Biden acts to protect workers as temperatures soar in record-setting
July
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[July 28, 2023]
By Andrea Shalal and Liliana Salgado
WASHINGTON/PHOENIX (Reuters) -U.S. President Joe Biden took steps to
protect workers from extreme heat and met with the mayors of sweltering
cities Phoenix and San Antonio on Thursday as an intensifying heat wave
put half of Americans under heat watches and warnings.
With this July set to become the hottest on record globally,
temperatures and heat index values across the United States were
forecast to soar above 100 degrees Fahrenheit (37.8 Celsius) until at
least Saturday, the National Weather Service said.
The growing frequency and intensity of severe weather is symptomatic of
global, human-driven climate change that is fueling extremes, experts in
the field say, with heat waves in much of the world expected to persist
through August.
Biden, a Democrat who has been hemmed in by a Republican congressional
majority that downplays or denies human-influenced warming, took further
executive action while noting climate emergencies such as costly
flooding in Vermont and California, increasingly severe droughts and
hurricanes, and Phoenix's record 28 straight days over 110F.
"Ocean temperatures near Miami are like stepping in a hot tub. They just
topped 100 degrees - 100 degrees - and they're hitting record highs
around the world," Biden told reporters after meeting with Phoenix Mayor
Kate Gallego and San Antonio Mayor Ron Nirenberg.
Biden instructed the Department of Labor to ramp up enforcement of
on-the-job heat hazards, for example by increasing inspections at
construction and agriculture sites, and to issue Hazard Alerts that
inform employers of their responsibilities and employees of their rights
during extreme heat.
Some 436 workers have died from environmental heat exposure since 2011,
according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, with farmworkers, farmers,
firefighters, and construction workers among the most affected.
Overall about 600 Americans die from extreme heat each year, according
to the U.S. Centers for Disease and Control.
The federal protections complement local efforts.
Phoenix Mayor Gallego said her city was the first in the nation to have
a permanently funded heat office, and was attempting to "out-innovate"
climate change. She also urged Congress to expand the definition of a
federal emergency to include heat.
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A worker from a road paving crew walks
on a job site, after New York City issued an excessive heat warning,
during hot weather in lower Manhattan in New York City, New York,
U.S., July 27, 2023. REUTERS/Mike Segar
While the mayor visited the White House, city officials and
non-profit partners back in Phoenix unveiled air-conditioned,
solar-powered homes converted from shipping containers on Thursday
that they hope can provide relief for the homeless.
Twenty current shelter residents will move into the new units
temporarily, while still having access to resources at the center
such as restrooms, showers and meals.
"The pavement gets to 180 degrees (82C) sometimes. People come with
third degree burns ... It's very debilitating," said Jessica Berg,
chief program officer at St. Vincent de Paul, one of the
collaborating non-profits along with Steel + Spark.
Meanwhile, officials in other big cities such as New York,
Washington and Philadelphia urged people to avoid working or playing
outside, to drink plenty of fluids and to check on loved ones and
neighbors.
"The next four days will be extremely hot - take care of yourself
and the people around you," Washington Mayor Muriel Bowser said on
social media. The nation's capital is expected to see the heat
index, a measure of what the temperature feels like to the human
body, reach 107 degrees F (41.7 C).
In Philadelphia, officials declared a health heat emergency until
Saturday and created a phone help line for the elderly, opened
cooling centers and increased homeless outreach.
Cooling centers have also been opened across New York City for those
who do not have access to air conditioning. The heat index could
reach 103 degrees F (39.4 C) on Friday in the most populous U.S.
city.
(Reporting by Andrea Shalal in Washington, Liliana Salgado in
Phoenix, and Brendan O'Brien in Chicago; Writing by Brendan O'Brien
and Daniel Trotta; Editing by Rosalba O'Brien and Stephen Coates)
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