Houston Chronicle Sunday

Nation takes precaution­s amid heat wave

- By Rick Rojas and Michael Gold

NEW YORK — Alberto Reyes fumed. He had paid $50 yesterday to have his air conditione­r checked at an electronic­s repair shop in Brooklyn to make sure it would be ready for the heat. He took it home and turned it on. Only hot air came out. Now he was back in the shop, his blue polo shirt stained a few shades darker by sweat.

“The fan is useless,” Reyes complained in Spanish, pacing inside the graffiti-tagged warehouse of a store, where old AC units were piled outside. On a day like Saturday, as New York City and much of the country struggled to ride out a heat wave, Reyes saw his patience melt. “One cannot breathe properly without an AC,” he said.

New York roasted Saturday as the heat approached 100 degrees, and thanks to air thickened by humidity, it felt even hotter. For some, the heat brought only discomfort. Yet officials feared far more perilous consequenc­es. Mayor Bill de Blasio declared a state of emergency lasting through the weekend, saying in a news conference Friday, “We have not seen temperatur­es like this in at least seven years.”

Hundreds of cooling centers were opened to protect those most vulnerable to the heat, like older people and the homeless. But lawyers and activists complained that inmates in the city’s jails stifled in units without air conditioni­ng and, in many cases, while still having to wear uniforms with long sleeves and pants. There were also worries about an overuse of electricit­y jeopardizi­ng the city’s power system, threatenin­g a blackout.

Still, New York pulsed with life. The heat did little to stop some New Yorkers from venturing into the streets, however sweaty they might be. They filled museums, formed lines around the block for community pools and went to work.

“The bills have to be paid,” said Ron Mason, 51, a parks worker in a fairly empty Marcus Garvey Park in Harlem, wearing long pants, long sleeves and work gloves. “So, regardless of if it’s burning hot or freezing cold, I’ve got to be out here.”

Extreme heat blanketed much of the continent, stretching as far as the Great Lakes and the Texas Panhandle. Across that swath of the country, the authoritie­s mobilized in the same ways as they did in New York. In Washington, homeless people were ushered into shelters. In Boston, officials there also declared a heat emergency and opened cooling centers. In South Dakota, local officials had to shut down a busy interstate after the pavement buckled under the heat.

Already, the heat has led to several deaths across the country.

A former player for the New York Giants died in Arkansas on Thursday from a heat stroke. The player, Mitch Petrus, 32, had been working outside his family’s shop in his hometown outside Little Rock. And an air conditione­r technician was found in an attic where he had been working in a suburb of Phoenix, and authoritie­s there said his death was likely caused by the heat.

Meteorolog­ists have predicted a miserable weekend, as a dreadful mix of soaring temperatur­es and high humidity will create heat indexes as high as 115 degrees in some places. Relief is not expected before the weekend is out. Rain is forecast Monday for many of the areas hit by the heat wave, including New York.

The paved environs of New York made it all even worse. High temperatur­es can feel particular­ly brutal thanks to the urban heat island effect, in which heat absorbed by asphalt and concrete makes cities significan­tly hotter than nearby suburbs — particular­ly at night, when the temperatur­e gap can be as wide as 22 degrees.

The scorching temperatur­es this weekend interrupt a summer that has, so far, been a season marked by relentless storms. The stifling humidity arrived amid an excessive heat warning for the greater New York City area that began Friday afternoon and was scheduled to last through Sunday evening.

The heat prompted the cancellati­on of OZY Fest, a hybrid musiclectu­re-food festival that had been expected to draw tens of thousands to the Great Lawn of Central Park over the weekend. The New York City Triathlon was also canceled. The horse races at Saratoga Race Course were called off as well, the first time they have been canceled over extreme heat in more than a decade.

To help residents and visitors, city officials said they had set up nearly 500 cooling centers for those without air-conditioni­ng to cool off. They also promised to put portable water fountains in places with heavy foot traffic, and issued a Code Red extreme heat alert to expand outreach efforts to homeless people, including the promise of transporta­tion to cooling areas at shelters. The parks department said it would keep sprinklers in parks running, and extended the hours of city pools and beaches.

 ?? Abel Uribe / Associated Press ?? Children rush the water flow Saturday at Millennium Park during the height of a heat wave in Chicago. Multiple cities have issued states of emergencie­s because of rising temperatur­es.
Abel Uribe / Associated Press Children rush the water flow Saturday at Millennium Park during the height of a heat wave in Chicago. Multiple cities have issued states of emergencie­s because of rising temperatur­es.
 ?? Byron Smith / New York Times ?? Haylie Kwaak, 8, floats Saturday in the Astoria Pool in New York. Meteorolog­ists have predicted heat indexes as high as 115 degress.
Byron Smith / New York Times Haylie Kwaak, 8, floats Saturday in the Astoria Pool in New York. Meteorolog­ists have predicted heat indexes as high as 115 degress.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States