Heat Waves Sweep the Northeast Over Sweltering
Weekend
Ali Watkins
July 24,
2022, 5:38 p.m. ETJuly 24, 2022
July 24,
2022
Ali Watkins
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/07/24/nyregion/heat-wave-us.html
Scorching
temperatures swept the Northeast on Sunday in the region’s first prolonged heat
wave of the summer, with a record-breaking five straight days of triple-digit
temperatures in Newark and blistering heat in Boston; Providence, R.I.; and
Manchester, N.H.
Other parts
of the country also sweltered, with Oklahoma enduring temperatures that have
topped 100 degrees in nine of the past 11 days.
The baking
heat underscored the sobering reality that such dangerous temperatures are
becoming a summertime norm for the United States and elsewhere, with heat
waves, wildfires and droughts disrupting day-to-day life across the globe.
Heat waves
in the United States jumped from an average of two per year in the 1960s to six
per year by the 2010s. The last seven years have been the warmest in the
history of accurate worldwide records.
The
Northeast heat surge, which hit some of the country’s most densely populated
corridors, sent residents scrambling for relief. In New York City, temperatures
stayed just shy of record highs Sunday afternoon, hitting 94 in Central Park,
as lines formed at the city’s pools, despite many facing lifeguard shortages.
William
Jimenez, 59, brought his 13-year-old son to the Crotona Park pool in the Bronx
early in the day, knowing that the spot would be mobbed later.
“The
weather is getting hotter and hotter,” he said. “The best thing is to be in the
pool and the park.”
Elsewhere
in the Bronx, many streets turned into asphalt water parks, thanks to open fire
hydrants spilling onto sidewalks. In several spots wooden planks were extended
into the street for people to avoid the small rivers.
Tina
Hernandez, 24, and her 12-year-old stepdaughter laughed as they flicked water
at each other by an open hydrant on Monroe Avenue.
“It’s
definitely been crazy,” Ms. Hernandez said. “The house is the hottest part in
the summer. We’ve been trying to run inside the sprinklers. It’s been hard
keeping cool.”
In Newark,
the temperature reached 102 degrees, a record for the date and the fifth day of
above 100-degree readings, the longest recorded streak for the city. Providence
hit 98 degrees, breaking its previous record of 94 in 1987, and Boston reached
a sweltering 100 degrees, breaking its earlier record of 98 in 1933.
Philadelphia hit 99 degrees, breaking its record of 98 from 2011, and
Manchester, N.H., recorded a temperature of 97, topping its previous high on
the day of 95.
From Boston
to Philadelphia to St. Louis, major cities declared heat emergencies and
advisories that lasted throughout the weekend, some triggering services to keep
residents cool, like opening libraries as cooling centers. In notoriously
swampy Washington, D.C., where temperatures hovered in the 90s, officials
extended opening hours for some of the city’s pools, and Kansas City, Mo.,
released tips on Twitter for residents to keep heat from damaging the
foundations of their homes.
Philadelphia,
which declared a heat emergency starting on Thursday, halted a plan to shut off
water to customers with delinquent bills, citing the heat wave.
Terry
Greene, 62, said he used to enjoy the Washington, D.C., heat but has grown
grateful for air-conditioning at the church where he is employed as a maintenance
worker.
“If I’m
going to be working outside, I just prepare for it. I know to come early in the
morning,” Mr. Greene said.
Farther
south, Jesse Williams, 40, was gearing up for a long shift in front of a
600-degree oven at Memphis Pizza Cafe in Memphis, Tenn., where the National
Weather Service issued a heat advisory. Temperatures were expected to hit
nearly 100 degrees.
“If I
didn’t have this little shop fan blowing on me, I’d probably get heat stroke,”
Mr. Williams said.
In Boston,
race organizers postponed the city’s annual triathlon. In New York, organizers
shortened a similar race to account for the temperatures; the water temperature
soared to nearly 80 degrees when the race started around dawn.
In
Philadelphia, the utility PECO rolled out strategies for customers to save
electricity, like washing clothes in cold water and installing window
coverings. In New York, Allan Drury, a spokesman for Con Edison, said that this
week represented the peak demand of electricity all summer. Since Monday, there
have been more than 28,400 scattered power outages in the New York area,
concentrated mainly in Westchester and the Bronx, Mr. Drury said.
“I’m 53
years old, and I don’t remember it ever being this hot,” said Lonnie Coleman, a
retired Philadelphia School District employee who relaxed by the Schuylkill in
the morning hours on Sunday, hoping to beat the afternoon heat.
Elsewhere
in Philadelphia, children, dogs and a few adults splashed in the shallow water
at the Logan Square fountain.
Laura
McSloy, a food service worker from the Brewerytown section, was sitting in the
fountain pool.
“It’s so
hot out that it made me feel bad for the dog,” Ms. McSloy, 47, said.
Temperatures
beyond the Northeast also skyrocketed. Outside Tulsa, Okla., Charley Pearson,
63, said the prolonged heat had been difficult for the small volunteer Fire Department
of which he is chief. He described a man who had collapsed outside his home
with heart problems.
“The man
was in sun, no shade to find, so here we are outside pumping chest in 104-,
105-degree weather,” he said.
In downtown
Oklahoma City, where temperatures rose to 96 degrees by the early afternoon,
children played in the water feature at Scissortail park, laughing and
splashing. But the feature wasn’t just for play: It is a last-ditch drinking
source for some of the city’s homeless people. Brian Brust, 52 and newly
homeless, said it was one of the first lessons he learned when he started
living on the streets.
“People
tell me it’s the place to go,” Mr. Brust said. “It’s hard to find water on the
streets.”
He waited
in the shade of the Ronald J. Norick Downtown Library with numerous other
homeless people around noon. It is one of the state’s 75 designated cooling
centers but did not open until 1 p.m.
The
crippling heat on Sunday descended as pockets of the country were already
struggling to manage a wave of heat-related emergencies, like the Southwest’s
crippling drought and a distressingly active wildfire season in New Mexico,
Arizona and California. The Oak Fire, near Yosemite National Park, has scorched
more than 14,000 square acres.
A similarly
scorching heat wave is set to sweep parts of the Northwest next week, with
cities like Seattle expected to face temperatures that top 100 degrees.
In the
Bronx, Wanda Rosser, 58, and Yvonne Miles, 62, friends for over 40 years, sat
in the shade outside the New York City Housing Authority’s Butler Houses
development on Sunday afternoon.
Reporting
was contributed by Adam Bednar, Téa Kvetenadze, Jon Hurdle, Luke Vander Ploeg,
Ben Fenwick, Alex Traub and April Rubin.
Ali Watkins
is a reporter on the Metro desk, covering crime and law enforcement in New
York. Previously, she covered national security in Washington for The Times,
BuzzFeed and McClatchy Newspapers. @AliWatkins


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