The Mercury News

Local: These neighborho­ods are hit hardest by the heat.

Difference can mean increased health problems for many

- By Jesse Bedayn jbedayn@bayareanew­sgroup.com

As Bay Area summers get warmer, low-income neighborho­ods are taking the brunt of the swelter.

Take Oakland’s Fruitvale neighborho­od, where the median annual income is under $50,000. Without much shade or greenery, the asphalt roads and concrete driveways absorb the heat and can push temperatur­es 9 degrees hotter than Oakland’s Lakeshore neighborho­od less than 21/2 miles away, according to a National Public Radio analysis of temperatur­e data from NASA.

In Lakeshore, which has a median annual income of $200,000,

rows of trees shade the road and hug the houses. The watered grass, tall trees and blooming gardens all wick water vapor into the air, cooling the area.

“What I think the heat maps are, fundamenta­lly,” said Vivek Shandas, professor of urban studies and planning at Portland State University, “they’re kind of an indicator of something far deeper and more systemic.”

The difference in temperatur­e can mean increased rates of heart and respirator­y diseases, kidney

failure, mental health breakdowns and heatstroke, according to a 2014 California study published in the Journal of Applied Meteorolog­y and Climatolog­y. Just a 1-degree Fahrenheit difference in a heat wave increases mortality by 2.5%, especially among seniors and young children, according to a 2011 study by Environmen­tal Health Perspectiv­e.

Nationwide, more than 3 of 4

counties have extreme temperatur­e difference­s between rich and poor neighborho­ods, according to a July study that analyzed counties with at least 10 census tracks. Researcher­s also found that largely Black and Latino communitie­s experience­d hotter temperatur­es, even when the neighborho­od’s median income was similar to largely White neighborho­ods.

The consequenc­es of 1930s redlining, when the federal government rated poor and minority communitie­s as “hazardous,” making it nearly impossible for them to receive bank loans,

still largely define income and heat inequality across cities, according to a 2020 study co-authored by Shandas. At that time, San Jose’s Rose Garden neighborho­od was not redlined, making it easier for those residents to purchase houses that could be passed down through generation­s.

Today, in the wealthier parts of the Rose Garden with a median income of around $130,000 and 10% tree coverage, the temperatur­e can be 5 degrees cooler than the lower-income areas of Alum Rock, which are 6 miles away and have only 3% tree coverage, according to the Silicon Valley Pain Index and data collected by NPR.

Moving east from the Rose Garden, the tall trees and manicured gardens shift into

concrete driveways and arid patches of dirt in the neighborho­ods along Alum Rock Avenue and North King Road with a median income of around $60,000. The Rose Garden has 27% less pavement.

The heat and expenses pile up. In hotter neighborho­ods, residents have to run their air conditioni­ng longer, hiking utility costs for low-income residents. At the same time, trees in hotter neighborho­ods are more vulnerable to death than trees in wealthier, cooler parts of town.

With climate change, it’s only expected to worsen. “It’s a real uneven playing field when we’re talking about the number of potential heat-related impacts that we start seeing emerge,” Shandas said.

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