The Arizona Republic

Supervisor: Valley must act amid deadly heat

Chairman aims to team with ASU on solutions

- Brandon Loomis Arizona Republic USA TODAY NETWORK

Central Arizona must adapt to increasing­ly dangerous heat waves, a top Maricopa County official says, and he’s pledging to work with Arizona State University to do it.

Heat doesn’t surprise anyone in a metro area that has always weathered triple-digit temperatur­es in summers, but the triple-digit death toll should, said Steve Chucri, who became chairman of the County Board of Supervisor­s this month. He considers the lengthenin­g season for extreme heat a challenge to both public health and economic developmen­t.

“We have to start paying attention,” said Chucri, a Paradise Valley Republican.

An Arizona Republic investigat­ion last fall found that a combinatio­n of global warming and urban growth’s

tendency to retain heat has extended Phoenix’s 100-degree season by six weeks over the past century. Last summer’s 25 days at or above 110 degrees represente­d about a doubling of the historical average.

At least 150 people in Maricopa County died of heat-related causes in 2016. For 2017, public-health officials have confirmed 129 heat-associated deaths, with 51 still under investigat­ion.

Chucri said he has visited the county morgue and was struck by the condition in which heat left the bodies of people who lived and died without air-conditioni­ng. He wants to work with ASU to determine how technology might minimize heat emitted by A/C units, and how market-friendly changes in building and shading Phoenix might cool public spaces.

ASU researcher­s have made Phoenix a leading center for urban-heat studies, and in recent months the university approached the county about teaming up for solutions, said Sethuraman Panchanath­an, the school’s executive vice president for research and innovation.

The university wants to take some of its research out of the laboratory and into heat-vulnerable neighborho­ods, he said. That would mean teaming with the county, cities and other partners to test cooler building designs, energy efficiency, bicycle and pedestrian connection­s, water-efficient greenery and heat-repelling pavements.

They’re just starting to meet and brainstorm.

“In addition to coming up with nice ideas, we’re also interested in determinin­g which ideas can be practicall­y implemente­d,” Panchanath­an said. “If we can address these things proactivel­y then we (in metro Phoenix) can rest assured that we have a bright future.”

Making physical changes to neighborho­ods will require the involvemen­t of local planners and developers.

“We need people to embrace these ideas,” Panchanath­an said.

Arizona officials of all political parties need to address and adapt to climate change, Chucri said. Otherwise, he said, the local climate — one of Arizona’s historical economic Five C’s, along with copper, cattle, cotton and citrus — could lose its luster for people and businesses looking to relocate.

“We have to figure this out,” he said. As a lifelong Arizonan, he added, “I want my kids to stay.”

Environmen­tal coverage on azcentral.com and in the Arizona Republic is supported by a grant from the Nina Mason Pulliam Charitable Trust. Follow the azcentral and Arizona Republic environmen­tal reporting team at OurGrandAZ on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

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