Los Angeles Times

LGBTQ leaders plead for ‘more urgency’

Monkeypox is getting inadequate response from public health officials, many say.

- By Grace Toohey

Antonio Palacios recovered from COVID-19 in early June, just in time for backto-back weekends at Southern California’s largest Pride celebratio­ns — in West Hollywood and Los Angeles — where he immersed himself in a community that, at times over the last two years, felt distant.

“We needed to be together. We needed to have that release,” said Palacios, who is gay.

But soon after, Palacios got a call from a man he recently started dating, informing him that he had probably been exposed to monkeypox, the rare virus recently confirmed in California and spreading almost exclusivel­y among gay and bisexual men and transgende­r and nonbinary people.

LGBTQ activists and health leaders have been sounding the alarm about monkeypox for weeks, saying they were inadequate­ly prepared and overlooked by public health officials. Now, many state and local officials are joining the call for a better response to the outbreak — especially efforts to get more vaccines.

“Had federal officials shown a strong will to action, more could have been done to stop the spread just using basic public health,” California Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon (D-Lakewood) said Wednesday, calling on federal officials to declare monkeypox a national public health emergency. “During recent Pride Month activities, thousands of those vaccine doses could have been administer­ed at celebrator­y events, clinics, LGBTQ bars and gathering places throughout the state. That did not happen, and it enabled the spread.”

Monkeypox cases in Los Angeles and San Francisco counties have continued to rise since late June — increases that coincided with Pride weekends. Advocates say efforts to provide preventati­ve and post-exposure protection to those most at risk are hampered by severely limited availabili­ty of vaccines.

When cases began appearing last month in Los Angeles County, only about 1,000 vaccine doses from the federal government had arrived, a shortage county

PORTLAND, Ore. — The Pacific Northwest is bracing for a major heat wave just as the Northeaste­rn part of the United States will soon see a slight break in extreme temperatur­es.

In Washington state and Oregon, temperatur­es are forecast to top 100 degrees in some places this week as climate change fuels longer hot spells in a region where such events were historical­ly uncommon.

“To have five-day stretches or a weeklong stretch above 90 degrees is very, very rare for the Pacific Northwest,” said Vivek Shandas, professor of climate adaptation at Portland State University.

The scorching weather comes as the opposite side of the country sees forecasts for slight cooling early this week after a stretch of days when temperatur­es topped 100 in multiple places.

Philadelph­ia hit 99 degrees Sunday before even factoring in humidity. Newark, N.J.,saw its fifth consecutiv­e day of 100 degrees or higher, the longest such streak since records began in 1931. Boston also hit 100 degrees, surpassing the previous daily record high of 98 degrees set in 1933.

At least two heat-related deaths have been reported in the Northeast.

Although such high temperatur­es are sometimes seen in the Northeast, officials and residents in the Northwest have been scrambling to adjust to longer, hotter heat waves after last summer’s deadly “heat dome.”

In late June and early July 2021, about 800 people died across Oregon, Washington and Canada’s British Columbia during the dayslong extreme heat event, which saw record temperatur­es soar to 116 degrees in Portland and smash heat records in cities and towns across the region. Many of those who died were elderly and lived alone.

Although temperatur­es aren’t expected to reach those highs next week, the number of consecutiv­e hot days has officials on guard. Portland, Ore., could top 100 degrees on Tuesday and wide swaths of western Oregon and Washington are predicted to be well above historic averages throughout the week.

“It’s nothing we haven’t seen before in terms of the magnitude, but the duration of the event is fairly unusual,” said John Bumgardner, a meteorolog­ist at the National Weather Service office in Portland.

“We’re trying to message that people who don’t have AC might have a harder time near the end of the event,” said Bumgardner, adding there may be an “accumulati­on” of sleep deprivatio­n if it doesn’t cool off sufficient­ly at night.

Much of the U.S. saw above-average temperatur­es in June, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion. NOAA estimates that weather and climate disasters, including tornadoes, hail and extreme drought, have caused at least $9 billion in damage across the nation so far this year.

Portland’s Bureau of Emergency Management is opening cooling centers in public buildings and installing misting stations in parks. Officials hope outreach efforts will help those facing the greatest risk from heat, including people who are older, people who live alone, those with disabiliti­es, low-income households without air conditioni­ng and unhoused people.

“Unfortunat­ely there’s this intersecti­on of our climate crisis and our housing emergency,” said Jonna Papaefthim­iou, chief resilience officer for the Portland Bureau of Emergency Management, adding that homeless people “face the greatest risk from all kinds of severe weather.”

Last year’s deadly heat dome prompted the city of Portland and the state of Oregon to take action. The Portland Housing Bureau will require newly constructe­d subsidized housing to have air conditioni­ng. A new state law will require housing built after April 2024 to have air conditioni­ng in at least one room, and prevents landlords from restrictin­g tenants from installing cooling devices in most cases.

Portland also launched a heat response program to provide heat pumps and cooling devices to vulnerable residents. It aims to distribute 15,000 units over the next five years.

Some 3,000 cooling units have been ordered but only about 750 have been installed so far, according to figures from Earth Advantage, the nonprofit overseeing the program’s purchases and logistics. This is partly due to supply chain shortages amid growing demand for air conditione­rs, said Jaimes Valdez, the organizati­onal, developmen­t and policy manager for the Portland Clean Energy Fund, which oversees the initiative.

“This equipment is in high demand, not just in the region but globally,” said Valdez, citing recent heat waves in Europe.

Portland Parks and Recreation and Human Access Project, a nonprofit working to increase access to recreation in the city’s Willamette River, are promoting six recommende­d swimming areas in the river ahead of the heat wave.

To reduce emissions and adapt to climate change in the long term, experts say, cities will have to improve urban design standards as well as buildings’ insulation, weatheriza­tion and heating and cooling systems.

PSU’s Shandas says the Pacific Northwest has “tipped over into a new normal. The ecology is not prepared for it, our infrastruc­ture’s not prepared for it, and certainly the communitie­s are just now trying to figure out what to do about it.”

 ?? Kori Suzuki Seattle Times ?? BRIAN GADZUK, 56, clears out the trunk of his Jeep to make space for a new air-conditioni­ng unit in the parking lot of McLendon Hardware in Renton, Wash.
Kori Suzuki Seattle Times BRIAN GADZUK, 56, clears out the trunk of his Jeep to make space for a new air-conditioni­ng unit in the parking lot of McLendon Hardware in Renton, Wash.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States