One of the little known facts about the weather, at least among those not following meteorology is that the most deadly weather events are not hurricanes, or tornadoes, or droughts, but heat waves.*
It appears that Phoenix, Arizona is having a surge of deaths associated with increased temperatures:
Scorching pavement blisters uncovered skin. Pus oozes from burned feet and bacteria-teeming wounds fester under sweat-soaked bandages for people living on the street.
They might be the lucky ones.
Relentless heat led to 645 deaths last year in Maricopa County, the most ever documented in Arizona. The soaring number of heat mortalities — a 1,000 percent increase over 10 years — comes as temperatures reach new highs amid exploding eviction rates in the Phoenix area, leading to a collision of homelessness and record-setting heat waves.
The crisis has left local officials searching for answers in a region that regularly relies on churches more than the government to save people’s lives by offering them a cool place to hide from the desert air.
Almost half of the victims last year were homeless — 290 people. Twenty died at bus stops, others were in tents, and an unrecorded number of people were found on the pavement, prone as if on a baking stone. More than 250 other people — the elderly, ill and unlucky — died in uncooled homes, on bikes or just going for a walk.
I have always believed that Phoenix was an unlivable hell-hole, with its acres of concrete, lack of shade, and car driven city layout, but it appears that climate change is turning my metaphorical statement into reality.
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