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FILE - In this Aug. 6, 2009, file photo, the stubble of a grain field on the Camas Priaire is burned after the harvest producing a heavy plume of smoke in Lewiston, Idaho. Federal officials have approved Idaho's request to loosen field burning rules that backers say offer more flexibility to disperse smoke away from people but that health advocates say will lead to breathing problems for some area residents. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency earlier this week issued a final rule that allows field burning in the state during worse air quality thresholds for ozone starting July 19, 2018. (Barry Kough /Lewiston Tribune via AP, File)

FILE - In this Aug. 6, 2009, file photo, the stubble of a grain field on the Camas Priaire is burned after the harvest producing a heavy plume of smoke in Lewiston, Idaho. Federal officials have approved Idaho's request to loosen field burning rules that backers say offer more flexibility to disperse smoke away from people but that health advocates say will lead to breathing problems for some area residents. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency earlier this week issued a final rule that allows field burning in the state during worse air quality thresholds for ozone starting July 19, 2018. (Barry Kough /Lewiston Tribune via AP, File)

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