CNN  — 

Around 75 million people in the United States are experiencing dangerous air conditions because of smoke from wildfires raging across Canada, with officials urging them to limit time outdoors and mask up for safety.

Forecasts show the dangerous air conditions could linger for days but are expected to slowly improve across the East heading into the weekend.

LIVE UPDATES: Millions in US under air quality alerts

It took several days for the dense smoke from the Quebec fires to reach US cities including New York, Philadelphia and Washington. In Quebec, smoke from wildfires across the region is now considerably reduced.

Without substantial new smoke entering the US, the dangerous air conditions are expected to improve. But current weather patterns suggest the smoke will be trapped in impacted areas until it can dissipate, meaning improvements will come slowly.

Here’s the latest:

  • Most of the Washington, DC, metro area is now experiencing hazardous air conditions. Air quality in New York and Philadelphia is still unhealthy but improving slightly from hazardous levels on Wednesday. New York, Charlotte, Detroit, Indianapolis, Delaware and Rhode Island, as well as other areas, remain under air quality alerts.
  • Washington Mayor Muriel Bowser has suspended several nonessential citywide services.
  • New York City could see “significant improvement” in visibility and air quality by Friday morning, Mayor Eric Adams said at a news conference Thursday morning.
  • Air quality remains poor across most of New York state, Gov. Kathy Hochul said Thursday. Officials are still seeing “unhealthy” levels everywhere, except in the Adirondacks, Hochul said, calling the air quality a “public health crisis.”
  • The Federal Aviation Administration said Thursday morning flights nationwide were delayed 34 minutes on average due to the conditions, with the maximum delay lasting an hour and 47 minutes. The agency issued ground stops for Philadelphia and New York airports earlier in the day.
  • In a sign of improving conditions in Canada, most of the Halifax residents who were evacuated because of the wildfires will be allowed to return home Friday, Mayor Mike Savage said. About 16,000 people left their homes during the height of the wildfire evacuations and about 4,100 remain evacuated.
Jose Luis Magana/AP
With the Washington Monument in the background under a thick layer of smoke, a Marine Corps honor color guard rehearses on Thursday.

New York earned the distinction of having the most polluted air quality of any city in the world Wednesday. Conditions are improving, but air quality remains at unhealthy levels.

“As of right now, the smoke models are not indicating another large plume over the city, so there’s a chance for significant improvement by tomorrow morning and throughout the day tomorrow,” Adams said Thursday. He urged residents to continue masking outdoors, preferably with an N95 mask, which city officials were providing on Wednesday.

Some schools are closing or taking precautions to limit exposure to poor air quality conditions.

Children in New York City have a planned day off Thursday. On Friday, some students that had been scheduled for in-school instruction in the city will go remote. Two school districts in New Jersey have closed due to poor air quality. Other districts are canceling after-school programs or outdoor activities and field trips. The School District of Philadelphia is encouraging students to wear masks on their way to school Thursday morning.

00:52 - Source: CNN
See timelapse of NYC disappearing into cloud of wildfire smoke

Smoke from the wildfires has delivered some of the poorest air quality measures in decades, said Mark Zondlo, an atmospheric chemist specializing in air quality monitoring and professor of civil and environmental engineering at Princeton University.

“What’s making it really unique – aside from the fires being huge by themselves – is the air is staying really close to the ground. So, instead of being wafted up and dispersing throughout the atmosphere or being in the layer 10,000 feet above us, it’s basically hugging the ground, and therefore it’s not dispersing,” Zondlo told CNN.

“The weather pattern is such that it’s funneling that smoke plume, keeping it tight close to the ground, and it’s coming for a bullseye right for us.”

Air quality in Canada has been on the decline as the ferocious blazes triggered evacuation orders, including for about 7,000 people in the Quebecois town of Chibougamau.

US President Joe Biden and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau discussed the wildfires’ impacts on air quality Wednesday, according to a statement from Trudeau’s office.

“Both leaders acknowledged the need to work together to address the devastating impacts of climate change,” the statement read.

