Albuquerque Journal

Southwest gears for high heat

120-plus degrees expected in region

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

LOS ANGELES — When you’re bracing for 120 degrees, it’s all about the water.

Drinking it, splashing in it to stay cool, and drinking it some more. A lot more.

That’s what officials were urging and residents were planning Friday as a potentiall­y record-shattering heat wave started enveloping the southweter­n United States and threatened to bring temperatur­es of more than 120 degrees to parts of Arizona and California next week.

People in places like Palm Springs and Phoenix are used to seriously high temperatur­es, but 120 degrees becomes all the talk around the water cooler. And with the health dangers of heat and dehydratio­n, that’s where authoritie­s hope they keep coming back.

Teresa Flores in Phoenix said she will make sure her three kids stay hydrated.

“Water, water, water, water,” Flores said. “So even when they think they’re not thirsty, they’re drinking water.”

Strong high pressure building over Western states is bringing the hot onslaught. Officials warned of excessive heat across southern portions of Arizona and Nevada, and throughout the 450-mile length of California’s Central Valley. Above-normal temperatur­es were forecast for almost the entire Golden State.

With up to 122 on the horizon, Palm Springs will have cooling centers in community centers and libraries, and Phoenix and nonprofit groups are planning water stations to help the homeless and others.

The National Weather Service in Phoenix said the last time the temperatur­e topped 120 was 1995, at 121. The record high is 122 degrees, set on June 26, 1990.

In the Arizona desert near the Mexican border, the heat can be so deadly that the Border Patrol reassigns agents to areas that are especially dangerous for immigrants.

 ?? ROSS D. FRANKLIN/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Hikers brave the afternoon sun as temperatur­es reached 110 degrees Thursday in Phoenix.
ROSS D. FRANKLIN/ASSOCIATED PRESS Hikers brave the afternoon sun as temperatur­es reached 110 degrees Thursday in Phoenix.

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