Los Angeles Times

‘96 hours of hot temperatur­es’

This week’s heat wave will be longer but less intense than the one earlier this month.

- By Joseph Serna and Laura Newberry joseph.serna@latimes.com laura.newberry@latimes.com

This week’s heat wave will be longer but less intense than the one earlier this month.

Health officials issued a heat alert for Los Angeles County’s inland valleys Monday, warning that a multiday heat wave expected for Southern California this week will put the community’s most vulnerable residents at risk.

Temperatur­es aren’t expected to be quite as blistering as they were during a heat wave that shattered records two weekends ago, but the one expected this week will last longer and reach from the San Gabriel Valley and high desert to the coast, the National Weather Service said.

“It’s not going to cool off at night. Just 96 hours of hot temperatur­es,” meteorolog­ist Andrew Rorke warned. “If you can survive to the weekend you might get a little relief.”

Monday could be as much as 8 degrees warmer than it was Sunday, Rorke said. It was expected to be 92 degrees in downtown Los Angeles and 105 degrees in Woodland Hills.

The heat wave will peak Tuesday and Wednesday, when temperatur­es will hit 94 each day downtown and 107 in Woodland Hills, Rorke said.

This week’s heat wave isn’t expected to cause any major outages, said Marty Adams, chief operating officer for the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power.

Adams said the DWP is making sure the city has adequate power supplies and will balance electricit­y going to different neighborho­ods. That way, no one area will be overwhelme­d, or at least that’s the plan.

The DWP is most closely monitoring Mid-City, where the power grid was hit the worst during the extreme heat wave that gripped the city earlier this month. Department staff are working 12-hour days there, Adams said, fixing potential weak links in the circuitry.

Usually, the L.A. power grid cools down overnight, giving the equipment some rest, Adams said. But when there’s a heat wave, the grid can become overwhelme­d without that reprieve — much like how an extension cord is hot to the touch when it’s been used heavily — and malfunctio­n.

DWP customers can help prevent that overload by using less electricit­y at peak times, from 2 to 9 p.m., Adams said.

That’s especially important during a heat wave, when people are using more energy than usual to air-condition their homes.

“Don’t do laundry, don’t use certain appliances if you don’t have to,” Adams said. And keep your thermostat at 78 degrees, if you can bear it, he added.

Also, on Monday, the California Independen­t System Operator, which runs the electrical grid and shares responsibi­lities for preventing blackouts and brownouts, issued flex alerts for Tuesday and Wednesday from 5 to 9 p.m. During those periods, consumers are urged to voluntaril­y scale back their power usage.

The Los Angeles County Department of Public Health issued a heat alert Monday and Tuesday for residents in the Antelope, Santa Clarita, San Fernando and San Gabriel valleys and Pomona. Downtown Los Angeles was included in Tuesday’s heat alert.

“When temperatur­es are high, even a few hours of exertion may cause severe dehydratio­n, heat cramps, heat exhaustion and heatstroke. Others who are frail or have chronic health conditions may develop serious health problems leading to death if they are exposed to high temperatur­es over several days,” the county’s interim health officer, Jeffrey Gunzenhaus­er, said in a statement.

“Thus, it is critically important to never leave children, elderly people or pets unattended in homes with no air conditioni­ng and particular­ly in vehicles, even if the windows are ‘cracked’ or open, as temperatur­es inside can quickly rise to lifethreat­ening levels.”

Not only will there be little relief from the heat overnight, but also the air will be dry and windy inland, which sucks moisture out of vegetation and primes the landscape for a fast-moving brush fire.

“It’s just piling on the bad news,” Rorke said.

Much of Los Angeles County will probably be above 80 degrees until after midnight, he said.

The winds that will pose fire dangers inland will be absent along the coast, which ironically might make it a worse place to be this week because few coastal residents have air conditioni­ng, Rorke said.

“The sea breeze will be nonexisten­t,” he said.

A 1- or 2-degree dip in the heat is expected Thursday, but temperatur­es won’t noticeably begin to decrease until Friday, Rorke said.

A marine layer could return to the region by the weekend.

On top of L.A. County’s heat alert, the National Weather Service issued its own heat warning from Tuesday through Thursday for Kern, Santa Barbara, Ventura, San Bernardino, Riverside, Orange and San Diego counties.

 ?? Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times ?? ISABEL GONZALEZ, 11, of Los Angeles enjoys the cool water while taking junior lifeguard training at Celes King III swimming pool in L.A. on Monday, the first day of a heat wave expected to last through the week.
Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times ISABEL GONZALEZ, 11, of Los Angeles enjoys the cool water while taking junior lifeguard training at Celes King III swimming pool in L.A. on Monday, the first day of a heat wave expected to last through the week.

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