management system software
Quality management system softwareQuality management system software
Quality management system softwareselinasimpson0301
 
Quality management vacancies
Quality management vacanciesQuality management vacancies
Quality management vacanciesselinasimpson351
 
Quality management international
Quality management internationalQuality management international
Quality management internationalselinasimpson2301
 
Quality management in nursing
Quality management in nursingQuality management in nursing
Quality management in nursingselinasimpson1401
 
Iso certificate 9001
Iso certificate 9001Iso certificate 9001
Iso certificate 9001daritajon
 
Quality management department
Quality management departmentQuality management department
Quality management departmentselinasimpson1201
 

What's hot (20)

Quality management systems definition
Quality management systems definitionQuality management systems definition
Quality management systems definition
 
Quotes on quality management
Quotes on quality managementQuotes on quality management
Quotes on quality management
 
Methods of quality management
Methods of quality managementMethods of quality management
Methods of quality management
 
Iso 9001 and 14001
Iso 9001 and 14001Iso 9001 and 14001
Iso 9001 and 14001
 
Iso 9001 qualification
Iso 9001 qualificationIso 9001 qualification
Iso 9001 qualification
 
Iso 9001 14001
Iso 9001 14001Iso 9001 14001
Iso 9001 14001
 
Iso 14001 9001
Iso 14001 9001Iso 14001 9001
Iso 14001 9001
 
Quality management conference
Quality management conferenceQuality management conference
Quality management conference
 
Iso 9001 work instructions
Iso 9001 work instructionsIso 9001 work instructions
Iso 9001 work instructions
 
Quality management definition
Quality management definitionQuality management definition
Quality management definition
 
Quality management system software
Quality management system softwareQuality management system software
Quality management system software
 
Project management quality
Project management qualityProject management quality
Project management quality
 
Quality management vacancies
Quality management vacanciesQuality management vacancies
Quality management vacancies
 
Home quality management
Home quality managementHome quality management
Home quality management
 
Ukas quality management
Ukas quality managementUkas quality management
Ukas quality management
 
Quality management international
Quality management internationalQuality management international
Quality management international
 
Quality management in nursing
Quality management in nursingQuality management in nursing
Quality management in nursing
 
Iso certificate 9001
Iso certificate 9001Iso certificate 9001
Iso certificate 9001
 
Quality system management
Quality system managementQuality system management
Quality system management
 
Quality management department
Quality management departmentQuality management department
Quality management department
 

Viewers also liked (9)

Ifmpresentation1 130704094735-phpapp01
Ifmpresentation1 130704094735-phpapp01Ifmpresentation1 130704094735-phpapp01
Ifmpresentation1 130704094735-phpapp01
 
River Bend Portfolio 2014
River Bend Portfolio 2014River Bend Portfolio 2014
River Bend Portfolio 2014
 
Quality assurance management
Quality assurance managementQuality assurance management
Quality assurance management
 
Futuro universidad Dr. Oscar Aguer 2014
Futuro universidad Dr. Oscar Aguer 2014Futuro universidad Dr. Oscar Aguer 2014
Futuro universidad Dr. Oscar Aguer 2014
 
Art 21 project
Art 21 projectArt 21 project
Art 21 project
 
Company_Profile_DevGro
Company_Profile_DevGroCompany_Profile_DevGro
Company_Profile_DevGro
 
Hotel industry evolution Dr. Oscar Aguer
Hotel industry evolution Dr. Oscar AguerHotel industry evolution Dr. Oscar Aguer
Hotel industry evolution Dr. Oscar Aguer
 
Quality management system template
Quality management system templateQuality management system template
Quality management system template
 
104 week ppa presentation
104 week ppa presentation104 week ppa presentation
104 week ppa presentation
 

Similar to Air quality management district

Quality management system training
Quality management system trainingQuality management system training
Quality management system trainingselinasimpson0701
 
International journal of quality & reliability management
International journal of quality & reliability managementInternational journal of quality & reliability management
International journal of quality & reliability managementselinasimpson0401
 
