In California’s interior, there’s no escape from
the desperate heat: ‘Why are we even here?’
Soaring temperatures are a way of life in the Central
Valley, but racial disparities mean many have no access to relief
Maanvi
Singh in Fresno
@maanvissingh
Sat 10 Jul
2021 11.00 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/jul/10/california-central-valley-extreme-heat-race
In Cantua,
a small town deep within California’s farming heartland, the heat had always
been a part of life. “We can do nothing against it,” said Julia Mendoza, who’s
lived in this town for 27 years. But lately, she says, the searing temperatures
are almost unlivable.
By midday
on Thursday, the first day of a protracted, extreme heatwave in California’s
Central Valley, the country roads were sizzling with heat. A young volunteer
with a local environmental justice non-profit who had come to check in on the
neighborhood collapsed on the sidewalk, her face bright red and damp.
Construction crews working nearby quickly swept her into an air-conditioned car
and handed her a cold bottle of water.
“¡Mira, el
calor!” gasped Mendoza as she rushed over from her front porch. Arcelia Luna,
her friend and neighbor shook her head as she poured a bottle of refrigerated
water over the head and body of the two-year-old boy she was watching.
Much of
California is suffering through record-breaking temperatures, just two weeks
after a deadly heat dome blistered the Pacific north-west. Across the west, 28
million Americans will have endured triple-digit heat this week. While coastal
regions, including the Bay Area, will have been spared by cool marine air,
California’s Central Valley – the state’s sprawling, agricultural innards –
will have broiled.
The
National Weather Service issued an “excessive heat warning” for the Central
Valley from Thursday through Monday. And by mid-morning on Thursday, asphalt-
and concrete-paved Fresno began shimmering with heat. There was no breeze to
rustle the rows and rows of almond and pistachio trees that radiated for miles
and miles out of the city. The occasional irrigation canal melded into the heat
mirage that radiated off the country roads.
Global
heating is driving stronger, longer heatwaves in the region, said Jose Pablo
Ortiz Partida, a climate scientist for the Union of Concerned Scientists, a
non-profit advocacy group.
Researchers
have been warning of such extreme heatwaves for decades, he said, but the
barrage of heat surges that California and the western US have been alarming,
he said. Temperature records are being broken earlier than expected or
predicted.
“We are
breaking temperature records this summer. And are going to keep breaking
temperature records, as long as we keep burning fossil fuels,” said Ortiz, who
lives in the valley. “It’s infuriating, it’s tiring and it’s emotionally
draining to see.”
The vicious
cycle of the climate crisis has merged with a vicious cycle of inequity in the
region. Racial disparities in access to shade and air conditioning are
increasingly becoming dangerous, even deadly.
Here,
changing weather patterns have wrought not only periods of extreme heat, but
also an extended drought – two phenomena that feed into each other. The heat
has caused water reserves to evaporate too quickly, drying out the reservoirs
that feed the region’s $50bn agricultural industry. With scarcely any moisture
left in the ground, the desiccated landscape heats up like a hot plate,
amplifying the scorching ambient temperatures.
On hot
weeks like this one, Mendoza and a group of other women who live in the area
gather on her front porch, seated in a circle on folding chairs under a nylon
tent. The group has been campaigning to build an air-conditioned community
center or a small park with trees where people can go to stay cool during what
have become increasingly frequent bouts of extreme heat.
In Cantua
Creek, and throughout the valley, the over-pumping of groundwater has led to a
concentrating of nitrates from pesticides, fertilizer and dairy waste runoff
from farms and naturally occurring arsenic. Mendoza and her neighbors aren’t
able to drink the water from their taps, so trucks lug jugs of potable water to
them each day. “We don’t want anything big, you know,” Mendoza said. “Just
somewhere to stay cool. And clean water.
“On days
like this,” she added, “I just want to be able to shower in tranquility.”
Hotter,
drier conditions also mean harder, and less work for the region’s hundreds of
thousands of farm workers. This week, Jesús Zúñiga has been up at 3am, to get
to the fields by 5am. “I pick tomatoes – which is one of the toughest jobs out
here,” he said, showing off the thick calluses that have developed on his
hands. For hours each day, the harsh valley sun bears down on his back as he
hunches over the tomato vines. Once he’s collected 50 pounds of fruit, he
sprints down the neat, irrigated rows, to dump buckets full of the fruit on to
trucks. His harvest ends up in grocery stores as well as fast food restaurant
chains.
On several
days this week, temperatures reached dangerous highs by 10am. “So on these hot
days we’re only able to work five or six hours, before we’d start to get sick,”
he said. “But then, we only get paid for five or six hours.” At $14 an hour
that isn’t enough to pay his rent and soaring electricity bills, or to support
his family of five.
“By the end
of the shift we are wet. Everything is wet with sweat. Sometimes my head starts
to hurt, and I get dizzy,” he said. “That is when I start to have doubts, so
many doubts: why are we even here?”
Farm
workers die of heat at roughly 20 times the national rate, according to the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. But as the climate crisis triggers
longer, hotter heatwaves, the risks for agricultural workers will rise, said
Michelle Tigchelaar, a researcher at Stanford University. Based on climate
models projecting a global temperature increase of 2F (1C) by 2050, Tigchelaar
discovered that agricultural workers who currently labor through an average of
21 dangerously hot days a year will see that number nearly double over the next
few decades.
In some
parts of the Central Valley, the heat index through most of the summer will
surpass what even healthy, young and well-hydrated workers could safely handle,
according to the study, published last year. “These are the hidden costs of
keeping our supermarkets and shops well-stocked,” she said.
In Fresno,
the wide sidewalks were eerily empty by late afternoon. The 500,000 people who
live here had all retreated to air-conditioned homes, malls or public
libraries. At the Community Regional medical center in downtown Fresno, Dr René
Ramirez said he’d already seen a few patients coping with severe sunburns, heat
exhaustion and other heat-related illnesses in the emergency department that
day. Many of his patients don’t have insurance, and many suffer from underlying
health issues including heart disease, high blood pressure and, in a region
with some of the worst air pollution in the country, asthma. All of those
conditions make it harder for people to cope with extreme heat, even those who
are acclimatized to high temperatures.
“From my
perspective, everybody should be entitled to access cooling, whether that’s at
home or at community centers,” he said “I think that is something that’s an
inherent right.”
Nora
Madden, 65, who has been living in her car or staying at motels for the past
year, said her usual strategy to survive heatwaves is to buy a bag of ice from
the dollar store in the morning, stow it in her icebox and chew the cubes
throughout the day.
But on
Thursday afternoon it had become too hot to sit in her car, so she headed over
to a community cooling center downtown. The city opens these centers when
temperatures are forecasted to reach 105F (41C), or higher. “But what about
when it’s 103F, or 100F?” Madden said. The stark, unshaded rows of concrete
that make up some of Fresno’s poorest neighborhoods are unforgiving heat
islands. “Do we have to die at 103?” she said.
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