Santa Fe New Mexican

In Oregon, at least 14 deaths likely related to heat wave

- By Claire Rush

SEATTLE — Oregon authoritie­s are investigat­ing four additional deaths potentiall­y linked to last week’s scorching heat wave, bringing the total number of suspected hypertherm­ia deaths to 14.

The Oregon State Medical Examiner’s Office said Monday the designatio­n of heat-related death is preliminar­y and requires further investigat­ion.

Multnomah County, which is home to Portland, recorded seven deaths suspected to be related to heat, the highest of any Oregon county.

Portland and Seattle set records Sunday for most consecutiv­e days of high temperatur­es.

In Portland, temperatur­es on Sunday rose above 95 degrees for the seventh day in a row, a record for the city for consecutiv­e days above that mark.

Further north in Seattle, the temperatur­e rose to 91 by early afternoon, marking a record six days above 90. Temperatur­es neared the triple digits nearly all of last week in the Portland area, prompting officials to open emergency overnight shelters and cooling stations.

The National Weather Service issued an excessive heat warning for both the Portland and Seattle regions lasting through late Sunday evening. Temperatur­es started to cool off Monday as colder air from the Pacific blew in.

Elsewhere, large parts of the Lower 48 are set to bake this week as the punishing, prolonged heat wave that set records in the Pacific Northwest edges east and south.

Few regions will be spared as the heat expands into different areas each day, scorching the Northern Rockies on Monday, the central states Tuesday and Wednesday and the Northeast by Thursday.

Climate change is fueling the longer heat waves in the Pacific Northwest, a region where weeklong heat spells were historical­ly rare, according to climate experts.

Residents and officials in the Northwest have been trying to adjust to the likely reality of longer, hotter heat waves following last summer’s deadly “heat dome” weather phenomenon that prompted record temperatur­es and deaths.

About 800 people died in Oregon, Washington and British Columbia during that heat wave, which hit in late June and early July of 2021. The temperatur­e hit an all-time high of 116 in Portland.

 ?? ELLEN M. BANNER SEATTLE TIMES VIA AP ?? The Internatio­nal Fountain at Seattle Center is packed with kids Wednesday as they run through the cooling spray. Temperatur­es rose above 90 degrees for six straight days in normally temperate Seattle as a deadly heat wave struck the Pacific Northwest.
ELLEN M. BANNER SEATTLE TIMES VIA AP The Internatio­nal Fountain at Seattle Center is packed with kids Wednesday as they run through the cooling spray. Temperatur­es rose above 90 degrees for six straight days in normally temperate Seattle as a deadly heat wave struck the Pacific Northwest.

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