Quality management manual template
Quality management manual templateQuality management manual template
Quality management manual templateselinasimpson331
 
Quality management system for construction
Quality management system for constructionQuality management system for construction
Quality management system for constructionselinasimpson2801
 
Production quality management
Production quality managementProduction quality management
Production quality managementselinasimpson2801
 
Corporate quality management
Corporate quality managementCorporate quality management
Corporate quality managementselinasimpson2701
 
Quality management system tools
Quality management system toolsQuality management system tools
Quality management system toolsselinasimpson2501
 
Iso 9001 quality management system requirements
Iso 9001 quality management system requirementsIso 9001 quality management system requirements
Iso 9001 quality management system requirementsselinasimpson3001
 
Quality management accreditation
Quality management accreditationQuality management accreditation
Quality management accreditationselinasimpson381
 
Quality management system for small business
Quality management system for small businessQuality management system for small business
Quality management system for small businessselinasimpson351
 
Quality management solutions
Quality management solutionsQuality management solutions
Quality management solutionsselinasimpson0801
 
Diploma in quality management
Diploma in quality managementDiploma in quality management
Diploma in quality managementselinasimpson0301
 
Application quality management
Application quality managementApplication quality management
Application quality managementselinasimpson351
 
Quality management training courses
Quality management training coursesQuality management training courses
Quality management training coursesselinasimpson1401
 
Certified quality management professional
Certified quality management professionalCertified quality management professional
Certified quality management professionalselinasimpson2901
 

Similar to Air quality management district (20)

Study quality management
Study quality managementStudy quality management
Study quality management
 
Quality management report
Quality management reportQuality management report
Quality management report
 
Quality management system training
Quality management system trainingQuality management system training
Quality management system training
 
Quality management program
Quality management programQuality management program
Quality management program
 
Quality management programs
Quality management programsQuality management programs
Quality management programs
 
International journal of quality & reliability management
International journal of quality & reliability managementInternational journal of quality & reliability management
International journal of quality & reliability management
 
Quality management manual template
Quality management manual templateQuality management manual template
Quality management manual template
 
Quality management system for construction
Quality management system for constructionQuality management system for construction
Quality management system for construction
 
Production quality management
Production quality managementProduction quality management
Production quality management
 
Corporate quality management
Corporate quality managementCorporate quality management
Corporate quality management
 
Quality management system tools
Quality management system toolsQuality management system tools
Quality management system tools
 
Iso 9001 quality management system requirements
Iso 9001 quality management system requirementsIso 9001 quality management system requirements
Iso 9001 quality management system requirements
 
Quality management accreditation
Quality management accreditationQuality management accreditation
Quality management accreditation
 
Quality management system for small business
Quality management system for small businessQuality management system for small business
Quality management system for small business
 
Quality management metrics
Quality management metricsQuality management metrics
Quality management metrics
 
Quality management solutions
Quality management solutionsQuality management solutions
Quality management solutions
 
Diploma in quality management
Diploma in quality managementDiploma in quality management
Diploma in quality management
 
Application quality management
Application quality managementApplication quality management
Application quality management
 
Quality management training courses
Quality management training coursesQuality management training courses
Quality management training courses
 
Certified quality management professional
Certified quality management professionalCertified quality management professional
Certified quality management professional
 

More from selinasimpson0301

More from selinasimpson0301 (8)

Quality data management
Quality data managementQuality data management
Quality data management
 
Quality project management
Quality project managementQuality project management
Quality project management
 
Quality management training
Quality management trainingQuality management training
Quality management training
 
Quality data management
Quality data managementQuality data management
Quality data management
 
Iso quality management
Iso quality managementIso quality management
Iso quality management
 
Iso quality management system
Iso quality management systemIso quality management system
Iso quality management system
 
Importance of quality management
Importance of quality managementImportance of quality management
Importance of quality management
 
History of quality management
History of quality managementHistory of quality management
History of quality management
 

