Sunnyside Environmental School
Most Sunnyside students spend the day in classrooms with below-target ventilation
Unless air purifiers are run consistently
Sunnyside's HVAC system delivers air-change rates that typically range from low to near target for classrooms and other learning spaces. District measurements show that some Sunnyside classrooms are far below health-based goals for ventilation, but many rooms are close to or above minimum health-based targets. The best way to reach healthy air targets is with a combination of building ventilation and effective in-room filtration, but ventilation in Sunnyside generally varies from too low to close to or meeting our minimum goal, and it is critical that Sunnyside receives ongoing support for placing and using in-room air purifiers.
The one air purifier originally assigned to Sunnyside‘s rooms is insufficient and undersized in some of Sunnyside's classrooms and large spaces. Two or more air purifiers per classroom can substantially improve air quality, reduce respiratory viruses and air pollutants, and achieve effective air cleaning, while running at quiet settings.
Two air purifiers are needed in some of Sunnyside's classrooms, auditorium, cafeteria, library, and main office to more effectively clean the air, and classrooms above minimum targets benefit from two air purifiers, too. That’s why the Oregon Health Authority provided additional free air purifiers for Sunnyside in 2023. Sunnyside received enough additional units that these rooms should have two air purifiers each! But teachers and staff at Sunnyside have also not gotten great guidance on how and why to use both air purifier. At other PPS schools where teachers didn't get sufficient guidance on using their air purifiers, we've been able to help the school community build better understanding and air quality practices, especially when parents at a school work with us. To connect and support next steps for clean classroom air at Sunnyside, join our Sunnyside group, and learn more about Sunnyside‘s air quality below.
Without air purifiers, Sunnyside falls short of clean indoor air goals
If no air purifiers are running:
✘ Coughs and sneezes in the typical Sunnyside classroom linger and hang in the air for over 25 minutes
The median rate of airflow from the HVAC system to classrooms at Sunnyside is only 5.5 air changes per hour.*
At 5.5 air changes per hour, it takes the HVAC system 25 minutes to clear out 90% of the respiratory aerosols being produced when kids and staff breathe, talk, sing, cough and sneeze. That is longer than we'd like for virus-laden respiratory aerosols and other indoor air pollutants to fill the air students and teachers are breathing.
But the median does not show how bad the lowest-ventilation rooms are …
✘ Classroom with the lowest ventilation: 213
1.1 air changes per hour
With airflow this low, how long do kids’ and staff’s viruses linger in room 213’s air?
>2 hours and 6 minutes
At 1.1 air changes/hour, 2 hours 6 minutes is how long it takes the HVAC system to clear out 90% of respiratory aerosols and other air pollutants.
✘ Without air purifiers, 3 more Sunnyside classrooms have less than 3 air changes per hour
At 3 air changes per hour, it takes the HVAC system over 45 minutes to clear 90% of the respiratory aerosols.
✘ 11 classrooms are between 3 and 6 air changes – all below recommendations
Only 11 classrooms meet our minimum health-based airflow target for the HVAC system alone of 6 air changes per hour or more, clearing 90% of aerosols out in 23 minutes or less.
Some examples of classrooms with high airflow:
Rm 209: 6.1
Rm P2: 6.7
Rm 208: 7.3
Rm 100: 8.6***
***Excellent airflow:
Just 16 minutes to clear 90% of aerosols in room Rm 100
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About these ventilation measurements
These numbers come from airflow testing done in nearly every room of every PPS building, before the district resumed in-person learning in 2021. We carefully reviewed the district’s results, compiled and maintain a districtwide database from the airflow reports, and corrected gaps and errors in the data so that classroom ventilation and filtration are represented accurately. Our analyses provide ventilation rates from the HVAC system alone and show how total clean airflow increases when in-room air purifiers are used.
To learn more about the district airflow testing and how SIAFOS corrected the data, see this excerpt adapted from our McDaniel High School Air Quality Report: District airflow measurements & SIAFOS analyses. For the full room-by-room values, corrections, and calculations for this school, see Sunnyside Environmental School Analysis by SIAFOS.
One air purifier is undersized for some Sunnyside classrooms
With only one air purifier per classroom, some Sunnyside classrooms still lack clean air:
Although the Intellipure air purifiers originally assigned to Sunnyside greatly improve the school's clean airflow rates, they are insufficient in some Sunnyside classrooms. Even with an Intellipure air purifier running at its reasonable noise level (half speed), the classroom with the lowest ventilation from the HVAC system — room 213 — is still far below healthy airflow targets. With room 213 at 2.1 air changes per hour, kids’ and staff’s viruses in their respiratory aerosols linger for over 1 hour and 6 minutes.
