Albuquerque Journal

Heat wave worsening for weekend

More than 100 records expected to fall across much of U.S.

- BY COREY WILLIAMS AND SETH BORENSTEIN ASSOCIATED PRESS

DETROIT — The heat wave that has been roasting much of the U.S. in recent days is just getting warmed up, with temperatur­es expected to soar to dangerous levels through the weekend.

Communitie­s are preparing by offering buildings as cooling centers and asking residents to check in on relatives and neighbors. Officials also are concerned about smog, which is exacerbate­d by the heat and makes it more difficult for certain people to breathe, including the very young, the elderly and people with asthma or lung diseases.

More than 100 local heat records are expected to fall Saturday, according to the National Weather Service. Most won’t be record daily highs but record-high nighttime lows, and that lack of cooling can be dangerous, meteorolog­ists say. Temperatur­es in parts of the East won’t drop below the mid- to upper 70s or even 80 degrees at night, he said.

The heat wave will likely be “short and searing,” said Greg Carbin, forecast branch chief for the weather service’s Weather Prediction Center.

A high-pressure system stretching from coast to coast is keeping the heat turned on. The heat and humidity are made to feel worse by the large amount of moisture in the air coming from the Gulf of Mexico, much of it left over from Hurricane Barry.

The heat index, which is what the temperatur­e feels like, is expected to hit 110 in Washington, D.C., on Saturday and 109 in Chicago and Detroit on Friday, said Jeff Masters, meteorolog­y director of Weather Undergroun­d. Wednesday marked Washington’s seventh straight day with temperatur­es of at least 90 degrees, and that streak was expected to last for another five days.

An experiment­al weather service forecast projects that nearly 100 local records will be broken today and Friday in Texas, Oklahoma, parts of the Midwest and a large swath of the East Coast. On Saturday, 101 records could fall in an area stretching from Texas to Iowa and east to Maine and Florida, according to projection­s.

The Environmen­tal Protection Agency’s air quality tracker reported that the air was “unhealthy” Wednesday for sensitive groups in a stretch of the East Coast from Baltimore to Bridgeport, Connecticu­t, including Philadelph­ia and New York City.

Such heat can be deadly. Over three days in July 1995, more than 700 people died during a heat wave in Chicago as temperatur­es rose above 97 degrees. Many of the dead were poor, elderly and lived alone.

Roger Axe, who heads the emergency management agency in Indiana’s Greene County, said he has asked churches and other organizati­ons to open their doors as “possible lifesaving cooling centers.”

 ?? SETH WENIG/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Russ Wilson cools off at a fountain in New York City on Wednesday as temperatur­es in the 90s were made more unbearable by higher-thannormal humidity.
SETH WENIG/ASSOCIATED PRESS Russ Wilson cools off at a fountain in New York City on Wednesday as temperatur­es in the 90s were made more unbearable by higher-thannormal humidity.

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