Imperial Valley Press

Southern California hit by heat wave

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LOS ANGELES (AP) — Southern California sizzled Friday in record-breaking heat from the desert to the sea, with widespread triple-digit highs and withering conditions that stoked wildfires.

Officials urged people to take advantage of cooling centers in libraries and other facilities and to watch out for the elderly and very young, warning that minor heat-related illnesses can worsen quickly.

Sidewalks and outdoor lunch tables were left to the blazing sun.

“There are no people,” said Gloria Aguilar, 37, a food vendor in the Los Angeles piñata district. “Because it’s too hot, and they want to stay inside the house. We sell more water than the food.”

Firefighte­rs worked in extreme temperatur­es as they battled outbreaks of wildfires, including a destructiv­e blaze in the San Diego County community of Alpine and another that spread from a truck fire on Interstate 15 in Cajon Pass east of Los Angeles.

Torrid conditions were expected to last through Saturday before easing a bit Sunday.

The heat was being produced by a “humongous” dome of high pressure that was also spreading oppressive conditions into parts of Arizona, Nevada and Utah, the National Weather Service said.

“Today will be one for the record books,” the Los Angeles region weather office said before sunrise — and within a few hours records began to fall.

In downtown Los Angeles, it was only 10:15 a.m. when the mercury topped the July 6 mark of 94 degrees set in 1992 and kept on rising, hitting 100 before noon and continuing upward.

LA’s Woodland Hills neighborho­od was a record 115 degrees (46.1 Celsius) by early afternoon, just a few degrees behind the 119 punishing the aptly named community of Thermal in the low desert southeast of Palm Springs.

Southeast of Los Angeles in Orange County, Los Alamitos Race Course canceled daytime racing after two races because of the heat.

The offshore flow of air pushing back the normal moderating influence of the Pacific Ocean had produced startling early morning temperatur­es: At 3 a.m., it was 98 degrees in Gaviota on the Santa Barbara County coast about 125 miles west of Los Angeles, the weather service said.

While beaches offered relief from the furnace-like conditions, forecaster­s warned that a lingering south swell from former Hurricane Fabio would continue to combine with a local northwest swell to produce dangerous rip currents and the possibilit­y of sneaker waves.

Residents toughing it out in the valleys around Los Angeles and in the inland region to the east faced the possibilit­y of unhealthy air quality.

Air pollution regulators said the conditions were likely to produce an atmospheri­c inversion that would increase ground-level ozone, which is linked to a host of respirator­y troubles ranging from trouble breathing to asthma attacks.

The highest fire danger stretched from Los Angeles County westward into several counties up the coast where a north wind added another element to the mix of hot, dry air and parched vegetation.

Elsewhere, the fire risk was characteri­zed as elevated.

An additional threat was likely to develop by Sunday with the arrival of seasonal monsoonal moisture and the possibilit­y of thundersto­rms.

“Any lighting strike is going to be a concern,” said Alex Tardy, a meteorolog­ist with National Weather Service in San Diego.

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 ?? PHOTO/ ?? A constructi­on worker rehydrates on site during a blistering day of heat in downtown Los Angeles on Friday. Southern California baked Friday under a heat wave that forecaster­s correctly predicted would be one for the record books, with widespread triple-digit highs and increased fire danger. AP RICHARD VOGEL
PHOTO/ A constructi­on worker rehydrates on site during a blistering day of heat in downtown Los Angeles on Friday. Southern California baked Friday under a heat wave that forecaster­s correctly predicted would be one for the record books, with widespread triple-digit highs and increased fire danger. AP RICHARD VOGEL

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