At 2.1 air changes/hour, 1 hour 6 minutes is how long it takes for the HVAC system and Intellipure air purifier to clear out 90% of the respiratory aerosols being produced when kids and staff breathe, talk, sing, cough and sneeze.
With only one air purifier per classroom:
✘ Worst-airflow classroom (room 213) is still less than 3 air changes per hour
✘ 3 more Sunnyside classrooms have less than 4 air changes per hour
✘ 5 classrooms are between 4 and 6 air changes – below recommendations
If one Intellipure unit is running at its quiet noise level, 17 classrooms meet our minimum goal for healthy ventilation and filtration of 6 air changes per hour or more, clearing 90% of aerosols out in 23 minutes or less.
Sunnyside needs two air purifiers in some rooms to clean classroom air

With two air purifiers per classroom placed and in use, 96 percent of the school's classrooms meet the minimum healthy air target
With two of the air purifiers the district already owns running at their best noise levels (one Intellipure at half speed and one Medify Pro at speed 2), 25 out of 26 Sunnyside classrooms would be at 6 air changes per hour or higher. Over three quarters of Sunnyside's classrooms are above an excellent 8 air changes per hour if both air purifiers are in place. Viruses, mold spores, dust and allergens, wildfire smoke, and other air pollutants would clear out by 90% in as little as 11 minutes.
The median clean airflow with two air purifiers per classroom would be 9.9 air changes per hour. At 9.9 air changes, the typical classroom at Sunnyside would have a high level of respiratory protection, well above our minimum clean air goal.
Two air purifiers make a big difference — but some rooms still fall short
In some Sunnyside classrooms, the baseline ventilation is so low that two air purifiers alone cannot fully solve the problem. Even so, using both an Intellipure and a Medify Pro still makes a major difference in these rooms, reducing exposure for students and staff compared with using only one unit, or none.For example, Sunnyside‘s worst-airflow classroom — Room 213 — is 4.2 air changes per hour even with two air purifiers. Although this is still below the minimum healthy air target of 6, it is far better than the 1.1 air changes per hour the room gets with no air purifiers running.
Visualizing how much air purifiers improve Sunnyside classroom airflow
The graphs below show how little ventilation most Sunnyside classrooms get without any air purifiers running. They also show how the addition of one air purifier per classroom shifts the rooms’ airflow rates higher , moving most rooms above health-based benchmarks for clean air. With two air purifiers per classroom, the pattern changes. Although two air purifiers still leave 1 classroom short of 6 air changes per hour, having two units per room moves most classrooms into the healthy air range above 6, and the lowest airflow classrooms are much improved.
Number of classrooms vs air changes per hour
No air purifiers
HVAC only
Over half of classroom airflows inSunnyside are below our clean air goal without air purifiers running. Over half of the classrooms are below 6 air changes per hour from the HVAC system.
One air purifier
One Intellipure air purifier running at its reasonable noise level increases the share of classrooms above 6 air changes by 23.0769230769231 percentage points, from 42.3076923076923% to 65.3846153846154%.
Two air purifiers
Most classrooms have good and excellent clean airflow with two air purifiers. Many classrooms reach 7, 8, 9+ air changes per hour. But a few rooms are still below 6, even with 2 units.
Next steps: support and strengthen Sunnyside's clean air practices and daily use of two air purifiers
Sunnyside received enough additional air purifiers that every classroom should have two units. The next step is ensuring Sunnyside teachers and staff are supported in using their units and understand how and why they want to run multiple air purifiers. Many schools have not been given clear information about how multiple air purifiers running quietly together are needed to clean the air in a full classroom of 20 or 30 kids. And teachers have not been given good guidance on how and when to use both units. But these second units need to be in classrooms and other school spaces providing critical benefits of clean indoor air, such as reduced illness, improved learning, and better attendance.
Placing and using this clean air infrastructure needs action at all levels, from district leadership to the classroom. Parents, caregivers, and school staff also have key roles to play to support daily use of two air purifiers in Sunnyside classrooms and ensure clean classroom air. Join SIAFOS and our Sunnyside group to connect with others who care about clean, cool classroom air at Sunnyside.
The data shows how Sunnyside can improve air quality, reduce illness, and increase attendance
Why were second air purifiers delivered for every Sunnyside classroom?
