Extreme heat watch: Will cities be ready for summer 2024? – GWC Mag

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Asking what Miami-Dade County’s chief heat officer does in the winter is like asking what Santa Claus does in the summer. Immediate extreme heat response might not be needed, but numerous plans and preparations are in the works as the clock ticks closer to summer 2024.

“It’s lovely, windy, breezy weather right now,” the Florida county’s chief heat officer, Jane Gilbert, said in a December interview. “But it won’t be in May.” Communications strategies need to be refreshed, a meeting assessing last summer’s performance must be planned, and the county will continue seeking ways to bring homeowners and renters more energy-efficient, affordable cooling. And that’s just the beginning of her team’s to-do list.

Cities worldwide are increasingly focused on planning for summers with extremely high temperatures as ballooning greenhouse gas emissions drive climate change. 2023 was the world’s hottest year ever recorded — a title it may not hold for much longer, with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration warning that 2024 has a one-in-three chance of being warmer.


“It’s lovely, windy, breezy weather right now. But it won’t be in May.”

Jane Gilbert

Miami-Dade County Chief Heat Officer


Perhaps the most time-sensitive heat-related question currently facing U.S. cities is what needs to happen before this summer arrives to minimize heat-related death and illness as much as possible. Now is the time to craft these plans, said Ladd Keith, an assistant professor at the University of Arizona’s School of Landscape Architecture and Planning. 

“Winter is the best time to plan for heat,” he said. “We don’t want to be caught unaware when it’s already hot.” 

That’s a new concept for many cities. “A lot of cities don’t start thinking about this until maybe the spring, but they’re starting to get better,” said Victoria Ludwig, senior climate specialist at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s Office of Community Revitalization.

Trends in extreme heat planning

In what Keith called a “fairly new development,” more cities are beginning to hold wintertime “heat summits” that bring together stakeholders to discuss strategies for the upcoming summer. “The city of Tucson, where I’m at, we’re going to hold a fairly large heat summit at the end of January to make sure that we’re even more prepared for the summer of 2024,” Keith said.

More cities and states also are developing “heat action plans” that not only chart a path forward on reducing the urban heat island effect in the longterm but also spell out emergency response plans for heat waves. “That’s still, unfortunately, a very innovative idea that you have all of that mapped out and planned,” Keith said. 

Even though planning for extreme heat is new for many cities and states, “there are enough good models out there that folks don’t have to reinvent the wheel,” he said.

Education campaigns are also a key component of cities’ heat planning efforts. In Miami, Gilbert said her communications team is using this winter to consider ways to further target messaging toward the most vulnerable residents. 

“What can we do for pregnant people? What can we do for parents of very young children? What can we do for athletes?” she asked. Already, her team has two new campaigns planned for this spring: one geared toward outdoor workers and their employers, and another focused on no- and low-cost ways people can keep cool at home.

Gilbert also noted potential plans to train the people who do outreach to the unsheltered homeless community to notice signs of heat-related illness and understand when such illness requires a 911 call.

Two people wheel a patient strapped to a gurney onto a vehicle

Austin-Travis County emergency medical technicians assist a patient on Aug. 8, 2023, in Austin, Texas. EMTs were called after the patient was found passed out and dehydrated near the Texas State Capitol amid a prolonged heat wave.

Brandon Bell/Getty Images via Getty Images

 

Ludwig urged cities to think beyond classic education tactics like teaching residents the definition of a heat warning or publishing a list of cooling centers. Much of the public doesn’t think of themselves as vulnerable to extreme heat, Ludwig said, and she encouraged local governments to step back further and conduct a community involvement process to understand people’s perceptions of heat risk.

Cooling center caveats

Cooling centers have become more common in recent years as a way for cities to protect people during heat waves. But Gilbert said the jury is still out on how much Miami-area residents use these locations, which are often located at libraries and recreation centers.

“Certainly, they’re used by our unsheltered population, but those are only two or three sites that are primarily used in the county, and we have over 30 sites,” Gilbert said. Her team is currently evaluating how many people used these resources in 2023, but it can be difficult to collect data on locations like libraries that are also open for other uses, she said.

People lay on mats on the ground and in chairs in a dimly lit room.

People seeking shelter from the heat rest at the First Congregational United Church of Christ cooling center on July 14, 2023, in Phoenix.

Brandon Bell/Getty Images via Getty Images

 

“Our advocacy groups get very focused on making sure we have them well distributed and open and whatnot, but it’s not clear to me that that’s where people go to cool off when they’re AC insecure,” Gilbert said. “They stay where they are because they don’t want to go somewhere, or they go to a family member’s house, or they might go to a mall.” She added that the county could do better at ensuring the public is aware of the sites.

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