If you can't stay indoors during this U.S. heat wave, here are a few ideas

If you can't stay indoors during this U.S. heat wave, here are a few ideas

If you can't stay indoors during this U.S. heat wave, here are a few ideas

It’s hot and getting hotter for workers and everyone else outdoors as the first significant heat wave of the year makes its way eastward across the United States

ByCOREY WILLIAMS Associated Press and JIM SALTER Associated Press

June 17, 2024, 3:22 PM

    FARMINGTON HILLS, Mich. -- It’s hot and getting hotter for workers and everyone else outdoors as the first significant heat wave of the year makes its way eastward across the United States. More than 70 million people were under extreme heat alerts Monday.

    What's more, the heat will move in and sit. Excessive humidity will make it feel even more oppressive. “The duration of this heat wave is notable and potentially the longest experienced in decades for some locations,” the National Weather Service said over the weekend.

    That's dangerous. Emergency medical services across the U.S. already deployed for heat-related emergencies more than 2,400 times between June 1 and June 14, according to a government data tracker.

    From gardeners to builders, not everyone can stay indoors. Here's some advice on how to cope from some of the people who will be working outside this week.

    Last year the U.S. had the most heat waves — abnormally hot weather lasting more than two days — since 1936. In the South and Southwest, last year was the worst on record, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

    On Monday afternoon, Jose Orozco and about a dozen other workers rested beneath a tree near their water main project in Farmington Hills, a suburb of Detroit. The temperature was already above 80 degrees and rising.

    The work of maintaining the public water supply in a heat wave is crucial. But it needs to be done as safely as possible. That means watching for signs of heat exhaustion, or worse.

    “All we do is just drink water and take breaks of 15 minutes,” Orozco said. “You can see somebody slow down and it’s time to take a break.”

    Tuesday will be even more challenging, he said. They will work with asphalt.

    Hot-mix asphalt being poured can reach temperatures of up to 300 degrees, said Chris Engelbrecht, safety and emergency management director for the Missouri Department of Transportation. On a given summer day, 2,000 or more workers will be on Missouri roads doing maintenance.

    The Illinois Department of Transportation has been preparing for the heat for weeks. It has “tailgate talk” sessions in mid-spring to prepare crews on what precautions to take, said Joseph Monroe, an operations engineer.

    From Southern California to parts of New England and from the Canadian border south to the Florida Keys, temperatures this week are expected to top 90 degrees and even over 100 in some places, according to the National Weather Service.

    Chris Sander operates Powder Monkey Fireworks, which is already preparing for the Fourth of July in Missouri. Sales begin this week, and workers have started setting out the merchandise.

    Sander said his employees do the hardest physical work early in the morning, before the heat grows. The tents are vented but not air-conditioned.

    “We have a bunch of fans, so you’ll pour bottled water on your head and stand in front of a 30-inch fan every five or 10 minutes, take a lot of breaks,” Sander said. Workers can also go to an air-conditioned camper. Sander encourages lunch at a restaurant to help them cool off.

    If needed, he'll send them home.

    “If you see somebody a little lethargic or not with it, tell them, ‘You’re done for the day. Come back tomorrow,’” he said.

    Urban areas are going to sizzle. Chicago is expected to reach 95 degrees Monday. The Detroit area could see 97 degrees on Thursday. Knoxville, Tennessee, could have 96 degrees by Friday.

    Work supervisors with the Oakland County Road Commission in southeastern Michigan try to restrict workers' hours in the direct sun, said spokesman Craig Bryson.

    Greg Brooks, director of safety and compliance for the Michigan Infrastructure and Transportation Association, said the state requires construction companies to take necessary precautions. Beyond providing drinking water and extra breaks, many companies rotate workers so no one person stays exposed to the heat all day long.

    On some jobs, shifts are staggered. Crews work during the cooler mornings and resume in the evening to avoid the hottest part of the day.

    It’s also important to teach workers how to recognize there’s an issue in each other, Brooks said: “Generally, people who are experiencing heat exhaustion aren’t going to recognize it as heat exhaustion because they get tunnel vision."

    ___

    Salter reported from O'Fallon, Missouri.