Air quality management district

  • 1. Air quality management district In this file, you can ref useful information about air quality management district such as air quality management districtforms, tools for air quality management district, air quality management districtstrategies … If you need more assistant for air quality management district, please leave your comment at the end of file. Other useful material for air quality management district: • qualitymanagement123.com/23-free-ebooks-for-quality-management • qualitymanagement123.com/185-free-quality-management-forms • qualitymanagement123.com/free-98-ISO-9001-templates-and-forms • qualitymanagement123.com/top-84-quality-management-KPIs • qualitymanagement123.com/top-18-quality-management-job-descriptions • qualitymanagement123.com/86-quality-management-interview-questions-and-answers I. Contents of air quality management district ================== The Air Quality Management District (AQMD) endeavors to manage and enhance the air quality resources of Shasta County through a balanced program of environmental oversight and protection of public health. The AQMD functions as professional staff to the Air Pollution Control Board regarding rule development and potential industrial and commercial development. It also processes commercial and industrial applications to construct emission devices and issues Permits to Operate which are renewed on an annual basis. The AQMD estimates releases of air contaminants and maintains an emission inventory to track emissions of all permitted devices. It also proposes mitigation strategies working cooperatively with affected emission sources, evaluates potential health risks, and adopts air pollution control measures and regulations that seek to attain federal and state ambient air quality standards. The AQMD operates monitoring devices to obtain information regarding concentrations of particulate matter (PM10 and PM2.5) and ozone air pollutants that may have an impact on the health of the general public or may damage vegetation and other materials. It issues open burning permits for agricultural, forest management, land clearing, and hazard reduction burning projects. ==================
  • 2. III. Quality management tools 1. Check sheet The check sheet is a form (document) used to collect data in real time at the location where the data is generated. The data it captures can be quantitative or qualitative. When the information is quantitative, the check sheet is sometimes called a tally sheet. The defining characteristic of a check sheet is that data are recorded by making marks ("checks") on it. A typical check sheet is divided into regions, and marks made in different regions have different significance. Data are read by observing the location and number of marks on the sheet. Check sheets typically employ a heading that answers the Five Ws:  Who filled out the check sheet  What was collected (what each check represents, an identifying batch or lot number)  Where the collection took place (facility, room, apparatus)  When the collection took place (hour, shift, day of the week)  Why the data were collected 2. Control chart Control charts, also known as Shewhart charts (after Walter A. Shewhart) or process-behavior charts, in statistical process control are tools used to determine if a manufacturing or business process is in a state of statistical control. If analysis of the control chart indicates that the process is currently under control (i.e., is stable, with variation only coming from sources common
  • 3. to the process), then no corrections or changes to process control parameters are needed or desired. In addition, data from the process can be used to predict the future performance of the process. If the chart indicates that the monitored process is not in control, analysis of the chart can help determine the sources of variation, as this will result in degraded process performance.[1] A process that is stable but operating outside of desired (specification) limits (e.g., scrap rates may be in statistical control but above desired limits) needs to be improved through a deliberate effort to understand the causes of current performance and fundamentally improve the process. The control chart is one of the seven basic tools of quality control.[3] Typically control charts are used for time-series data, though they can be used for data that have logical comparability (i.e. you want to compare samples that were taken all at the same time, or the performance of different individuals), however the type of chart used to do this requires consideration. 3. Pareto chart A Pareto chart, named after Vilfredo Pareto, is a type of chart that contains both bars and a line graph, where individual values are represented in descending order by bars, and the cumulative total is represented by the line. The left vertical axis is the frequency of occurrence, but it can alternatively represent cost or another important unit of measure. The right vertical axis is the cumulative percentage of the total number of occurrences, total cost, or total of the particular unit of measure. Because the reasons are in decreasing order, the cumulative function is a concave function. To take the example above, in order to lower the amount of late arrivals by 78%, it is sufficient to solve the first three issues.