In 2023, PPS received 3500 free air purifiers — enough additional air purifiers to provide a second unit for every classroom in the district and other learning spaces as well. Instead of fully delivering on that commitment, previous district leadership used a flawed decision-making process that sent most units into storage rather than into classrooms. Sunnyside was one of 28 schools whose units were delivered without being sent to storage first.
However, for 68 other schools, errors in airflow calculations, inappropriate averaging methods, and misleading communications under previous leadership resulted in PPS erroneously concluding that most other schools in the district did not need second air purifiers. A full explanation of how the storage of air purifiers meant to be cleaning classroom air occurred, and how PPS can correct course is available at:
In our analysis that corrects gaps in PPS’s airflow report, we have fixed errors and calculated classroom airflows with air purifiers running at speeds teachers can actually use.
Our airflow analysis provides room-by-room airflows at Sunnyside when rooms have no air purifiers, vs. one air purifier, vs. two air purifiers.
See our full airflow analysis for Sunnyside Environmental School here.
Highlights from our comprehensive room-by-room analysis of Sunnyside airflows
- With no air purifiers, 4 out of 26 classrooms are below 3 air changes per hour
- The HVAC system only provides the library with 3.4 air changes per hour, and the cafeteria is only 0.6
- With one air purifier in most classrooms and two air purifiers in low-airflow rooms, no classrooms are under 3 air changes per hour, and 25 meet or exceed our minimum goal of 6 air changes per hour
Other SIAFOS analyses, reports, and campaigns
Learn more about indoor air quality in PPS with some of our other analyses, reports, and campaigns:
McDaniel High School Air Quality Report — our 144-page flagship report using the McDaniel cluster as a case study for districtwide problems, and solutions, for clean air
Benefits of Clean Indoor Air — improving air quality in PPS will increase student performance, reduce absences and educator sick days, improve health for students, staff, and surrounding communities, improve equity, and help mitigate impacts of climate change
Teacher Feedback on PPS’s Fall 2025 Temporary Cooling Measures — report on our survey of teachers in the 15 schools that received temporary cooling equipment in the fall 2025 heat wave
Sign-On Letter to Show Your Support for Clean Air in PPS — add your voice to our public letter calling for health-based ventilation and air quality in PPS
Airflow 101 Handouts: Understanding Airflow Sources in the Classroom and How Using Two Air Purifiers Allows Quiet Speed Settings
Poor airflow in Sunnyside and other PPS schools is why we worked with parents across the district in spring 2023 to advocate that PPS classrooms need additional, high quality air purifiers to provide safe air to kids now, when HVAC system overhauls will take the district years to do in all schools and a mix of ventilation from HVAC systems and in-room filtration is the best approach for clean classroom air in both newly modernized buildings and older buildings alike. Just as we were advocating to the school board for the need for additional filtration capacity in PPS classrooms, the Oregon Health Authority announced a program offering free Medify air purifiers to any K-12 schools in Oregon. When it became clear that district staff were not planning to sign up for any of the free air purifiers from OHA, we made the case for why Sunnyside needed these additional units. Parents from across the district joined SIAFOS in advocating that the district take full advantage of the program.
How can you help with clean air for Sunnyside?
Let’s support Sunnyside in using clean air tools well — Sign up to help ensure air purifiers are in place and running quietly to keep Sunnyside classroom air clean!
Two air purifiers running at quiet settings in each low-airflow classroom would provide more air filtration to the 4 Sunnyside classrooms that do not even get 3 changes of air per hour and the 11 classrooms that only get between 3 and 6! Using multiple air purifiers would also ensure Sunnyside‘s cafeteria, where kids pack in close to eat lunch, and library and other key spaces get better air quality, too.
Join us to be part of a group of parents and community members advocating for strategic, effective, and science-based planning for sufficient ventilation and filtration capacity in PPS schools — including Sunnyside. PPS air quality efforts have cycled between strong progress as well as periods of inaction and missteps. We are now working more collaboratively with district leadership, yet long-standing gaps in ventilation and air filtration persist across the district — which is why parent, staff, and community involvement at the classroom level, school level, and district level remains so important.
Changing our schools in PPS to have good air quality practices only happens when families and staff work together. When you join us, we’ll connect you with others and share simple processes that help PPS kids and staff, including kids and staff at Sunnyside, learn and work in classrooms with cleaner air, less illness, and healthier learning environments. Sign up below to join our organizing for PPS air quality!
*Notes on our numbers
Air changes per hour given on this page are “equivalent” and include ventilation and filtration. These numbers are based on the district’s airflow report for Sunnyside, conducted in August 2021 (available at safeairoregon.org/original-airflow-reports) but corrected gaps and errors.