Penticton Herald

High heat slams France, Britain

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LONDON — Residents and visitors in Britain sought refuge from searing heat Friday, with thousands mobbing beaches and parks despite warnings to maintain social distance and other precaution­s during the COVID-19 pandemic.

With the U.K.’s infection rate limiting the ability of its citizens to travel abroad, temperatur­es that rose to 36.4 degrees Celsius (97.5 degrees Fahrenheit) at Heathrow Airport and Kew Gardens produced a larger than normal August population seeking places to cool off.

Her Majesty’s Coastguard responded to 70 calls by midday.

“The beaches across the whole of the southwest are extremely busy at the moment with both locals who are holidaying at home this year and an influx of visitors to the region,” said Kitty Norman, a water safety expert at the the Royal National Lifeboat Institutio­n. “The sheer volume of people making social distancing tricky is one thing to be conscious of before planning your trip to the beach.”

The National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers said it expects a surge of passengers to the beaches from Blackpool to Southend and Brighton to Bournemout­h this weekend as the heatwave continues.

“It is important that the Public Health England COVID-19 safety standards are maintained at all times,” union senior assistant general secretary Mick Lynch said. “The combinatio­n of sun and alcohol is a clear threat to that.”

The mercury was also rising in France, where the national meteorolog­ical service Meteo-France placed 45 department­s, including Paris and its inner suburbs, on orange alert warning the public should be vigilant for a heatwave. Temperatur­es were set to rise to 42 degrees Celsius (107 F) in parts of the country.

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