  • 4. The purpose of the Pareto chart is to highlight the most important among a (typically large) set of factors. In quality control, it often represents the most common sources of defects, the highest occurring type of defect, or the most frequent reasons for customer complaints, and so on. Wilkinson (2006) devised an algorithm for producing statistically based acceptance limits (similar to confidence intervals) for each bar in the Pareto chart. 4. Scatter plot Method A scatter plot, scatterplot, or scattergraph is a type of mathematical diagram using Cartesian coordinates to display values for two variables for a set of data. The data is displayed as a collection of points, each having the value of one variable determining the position on the horizontal axis and the value of the other variable determining the position on the vertical axis.[2] This kind of plot is also called a scatter chart, scattergram, scatter diagram,[3] or scatter graph. A scatter plot is used when a variable exists that is under the control of the experimenter. If a parameter exists that is systematically incremented and/or decremented by the other, it is called the control parameter or independent variable and is customarily plotted along the horizontal axis. The measured or dependent variable is customarily plotted along the vertical axis. If no dependent variable exists, either type of variable can be plotted on either axis and a scatter plot will illustrate only the degree of correlation (not causation) between two variables. A scatter plot can suggest various kinds of correlations between variables with a certain confidence interval. For example, weight and height, weight would be on x axis and height would be on the y axis. Correlations may be positive (rising), negative (falling), or null (uncorrelated). If the pattern of dots slopes from lower left to upper right, it suggests a positive correlation between the variables
  • 5. being studied. If the pattern of dots slopes from upper left to lower right, it suggests a negative correlation. A line of best fit (alternatively called 'trendline') can be drawn in order to study the correlation between the variables. An equation for the correlation between the variables can be determined by established best-fit procedures. For a linear correlation, the best-fit procedure is known as linear regression and is guaranteed to generate a correct solution in a finite time. No universal best-fit procedure is guaranteed to generate a correct solution for arbitrary relationships. A scatter plot is also very useful when we wish to see how two comparable data sets agree with each other. In this case, an identity line, i.e., a y=x line, or an 1:1 line, is often drawn as a reference. The more the two data sets agree, the more the scatters tend to concentrate in the vicinity of the identity line; if the two data sets are numerically identical, the scatters fall on the identity line exactly. 5.Ishikawa diagram Ishikawa diagrams (also called fishbone diagrams, herringbone diagrams, cause-and-effect diagrams, or Fishikawa) are causal diagrams created by Kaoru Ishikawa (1968) that show the causes of a specific event.[1][2] Common uses of the Ishikawa diagram are product design and quality defect prevention, to identify potential factors causing an overall effect. Each cause or reason for imperfection is a source of variation. Causes are usually grouped into major categories to identify these sources of variation. The categories typically include  People: Anyone involved with the process  Methods: How the process is performed and the specific requirements for doing it, such as policies, procedures, rules, regulations and laws  Machines: Any equipment, computers, tools, etc. required to accomplish the job  Materials: Raw materials, parts, pens, paper, etc. used to produce the final product  Measurements: Data generated from the process that are used to evaluate its quality
  • 6.  Environment: The conditions, such as location, time, temperature, and culture in which the process operates 6. Histogram method A histogram is a graphical representation of the distribution of data. It is an estimate of the probability distribution of a continuous variable (quantitative variable) and was first introduced by Karl Pearson.[1] To construct a histogram, the first step is to "bin" the range of values -- that is, divide the entire range of values into a series of small intervals -- and then count how many values fall into each interval. A rectangle is drawn with height proportional to the count and width equal to the bin size, so that rectangles abut each other. A histogram may also be normalized displaying relative frequencies. It then shows the proportion of cases that fall into each of several categories, with the sum of the heights equaling 1. The bins are usually specified as consecutive, non-overlapping intervals of a variable. The bins (intervals) must be adjacent, and usually equal size.[2] The rectangles of a histogram are drawn so that they touch each other to indicate that the original variable is continuous.[3] III. Other topics related to Air quality management district (pdf download) quality management systems quality management courses quality management tools iso 9001 quality management system quality management process quality management system example quality system management quality management techniques quality management standards
  • 7. quality management policy quality management strategy quality management books