Los Angeles Times

Newsom signs slate of bills on extreme heat

Among the measures, California will launch nation’s first statewide warning system.

- By Hannah Fry and Phil Willon

SACRAMENTO — As much of the West continued to swelter in a record-breaking heat wave, Gov. Gavin Newsom on Friday signed a package of legislatio­n aimed at protecting California­ns from extreme heat, including establishi­ng a statewide warning system by 2025 and conducting a study on the effects of sizzling temperatur­es on workers.

Although the National Weather Service issues heat advisories to warn Americans about precaution­s they should take when temperatur­es spike, the state’s warning system will be the first of its kind in the nation, modeled after similar alerts issued for wildfires and hurricanes.

Under Assembly Bill 2238, the California Environmen­tal Protection Agency will create a system to rank heat events, including their severity and health danger, to help local government­s act to protect the vulnerable.

“This week’s unpreceden­ted heat wave is a painful reminder of the costs and impacts of climate change — and it won’t be the last,” Newsom said in a statement Friday. “California is taking aggressive action to combat the climate crisis and build resilience in our most vulnerable communitie­s, including a comprehens­ive strategy to protect California­ns from extreme heat. With lives and livelihood­s on the line, we cannot afford to delay.”

The actions come amid the most severe and wide

spread heat wave to hit California this year. Searing temperatur­es along the coast and midsection of the state triggered warnings of rolling blackouts as the electrical grid struggled to keep up with demand. The heat also intensifie­d a series of wildfires, including an explosive blaze near Hemet that forced the evacuation of more than 20,000 people and caused at least two deaths.

Newsom declared a state of emergency to increase energy supplies and avoid rolling blackouts — power outages that would have threatened the well-being of California­ns unable to avoid the extreme heat.

On Friday, Newsom also signed Assembly Bill 1643, which creates an advisory committee on the effects of extreme heat on California’s workers, businesses and economy, and Assembly Bill 2420, which requires state health officials to provide recommenda­tions to protect pregnant workers outdoors and to assess the effects of extreme heat on perinatal health.

Under Senate Bill 852, which the governor also signed, cities and counties will be able to create “climate resilience districts” with taxing authority, to address heat waves, drought, wildfire and the impacts of climate change.

Joe Árvai, director of the Wrigley Institute for Environmen­tal Studies at USC, said the bills are “welcome news” as heat continues to be a deadly problem.

“These policies are going to save people’s lives,” Árvai said. “To see a state like California stepping up when it comes to this kind of legislatio­n sends a really important signal to people around the country and around the world.”

Extreme heat is one of the deadliest consequenc­es of climate change, experts say, and heat waves are increasing in frequency. A Times investigat­ion published last year revealed that California has done a poor job of tracking the number of people who have died because of extreme heat and has largely failed to provide adequate resources to communitie­s most at risk.

In April, the Newsom administra­tion released an Extreme Heat Action Plan designed to protect California­ns. Recommenda­tions included greening school yards; adding more cooling centers; better coordinati­on and targeting of public messaging, particular­ly for underserve­d communitie­s; and planting more trees in urban areas that lack shade.

Gina Solomon, director of the Achieving Resilient Communitie­s project at the Public Health Institute, said the current heat wave is a clear example of the necessity of policies that address the effects of extreme temperatur­es.

“It’s what we’re going to see in the future — longer and stronger heat waves — and not just in the traditiona­l summer months, but in the spring and fall,” she said. “We need to adapt to that, and some of those changes will have to be made through legislatio­n and regulation.”

 ?? Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times ?? CALIFORNIA­NS, such as this man walking past a mural by Kenny Scharf in Culver City, have been dealing with a historic heat wave. Gov. Gavin Newsom on Friday signed bills aimed at addressing extreme heat.
Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times CALIFORNIA­NS, such as this man walking past a mural by Kenny Scharf in Culver City, have been dealing with a historic heat wave. Gov. Gavin Newsom on Friday signed bills aimed at addressing extreme heat.

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