    ___

    Follow AP’s coverage of weather at https://apnews.com/hub/weather

    OTHER NEWS

    17 minutes ago

    Supreme Court Sides With White House In Case Challenging Government Efforts To Curb Social Media Disinformation

    17 minutes ago

    Groundbreaking Greek Drama ‘The Witch’ Gets A Prequel Series, Production About To Start – NATPE Budapest

    19 minutes ago

    Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra Set to Enhance and Open up the Olympic Broadcast and Viewer Experience Like Never Before at the Olympic Games Paris 2024

    19 minutes ago

    Behind the Unrest in Kenya, a Staggering and Painful National Debt

    19 minutes ago

    Midway through his first season as a Dodger, Shohei Ohtani is a Hollywood blockbuster

    19 minutes ago

    Bomb squad detonates ‘WWII relic’ in the Northern Territory

    19 minutes ago

    Report: Dolphins unwilling to give Tua Tagovailoa a ‘market value’ contract

    19 minutes ago

    Which players are most likely to sign for Barca this summer?

    19 minutes ago

    'I had to move back with my separated husband' - renters on the strain of trying to find stable and affordable accommodation

    19 minutes ago

    'I just had a small fracture... they kind of put my safety first'

    19 minutes ago

    ESPN: Jaguars projected 2024 starting lineup ranks middle of the pack

    19 minutes ago

    Girls Aloud fail to sell out O2 Arena dates in London after slashing ticket prices by 60%

    19 minutes ago

    AI Chip Startup Etched Aims to Take On Nvidia

    19 minutes ago

    Shock footage of Céline Dion's agonising Stiff Person Syndrome seizure is featured in her new documentary

    19 minutes ago

    PrettyLittleThing outrages customers as it deactivates accounts for returning too many products

    19 minutes ago

    Projecting the cost of Pat Surtain's eventual extension with Broncos

    19 minutes ago

    JPMorgan upgrades Campbell Soup, saying its recently-acquired Rao's sauce business is thriving

    19 minutes ago

    How to get long an energy stock with substantial comeback potential, according to options trader

    19 minutes ago

    'Best game ever': Joey in awe of clutch Moses display

    19 minutes ago

    Friends of talented Louth photographer start fundraiser to help her late husband and their four young children

    19 minutes ago

    Trump hush money trial judge partially lifts gag order ahead of debate with Biden

    19 minutes ago

    Jarryd Hayne breaks his silence with State of Origin message after fallen footy legend saw six-year criminal rape ordeal end

    19 minutes ago

    Dutch Olympic chiefs give volleyball player who raped a 12-year-old British girl the green light to play at the Paris Games - and say there's no reason to stop him

    19 minutes ago

    EUROS DAILY: 'Bad, boring England are sleepwalking towards the exit'

    24 minutes ago

    River Valley fatal accident: Maid jaywalked with 4-year-old girl who died, says TP officer

    24 minutes ago

    More than 40 Indonesian agencies hit by cyberattack on data centres

    25 minutes ago

    Justin Timberlake makes first Instagram post since DWI arrest

    25 minutes ago

    Netflix fans upset over new adverts that cut characters off mid-sentence

    26 minutes ago

    Kenyan president withdraws controversial tax bill amid deadly protests

    26 minutes ago

    Gassy cows and pigs will face a carbon tax in Denmark, a world first

    26 minutes ago

    A Vatican Radio territory in north Rome once blamed for electro-smog will become a solar farm

    26 minutes ago

    Activists pour red paint down Rome's famed Spanish Steps in outrage over femicides in Italy

    27 minutes ago

    Don't make this mistake in a job interview, says ex-Nvidia recruiter: It makes people think ‘you shouldn't be interviewing'

    27 minutes ago

    Supreme Court rules for Biden administration in a social media dispute with conservative states

    29 minutes ago

    Edmonton Oilers start off-season by cleaning out lockers after Stanley Cup loss

    32 minutes ago

    Horrified fans slam de-aged Tom Hanks and Robin Wright as 'nightmare fuel' in new film

    32 minutes ago

    Ed Davey: I bet on outcome of 2010 election

    32 minutes ago

    Michael Phelps warns doping mistrust could be end of the Olympics following Chinese swimming scandal

    32 minutes ago

    Penguins Draft Profiles: Luke Misa

    32 minutes ago

    Mercedes enforce top-secret W15 upgrade plan to keep F1 rivals in the dark