Air Quality Permitting

The Permitting Section assists businesses and industry in complying with the Clean Air Act and with Health Department Article XXI - Air Pollution Regulations(PDF, 2MB).

All sources of air pollution must obtain permits to operate, in addition to permits to install new units or modify existing equipment.

View a map of the facilities inspected and permitted by the ACHD.

For more detailed information, check out the Air Toxics Guidelines(PDF, 92KB) and the Air Toxic Guidelines Workshop(PDF, 6MB).

If you have any questions, please call the Permitting office at 412-578-8103.

Air Quality Program Fee Schedule

Compliance Certification

Please note: The new Title V Annual Compliance Certification Form listed below is the only form that will be accepted after April 1, 2017.

EPA Air Quality Program Audit

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) periodically performs an audit of the Allegheny County Health Department’s Air Quality program. The most recent was an audit of its Title V operating permit process(PDF, 2MB) in August of 2017.

One area of concern in the 2017 audit was the Title V permit backlog (defined as any unissued permit with an application older than 18 months). At the time of the audit, the Title V permit backlog was 34%. As of January 1, 2026, the backlog is 13.8% and all backlogged permits have been through the public comment period at least once.

ACHD has increased permit application, maintenance, and emissions fees in response to the EPA Audit. See the tab “Air Quality Program Fee Schedule” on this page for more information.

To address the EPA audit findings, in 2018, ACHD hired a consultant to evaluate staffing and IT, and to provide an overall assessment of the workflow process in the Air Quality Permitting.  ACHD has addressed the staffing needs outlined in the evaluation and has implemented the Regulated Entities Portal (REP). REP streamlines the permitting process by allowing facilities to efficiently track, manage, and submit required reports and renewal applications into one centralized system.

For more information on the Title V program, including the status of backlogged permits, bookmark and revisit our Title V & Public Interest Permits page.

Open Burning Permits

Open Burn Permit applications are now being accepted through the Regulated Entities Portal (REP). For more information visit the Regulated Entities Portal.

For more information about open burning in Allegheny County, see: Open Burning in Allegheny County.

Asbestos and Abrasive Blasting Permits

Abrasive Blasting permit applications are now being accepted through the Regulated Entities Portal (REP). For more information visit the Regulated Entities Portal.

For information about asbestos and abrasive blasting permits, please see our Asbestos and Abrasive Blasting page.

Mon Valley Air Pollution Episode Rule

In September 2021, the "Mon Valley Air Pollution Episode Rule" was added to Article XXI - Air Pollution Control Regulations(PDF, 2MB). These new regulations were added to respond to weather-related inversions in the Mon Valley, which can result in episodes of high levels of particulate matter pollution (PM2.5). For more information, see the Mon Valley Air Pollution Episode Rule page. Following are documents being distributed to municipalities and sources affected by the regulation: