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Western heat wave lingers as California counts ‘hidden costs’ of extreme heat

A person wipes sweat from their brow at Death Valley National Park.
(Ty Oneil / Associated Press)
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Good morning. It’s Tuesday, July 9. Here’s what you need to know to start your day.

California heat wave won’t be letting up this week

This prolonged, early-summer heat wave is doing a number on California and other Western states. Dangerous, triple-digit temperatures have shattered records and the heat is being blamed for several deaths.

How much longer will it linger?

The National Weather Service has issued excessive heat warnings across much of the state this week. Some in Southern California are currently running until late Thursday, but many in effect for the inland valleys and deserts run until Saturday night.

“Extreme heat has become the nation’s deadliest weather-related hazard,” Times reporter Grace Toohey wrote Monday. “The National Weather Service … has continued to beef up its warning systems to encourage people, especially vulnerable populations, to take precautions.”

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Amid this record-shattering heat wave, the state released a first-of-its-kind report that seeks to quantify the full, often hidden costs that extreme heat causes in the Golden State. Looking at seven heat events in California over a 10-year period, researchers found that heat killed nearly 460 people, hospitalized more than 5,000 and cost $7.7 billion overall.

Before we get further into that, let’s look at how our current extreme heat event is affecting Californians.

Multiple daily and all-time temperature records have been broken across the West

Those include:

  • 124 degrees in Palm Springs (all-time record);
  • 120 in Las Vegas (all-time record);
  • 119 in Redding (all-time record);
  • 115 at Palmdale Airport (all-time record);
  • 114 in Fresno (daily record for July 7);
  • 110 in Merced (daily record for July 6).

The desert cities of Palmdale and Lancaster set records for the most consecutive days at or above 110 degrees over the weekend (four), the weather service reported.

It wasn’t just high temperatures that peaked. Some regions also saw the hottest low temperatures on record, including Bakersfield and Fresno, where lows were 82 degrees and 81 degrees, respectively.

“It’s not normal, this is excessive heat,” weather service meteorologist Dan Berc told The Times. “We’re talking 10 to 12 degrees above normal for the hottest part of the year.”

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Hikers walk a trail on a hot day
Hikers brave high temperatures while hiking through Eaton Canyon on July 3, 2024.
(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

The extreme heat is being blamed for several deaths

A group of motorcyclists were riding through Death Valley National Park on Saturday, where temperatures reached 128 degrees — when several riders experienced severe heat illness. One person died at the scene and others were hospitalized.

A woman incarcerated at the Central California Women’s Facility in Chowchilla was hospitalized last week and died Saturday. A prisoner advocacy group is blaming her death on “heatstroke and neglect,” but a California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation spokesperson told the San Francisco Chronicle that the woman appeared to have died due to “an ongoing medical condition.”

Extreme heat is also suspected to have killed four people in the area of Portland, Ore.

The heat is making wildfires harder to fight — and upping the risk for more

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At least 18 fires are burning in the state, according to Cal Fire.

The largest as of Monday was the Lake fire in the Santa Barbara County mountains, which has scorched more than 20,000 acres and is 8% contained.

Weather service forecasters warn that the heat wave “will continue to bring elevated to critical fire weather conditions” and could easily fuel the growth of existing fires.

The state spotlights “unseen impacts” of extreme heat

The Times has extensively covered extreme heat’s effects in California, reporting in 2021 that the state “chronically undercounts the death toll and has failed to address the growing threat of heat-related illness and death.”

The California Department of Insurance released a report last week analyzing seven major heat events in regions across the state between 2013 and 2022, in an effort to better understand the effects that extreme heat brings, especially on the most vulnerable communities.

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It estimated that the total insured and uninsured cost of those events — including costs related to health and safety, economic activity, infrastructure and energy — was $7.7 billion. Researchers noted that nearly 460 people died from heat-related causes during those seven events. Thousands more were hospitalized or treated in emergency rooms and urgent care facilities.

A bar graph shows various costs in dollars for heat events in California.
A new report released by the California Department of Insurance analyzes the “hidden costs” that extreme heat is exacting on the state. The study focused on seven heat events across California over a 10-year period.
(California Department of Insurance)

The study also linked extreme heat to hundreds of millions of dollars in lost labor productivity, losses caused by power outages, as well as damages and delays due to infrastructure failures — mostly roads and rail lines that fail in the heat.

The new study also supports existing research on the racial and economic disparities of extreme heat.

“Black, Native American, and White Hispanic estimated mortality rates from extreme heat are higher than for Asian and White Non-Hispanic populations,” the study states. “In some cases, the rates for overburdened groups are twice as high as for Asian and White Non-Hispanic groups.”

The study’s authors note that the full costs of extreme heat are much higher and “cannot be quantified or fully estimated.”

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The analysis “underscores the urgency of California’s efforts to create a groundbreaking heat wave ranking and early warning system,” Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara wrote in the report. “It’s a call for comprehensive strategies to address the previously unseen impacts of extreme heat.”

That could prove difficult, as Gov. Gavin Newsom recently signed a state budget that cut more than $107 million in funding for heat resiliency and other climate-related programs. Voters could decide in November to restore some of those dollars via Proposition 4, a climate bond, which would borrow $10 billion to fund climate and environmental projects — including heat resiliency work.

Scientists say human-caused climate change is contributing to more frequent extreme weather events around the world, which Californians have experienced plenty of in recent years. Experts project that our wet and dry seasons will only get more intense as the planet continues to heat up. That means more intense storms, worse flooding and more dangerous heat — along with all the threats to health and infrastructure those bring.

Today’s top stories

A Cal Fire inmate crew is trudging up a hill.
A Cal Fire inmate crew returns after overnight duty helping fight a fire in the Redlands area in 2020.
(Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)

California fires

Politics

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Commentary and opinions

Today’s great reads

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(Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

How Beverly Hills became an unlikely battleground for the future of abortion rights. The campaign by an antiabortion group to block the opening of a specialized clinic in Beverly Hills may offer a playbook for similar efforts in other cities and states.

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How can we make this newsletter more useful? Send comments to essentialcalifornia@latimes.com.


For your downtime

The Prime rib katsu sando from Lawry's
The Prime rib katsu sando from Lawry’s. The new sandwich is only available at the bar.
(Palm + Ocean)
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Going out

Staying in

And finally ... a great photo

Show us your favorite place in California! We’re running low on submissions. Send us photos that scream California and we may feature them in an edition of Essential California.

Two women sitting and a man standing are seen through an opening under a sign reading "The Urban Homestead" in Pasadena.
Anäis, left, Justin and Jordanne Dervaes carry on the family work at the Urban Homestead in Pasadena that their father, Jules Dervaes Jr., started in 1985.
(Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Times)

Today’s great photo is from Times photographer Myung J. Chun from the organic Urban Homestead of Jules Dervaes Jr., whose children still farm the land 50 years later.

Have a great day, from the Essential California team

Ryan Fonseca, reporter
Kevinisha Walker, multiplatform editor and Saturday reporter
Christian Orozco, assistant editor
Stephanie Chavez, deputy metro editor

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