Ed Jones/AFP/Getty Images
People look out at a hazy Manhattan skyline from the Rockefeller Center viewing deck Friday, June 30, in New York.
David Dee Delgado/Getty Images North America/Getty Images
Smoke from wildfires in Canada shrouds the view of the Statue of Liberty on Friday in New York.
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The setting sun is shrouded by smoke from Canadian wildfires in this photo taken from New York's 42nd Street on Thursday, June 29.
Gene J. Puskar/AP
Haze hangs over downtown Pittsburgh and PNC Park as fans take their seats before a Major League Baseball game between the Pittsburgh Pirates and the San Diego Padres on June 29.
Jim Watson/AFP/Getty Images
Traffic makes its way across the Chesapeake Bay Bridge in Stevensville, Maryland, on June 29.
Megan Smith/USA Today Network
Smoke and haze is seen from the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, DC, on Tuesday, June 27.
Kamil Krzaczynski/AFP/Getty Images
People in Chicago walk along the shoreline of Lake Michigan on June 27.
Cpl Marc-Andre Leclerc/Canadian Forces/Reuters
A Canadian soldier flies over a wildfire near Mistissini, Quebec, on June 12.
Xinhua/Shutterstock
Wildfires burn in British Columbia in this aerial photo released by the BC Wildfire Service on June 9.
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A jogger wears a face mask in Washington, DC, on June 9.
Shannon Stapleton/Reuters
A man wears a protective face mask while walking through Times Square in New York on June 8.
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An airplane takes off June 8 from Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport in Arlington, Virginia.
Matt McClain/The Washington Post/Getty Images
Traffic heads into Washington, DC, under hazy conditions on June 8.
Emmalee Reed/CNN
Smoke from Canadian wildfires obscures the visibility in Pittsburgh on June 8.
Hannah Beier/Bloomberg/Getty Images
Buildings in the Philadelphia skyline are shrouded in smoke on June 8.
Mandel Ngan/AFP via Getty Images
A cyclist rides under a blanket of haze that was partially obscuring the US Capitol on June 8.
Timothy A. Clary/AFP via Getty Images
A woman in New York City wears a mask during the morning rush hour on June 8. The city saw slight air quality improvements, but levels were still considered "very unhealthy" for residents.
Mike Segar/Reuters
The One World Trade Center tower is seen in New York, shortly after sunrise on June 8.
John Minchillo/AP
A starting gate is unused at Belmont Park in Elmont, New York, on June 8.
Seth Wenig/AP
Transit employee Shanita Hancle, left, hands out masks to commuters at a subway station in New York on June 8.
Matt Rourke/AP
The Philadelphia skyline is shrouded in haze on June 8.
Ting Shen/Bloomberg via Getty Images
A smoky haze obscures M&T Bank Stadium in Baltimore on June 8.
Alberta Wildfire/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock
Firefighters battle a wildfire in Evansburg, Alberta, on June 8.
David Dee Delgado/Getty Images
A person on the New York City subway wears a mask as smoky haze blankets a neighborhood on June 7.
Matt Slocum/AP
Workers chain up seats at Citizens Bank Park after the Philadelphia Phillies postponed a baseball game because of poor air quality on June 7. The New York Yankees also postponed a game that night.
Amr Alfiky/Reuters
Two men stand by the waterfront in Brooklyn, New York, on June 7.
David Dee Delgado/Getty Images
Smoky haze affects the visibility of the Empire State Building in New York on June 7.
John Meore/The Journal News/USA Today Network
A man in Piermont, New York, attempts to photograph the sun obscured by smoke on June 7.
Leah Millis/Reuters
Smoke blankets the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool and the National Mall on June 7.
Seth Wenig/AP
A person in Fort Lee, New Jersey, talks on the phone near the George Washington Bridge on June 7.
Peter Carr/The Journal News/USA Today Network
Smoke obscures the view from the New York State Thruway, looking north from West Nyack on June 7.
Yuki Iwamura/AP
People wear face masks as they walk in New York's Herald Square on June 7.
Mike Segar/Reuters
A woman jogs along the Hudson River as a smoky haze hangs over the New York City skyline shortly after sunrise on June 7.
Kareem Elgazzar/The Cincinnati Enquirer/USA Today Network
A couple sits for lunch in Cincinnati on June 6. Smoke from the Canadian wildfires had drifted to the city, causing the air to appear hazy.
Carlos Osorio/Reuters
People at Toronto's CN Tower take photos of the smoky city on June 6.
Frank Franklin II/AP
The sky is discolored during a New York Yankees baseball game on June 6.
Merrily Cassidy/Cape Cod Times/USA Today Network
A smoky sky provides a muted backdrop June 6 at Rock Harbor in Massachusetts. Skies over Cape Cod were filled with smoke from the wildfires in Canada.
Selcuk Acar/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
People in New York wear masks as they ride bikes on June 6. That morning, the city briefly had the world's worst levels of air pollution.
Amr Alfiky/Reuters
The Statue of Liberty is obscured by the air pollution in New York on June 6.
Spencer Colby/The Canadian Press via AP
Wildfire smoke engulfs downtown Ottawa on June 5.
B.C. Wildfire Service via Reuters
Smoke billows upwards from a planned ignition by firefighters who were tackling the Donnie Creek Complex wildfire south of Fort Nelson, British Columbia, on June 3.
Communications Nova Scotia via Reuters
Firefighter Jason Rock sprays hot spots in the Birchtown area while tackling wildfires in Shelburne County, Nova Scotia, on June 3.
NASA
An astronaut aboard the International Space Station took this photo of wildfire smoke near Shelburne, Nova Scotia, on May 29. Human-caused climate change has exacerbated the hot and dry conditions that allow wildfires to ignite and grow.
B.C. Wildfire Service via Reuters
Smoke rises from a wildfire in Fort Nelson on May 27.
Kamloops Fire Rescue via Reuters
Firefighters stand on a truck while battling a blaze near Fort St. John, British Columbia, on May 14.
Anne-Sophie Thill/AFP via Getty Images
BJ Fuchs, a farmer who has lost some land and had to move his cattle due to the wildfires, stands in Shining Bank, Alberta, on May 11.

Biden has directed federal firefighting resources to aid in stopping the fires, the White House said, adding that more than 600 firefighters and support personnel have already been deployed.

Biden on Thursday said it’s “very important” that communities impacted by the air pollution heed local guidance and check on their neighbors.

Meanwhile, New York state is sending forest rangers to Canada to help fight the wildfires in Quebec, Hochul announced Thursday. The first responders will depart from the Saratoga fire department on Friday.

View this interactive content on CNN.com

Wildfires that lead to such poor air quality have become more common and severe as the planet warms from the impacts of human-induced climate change, experts have said.

“We typically see these impacts with wildfires in the Western US and in the Mountain West,” said Dr. Peter DeCarlo, an associate professor in the Department of Environmental Health and Engineering at Johns Hopkins University.

“The East Coast is generally a little bit more insulated from this type of thing. Our forests tend to be wetter and don’t burn as much, but looking forward with climate change, while this is kind of a unique experience that we’re seeing right now, it may become a lot less unique and a little bit more common in the future.”

CNN’s Ray Sanchez, Dave Hennen, Laura Ly, Robert Shackelford, Laura Ly, Rachel Ramirez, Meg Tirrell, Sara Smart, Mitchell McCluskey, DJ Judd, Jen Christensen, Paula Newton, Liam Reilly, Dugald McConnell and Brandon Miller contributed to this report.