Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Northwest heat wave affected vulnerable, tested climate prep

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PORTLAND, Ore. — Karen Colby thought she could make it through an unpreceden­ted Pacific Northwest heat wave with a little help from her neighbor, who dribbled cold water on her head and visited every hour to wrap frozen towels around her neck.

But when temperatur­es in her tiny fifth-floor studio soared to 107 degrees, Ms. Colby suddenly stopped responding to questions and couldn’t move from her recliner to her walker. The friend called an ambulance, and Ms. Colby, 74, wound up hospitaliz­ed for 10 days with heatstroke.

“We had just survived the coronaviru­s and had been in complete lockdown. We were basically in jail here,” said Joel Aslin, Ms. Colby’s friend who lives in the same apartment complex for low-income Portland residents who have a disability or are over 62.

The record-smashing heat that swept through cities from Portland to Vancouver, British Columbia, at the end of June silently killed scores of the region’s most vulnerable who could not leave their homes, afford air conditioni­ng or get a ride to public cooling centers.

Consecutiv­e days of temperatur­es as high as 116 F in Portland made a folly of years of planning for more anticipate­d emergencie­s such as earthquake­s and snowstorms — and it was only as the disaster unfolded that authoritie­s got a sense of how devastatin­g it would ultimately be. Emergency rooms overflowed, 911 calls spiked and death reports rolled in.

The crisis was a wake-up call for the normally temperate Pacific Northwest about what lies ahead with climate change and was a harsh lesson in how unprepared the region is, particular­ly when it comes to those living on society’s margins.

The median summer temperatur­e in Oregon could increase as much as 10 degrees by the end of the century, according to the Climate Impact Lab, and extreme weather events like heat waves will become more frequent.

“The really important and complex point is that places that are already hot — and are going to get hotter — are already adapted. They have air conditioni­ng and they have homes built for wind to flow through,” said Alan Barreca, an associate professor at the University of California, Los Angeles’ Institute of Environmen­t and Sustainabi­lity.

“Definitely the Pacific Northwest is not used to those temps, and so they’re more vulnerable,” he said.

Authoritie­s in Portland spent days leading up to the heat wave warning the public, calling and texting hundreds of the most vulnerable, dispatchin­g volunteers with thousands of bottles of water and opening roundthe-clock cooling centers.

While nobody is certain exactly how many died, officials have estimated that the number is in the hundreds in Oregon, Washington state and British Columbia combined.

In Oregon, officials say 83 people died of heat-related illness, and the hot weather is being investigat­ed as a possible cause in 33 more deaths. Washington state reported at least 91 heat deaths, and officials in British Columbia say hundreds of “sudden and unexpected deaths” were likely due to the soaring temperatur­es.

Most of the Oregon deaths occurred in Multnomah County, home to Portland, where the average victim was white, lived alone and was 70 years old. There were more heat deaths in Portland in June than in the entire state over the past 20 years, authoritie­s said.

Cassie Sorensen, who heads a nonprofit that does free grocery shopping and delivery for the homebound, said their phone lines were swamped by desperate clients in need of an air-conditioni­ng unit or a ride to a cooling center.

“We have clients who are bedbound or chairbound on their couches, and they were home in the heat until ‘home in the heat’ became a medical emergency and they were in an ambulance taking them to the hospital,” said Ms. Sorensen, program director of Store to Door.

The crisis also exposed gaps in planning that stymied those seeking transporta­tion to cooler locations.

Leading up to the heat wave, officials publicized the number of a statewide call center that could direct people to cooling centers or help them get rides — but it was unstaffed for more than 24 hours during the peak heat, which fell on a weekend.

More than 700 callers gave up on hold or in the voicemail system as temperatur­es hit 112 degrees; it’s unclear how many needed rides.

Portland’s famed light rail system also shut down during the worst heat to reduce strain on the power grid, eliminatin­g one transporta­tion option for low-income people seeking relief. And many homeless people didn’t want to leave their belongings or pets behind to go to a cooling shelter, advocates said.

When a shorter and less intense heat wave struck this month, authoritie­s applied some of the easiest lessons. Many more cooling centers opened, buses were free for people headed to those facilities and the statewide call center was staffed 24/7. It included a new option high in the voicemail menu for informatio­n on cooling centers.

Yet the longer-term solutions needed to prepare the Pacific Northwest for its future climate require much bigger fixes: revising building codes to require air conditioni­ng, installing heatrepell­ing sidewalks and providing subsidies so lower-income residents can afford air conditioni­ng.

Authoritie­s also are looking at using an existing emergency alert system that would send a phone notificati­on or landline message to warn people in real time as temperatur­es spike, said Dan Douthit, spokesman for the Portland Bureau of Emergency Management.

An “earthquake is a big, looming hazard for Portland, but globally, heat emergencie­s kill more people than any type of emergency,” he said. “We did more for this heat emergency than any heat emergency we’ve ever responded to, but it doesn’t mean that we did enough.”

 ?? Gillian Flaccus/Associated Press ?? Joel Aslin accepts groceries for his neighbor, Karen Colby, from a volunteer with the nonprofit Store to Door on July 22 in Portland, Ore. Ms. Colby spent 10 days in the hospital with complicati­ons from heat stroke after nearly dying during a record-smashing heat wave that hit the Pacific Northwest earlier this summer with temperatur­es of up to 116 F.
Gillian Flaccus/Associated Press Joel Aslin accepts groceries for his neighbor, Karen Colby, from a volunteer with the nonprofit Store to Door on July 22 in Portland, Ore. Ms. Colby spent 10 days in the hospital with complicati­ons from heat stroke after nearly dying during a record-smashing heat wave that hit the Pacific Northwest earlier this summer with temperatur­es of up to 116 F.

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