Northwest sizzles as a heat wave touches many parts of us – News2IN
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Northwest sizzles as a heat wave touches many parts of us

Portland: Volunteers and district employees arranged the couch and stacked hundreds of bottles of water in air-conditioned cooling centers in an empty building in Portland, Oregon, one of the many places established when Northwest saw another sizzling stretch.
Hangus weather is also about other parts of the country this week.
Weather services said hot advisers and warnings would apply from the Midwest to the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic to at least Friday.
In Portland, the temperature on Wednesday reached 102 degrees Fahrenheit (39 Celsius) – binding a record set for the day set in 1977.
This should be even hotter Thursday and Friday.
The authorities tried to provide assistance to vulnerable people was to pay attention to the heat wave that destroyed the recording of earlier this summer which killed hundreds at Pacific Northwest.
High temperatures in Portland, part of the area that is usually medium, will damage the record of all time this week if the hot wave of June has not done so.
Seattle will be cooler than Portland, with temperatures in the mid 90’s, but still has the opportunity to break the record, and many people there, like in Oregon, don’t have air conditioning.
People started into the 24-hour cooling center in North Portland before opening Wednesday.
Some of the first people to experience homeless, populations are susceptible to extreme heat.
Among them were December Snedecor, which slept two nights at the same center in June when the temperature reached 116 f (47 c).
He said he planned to sleep there again this week because the heat in his tent was unbearable.
“I poured a lot of water into myself.
It’s up to teenagers, hundreds and things.
It makes me dizzy.
It’s not good,” said Snedecor about June heat.
“I just remained calm.
I don’t want to die.” Oregon Gov.
Kate Brown has stated an emergency and activates the emergency operation center, citing potential disorders on electricity and transportation networks.
In addition to opening the cooling center, the city and district governments expand the clock of public libraries and release bus rates for those who head to cooling centers.
The 24-hour sulvestide assistance line will direct the caller to the nearest cooling shelter and offer security tips.
Emergency officials have sent a warning to the telephone, said and Douthit, spokesman for the Portland emergency management bureau.
Back-to-back heat waves, coupled with very warm and dry summer as a whole, pampering areas where summer highs usually float to the 70s or 80s.
Intense heat waves and historical droughts in Western America reflect climate change that makes the weather more extreme.
Heat in June in Oregon, Washington and British Columbia killed hundreds of people and served as a wake-up call for what was in the warmest world.
It is almost impossible without climate change caused by humans, detailed scientific analysis found.
Even younger residents struggled with heat in June and feared the heat.
Katherine Morgan, 27, did not have air conditioning in the third floor apartment and was unable to buy a window unit on the money that made it work at a bookstore and as a hostess at a brewery.
He had to walk to the office on Thursday, the day when the temperature continued.
“All my friends and I know that climate change is real, but it is increasingly frightening because it gradually gets hotter – and suddenly becomes very hot, very fast,” Morgan said.

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