(3 Jul 2024)
RESTRICTION SUMMARY:
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Sacramento, California - 2 July 2024
1. Discovery Park beach on American River
2. Christina Coffey sets up tent on beach
++SOUNDBITE PARTIALLY COVERED++
3. SOUNDBITE (English) Christina Coffey, Fairfield resident:
"Well, I hear it's going to be like 111, if I'm not mistaken, and sitting in the house and that type of heat is pretty miserable at times, even with the air conditioner. So, yeah, we just decided to come out and get some air and enjoy the heat outside versus inside."
4. Coffey with young daughter
5. Carl Olson walking in water
6. Jordan Campbell lines up to buy ice cream from truck
++SOUNDBITE PARTIALLY COVERED++
7.SOUNDBITE (English) Jordan Campbell, Sacramento:
"This is my first summer in Sacramento, actually. I'm from Los Angeles. We have beaches, so it's a little cooler. So out here, I'm just trying to get, like, ice cream and stay indoors. Try to walk in the shade."
8. Friend takes photo of Hilal Zakhilwal in front of State Capitol
++SOUNDBITE PARTIALLY COVERED++
9. SOUNDBITE (English) Hilal Zakhilwal, Antelope resident:
"I'm not very familiar with the heat still being for three years in Sacramento because where I have lived for my life and Afghanistan, Kabul, that was very cold and winter was snowing and summer it was not that how it is here. But I think it's it's it's feel very hard for me. But I try to be under the shade not to be under the direct light of the sun, but I think it is hot. It is very hot."
10. Dome of California State Capitol building
STORYLINE:
Swaths of California sweltered Tuesday and things were only expected to get worse during the Fourth of July holiday week for parts of the United States with nearly 90 million people under heat alerts.
The torrid conditions were being caused by a ridge of high pressure just off the West Coast and a separate ridge that spawned heat warnings and advisories from Kansas and Missouri to the Gulf Coast states, according to the National Weather Service.
California's capital, Sacramento, was under an excessive heat warning expected to last until Sunday night, with temperatures forecasted to reach between 105 degrees and 115 degrees (40.5-46 Celsius).
An analysis by The Associated Press found that heat killed more than 2,300 people in the U.S. last year, setting a record. That figure is likely a major undercount, dozens of experts told AP reporters.
Dr. Arthur Jey, an emergency services physician with Sutter Health in Sacramento, told reporters that getting out of the heat is important, along with wearing a hat and loose clothes, hydration and watching out for signs of heat stroke.
California's heat was expected to spread from north to south over the week, with the worst of it focused on interior areas including the Sacramento and San Joaquin valleys and the southern deserts. But warnings extended out to just short of the coast.
San Francisco, famous for its cool summers, was expected to have a high Tuesday in the upper 80s (31 C) downtown but mid-60s (18.3 C) at Ocean Beach, forecasters said.
“The high pressure dome will linger over California for at least a week, with more long range guidance suggesting that timeline may even be optimistic,” the Bay Area weather office wrote.
The heat arrived with gusty, dry winds in the northern part of the state, where the utility Pacific Gas & Electric implemented public safety power shutoffs in parts of 10 counties to prevent wildfires from being ignited by downed or damaged electrical wires.
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