Detroit Free Press

Wildfire fallout in state is likely to worsen

If rain arrives over weekend, it could help to clear the air

- Detroit Free Press USA TODAY NETWORK

Frank Witsil, Christina Hall and Keith Matheny

Michigande­rs are seeing — and smelling — the dangerous smoke from wildfires burning hundreds of miles away in Canada while weather forecaster­s are warning more of that dangerous ash-filled air is likely headed toward the state Friday.

Weather watchers said the recent dry weather also makes conditions ripe for more woodland blazes.

Dave Rexroth, the chief meteorolog­ist at WXYZ-TV (Channel 7), predicted Thursday would be “about as bad or worse” as Wednesday and “it might even get worse on Friday.” During his 11 p.m. Wednesday broadcast he also blamed a weather pattern known as an omega block, because of its shape like the Greek character omega, for forcing the smoke down onto millions of Americans in the Midwest and along the East Coast.

Some relief, Rexroth and other forecaster­s said late Wednesday, could be coming to parts of Michigan as early as Sunday, with a 60%70% chance of much-needed rain that could last for two or three days, but it is challengin­g to predict weather more than a week out and conditions could change.

Rain, starting Sunday, could help clear the smoke and dangerous air, but also dampen the extreme wildfire conditions throughout Michigan that Department of Natural Resources officials have said they have not seen this bad, but once or twice before, in the nearly 50 years they have been monitoring it.

This past weekend, Gov. Gretchen Whitmer called for an “all-hands-on-deck response to the wildfires in northern Michigan” as a result of two forest fires in Crawford and Iosco counties, where especially dry conditions as a result of little rain had contribute­d to the danger.

Smoke blankets large swath of US

In New York, where the smoke was so thick Wednesday the sky in some cities appeared amber, a social media poster mentioned being about to “taste the air.” Other residents told news outlets it was “hard to breathe” and there were so many particles in the air it “looked like Mars.”

Dangerous smoke closed Northeaste­rn schools, held up flights at major airports and postponed Major League Baseball games in

New York and Philadelph­ia. The Women’s National Basketball Associatio­n called off a game in Brooklyn.

The hazy skies also prompted people to dig out their COVID-19 pandemic face masks to try to keep the ash out of their lungs as experts said the air quality conditions could exacerbate respirator­y problems, such as asthma and chronic obstructiv­e pulmonary disease.

Dr. Lawrence MacDonald, the chief of pulmonary medicine at DMC Huron Valley-Sinai Hospital in Commerce Township, reassured Michigan residents that, for the most part, they should not be affected and could handle added dust and allergens.

Is relief in sight?

National Weather Service meteorolog­ists added late Wednesday that relatively mild highs for this time of year, in the low to mid-70s, and wind gusts of only about 10-20 mph, should help mitigate the smoke’s spread for the next couple of days.

By Thursday morning, while local skies may have looked clearer, weather forecaster­s, said that the air quality was still unhealthy. It can be difficult, the experts said, to detect what’s in the air with the eye alone. Air quality, they added, was expected to improve slightly Thursday morning and afternoon, but get worse by early Friday.

Canadian officials have asked other countries to help it fighting more than 400 blazes that have displaced 20,000 people and reportedly stoked anxiety nationwide.

White House press secretary Karine JeanPierre said Wednesday that some assistance was on the way. President Joe Biden, she said, is sending more than 600 firefighte­rs and equipment to Canada, and the administra­tion also has contacted some U.S. governors and local officials about providing assistance.

And in Detroit, where the air quality ranked Wednesday among some of the worst of metropolit­an areas in the world, weather watchers ominiously warned that the lingering haze and orangey sun, could be foreshadow­ing what’s to come in the future if more, over time, isn’t done to address climate change.

“This is one of the things that has been highlighte­d as the threat for the region and for the country moving forward in the coming decades,” Trent Frey, a weather service meteorolog­ist in White Lake, said. “Models are projecting that there’s going to be a higher risk for wildfires, as the climate warms in parts of Canada and the United States.”

Contact Frank Witsil: 313-222-5022 or fwitsil@freepress.com. The Associated Press contribute­d.

 ?? SETH WENIG/AP ?? A man talks on his phone as he looks through the haze at the George Washington Bridge from Englewood Cliffs, N.J.
SETH WENIG/AP A man talks on his phone as he looks through the haze at the George Washington Bridge from Englewood Cliffs, N.J.

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