Consider This from NPR - Three Stories From A Very Hot July
Episode Date: August 6, 2023July was almost certainly the hottest month, globally, on record. It was also a month in which many lives were upended by weather related-disasters — the sort of disasters that are increasingly like...ly as climate change continues. So what do the people who lived through those disasters make of all this? We asked Dr. Frank LoVecchio, an emergency room doctor at Valleywise Health Medical Center in Phoenix, Ariz., about trying to keep people alive who spent too much time out in the deadly heat.And Michelle Eddleman McCormick, general manager at the Marshfield Village Store in Vermont, about living through extreme flooding.And Will Nicholls, of the Cree Nation of Mistissini, editor-in-chief of The Nation magazine, about how historic wildfires in northern Quebec have affected his community.In participating regions, you'll also hear a local news segment to help you make sense of what's going on in your community.Email us at considerthis@npr.org.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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every year, making discoveries that improve human health, combat climate change,
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Here's how UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres started his press conference on climate change at the end of July.
Humanity is in the hot seat.
And you can think of that as an extremely grim dad joke, because humanity really hasn't ever been this hot. The UN's World Meteorological Organization is still analyzing the final
numbers, but it's pretty likely that July was the hottest month in terms of the average global
temperature in recorded history. Along with that heat has come a steady stream of climate-driven
disasters. For vast parts of North America, Asia, Africa, and Europe, it's a cruel summer.
Here in the US, there's been historically bad flooding. The capital of North America, Asia, Africa, and Europe, it's a cruel summer. Here in the U.S., there's been historically bad flooding.
The capital of Vermont tonight, underwater, shut down most of the day.
Authorities fearing a nearby dam may not hold.
Cities blanketed in smoke.
Wildfires burning in eastern Canada are causing dangerous air quality conditions
for millions of Americans from New England all the way down to Washington, D.C.
And heat wave after heat wave.
In Death Valley, California,
temperatures hit 125 degrees today,
just five degrees shy
from the hottest temper recorded on Earth.
As Guterres put it,
climate change is here,
it is terrifying,
and it is just the beginning.
The era of global warming has ended.
The era of global warming has ended. The era of global boiling has arrived.
And since this really is just the beginning,
since summers like this one and worse can be expected in the years ahead,
we thought it would be worth checking in with some of the people
who lived through July's climate-driven disasters
to see what they were like firsthand,
to hear how they've coped,
and what they'd like to see to hear how they've coped and what
they'd like to see work better the next time disaster strikes. It's Consider This from NPR.
I'm Scott Detrow. It's Sunday, August 6th.
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unlocking cures and solutions that lead to a better future for all. More at iu.edu forward. It's Consider This from NPR. We're going to start in Phoenix,
Arizona with Dr. Frank Lavecchio, who works in the emergency department at Valleywise Health
Medical Center. When we caught up with him, after 31 straight days with highs at 110 degrees or
hotter, the city had finally gotten a break. Kind of. What is a reprieve like in Phoenix
in August this year? 109. You know, our high of the day was 109. But more importantly, at night,
because it rained, we were able to dip into the 80s. By contrast, in July, the average low
temperature stayed above 90 degrees. And the relentless heat sent a lot of people to Dr. Lavecchio's emergency room.
About two years ago or so, we might see one case a week, maybe two cases of severe heat stroke.
Now, during this past month or so, on a slow day, we'd see three. On a busier day, we'd see,
you know, six or seven of them. And this is a patient that needs full core press. We're aggressive about
what we do, which is put them in an ice bath. So you use a body bag because it's non-permeable
and you put a patient in a body bag. They come in unconscious and comatose with temperatures
over 107 and cover them with ice, bury them with ice and water.
I want to go back to something you said a few minutes ago. You said a slow day
over the past month or so was typically what you saw over the course of a week in previous years
when it comes to the number of people coming into the hospital with very serious heat stroke. Is
that right? Yes, that's true. And we also have a burn center and one of the busiest burn centers, and we certainly see many contact burns.
It turns out that when the temperature is over 100 degrees, the asphalt can get up to 160 degrees.
Another way to say that is if you walk across the street barefoot, you will definitely get at least a second, if not a third degree burn.
In those cases, many times people fall, they have burns all over.
Our burn center is bursting at the seams with patients who had heat illness and have a
potentially life-threatening burn. I mean, you talk about the higher numbers coming in. Are you
seeing the type of burnout in your ER at your hospital that you saw at the peak of COVID because
of this heat? To be honest, yes. When we see these patients many
times, they go to the intensive care unit, and the intensive care unit was full. Many of these
patients are homeless. So if you have mild heat illness and you're homeless, you're just waiting
in the ER. We have a policy not to just discharge somebody if they had a heat illness issue,
not to just discharge them back to the street where you know, where it's, you know, hot, et cetera. And there've been patients in our emergency department that
were waiting three days for a shelter bed. And it's not quite emergency medicine if there's just
somebody who just really doesn't need anything, just a place to stay. It's more related to the
social systems and the social, you know, faults that we have right now.
Dr. Frank Lavecchio in Phoenix.
So Arizona's problem was a hot July.
Vermont's problem was a wet one. My phone started getting alerts about road closures
in other parts of the county.
And then I'm getting alerts you know, alerts for a flash
flood warning. And then it just suddenly sunk in that this was getting bad quickly.
Michelle Edelman McCormick is a general manager at the Marshfield Village store in a rural area
of Vermont. And that's where she was on July 10th, as two months worth of rain fell on already
saturated soil in just a couple of days. It wasn't long before roads started to fail, bridges
collapsed, all in the type of a tense and concentrated rainstorms that we know will become
more common and more powerful in a hotter climate. Homes were inundated. A landslide took out the village's water and sewer system.
We were without any running water for about 11 days, pushing 12.
And then, of course, there was a boil water notice after that.
Without water and with road access to the outside world largely cut off,
the Marshfield Village store, on high ground right in the center of town,
became a sort of pop-up relief hub.
We opened up a distribution center with cleaning supplies, relief supplies, food and water in the neighbor's lawn right next to the store.
And all of this was almost second nature for McCormick because she had been through something like this before.
She did relief work in New Orleans' Lower Ninth Ward right after Katrina.
And after that,
she lived in Naples, Florida through two more big hurricanes. And so I actually moved up to Marshfield, Vermont to try and create a future for my, you know, my children and other folks
in a place that is slated to be that much more climate resilient. And yet you found yourself
dealing with this catastrophic flooding.
I mean, did that change the way that you feel about whether that feels like a safe place to be?
Actually, for me, it actually reaffirmed that this is where I need to be.
Why is that?
Because there is such a built-in level of resilience here and a culture of mutual aid. Everything that happened in this
town was a result of people in Marshfield helping to take care of people in Marshfield
and our volunteer government. And that gets to another question I want to ask you. Extreme weather
is clearly going to continue. There will be more flooding in the future. Is there anything
local or federal government could do to make this process better the next
time around?
For the federal response, I think this many years after Hurricane Katrina, I'm still
shocked at the levels of, I guess, ineptitude.
There's really no other way to describe it.
And that probably felt personal on both ends to you, given your work and your time in the Lower Ninth Ward.
Absolutely.
I mean, a clear example was that day two, I knew that we needed to start planning for showers because it's hot, it's muggy, people are working on their flood-damaged homes, they don't have any water.
So, you know, I told our emergency manager we should get
showers. He agreed and he put the request in. They said they would have to source it. It took the
National Guard to bring in these giant expensive water buffalo. And FEMA had to figure out how to
get the water into the water buffalo because they didn't want to transport them full.
And then it took a private contractor to bring in the actual shower
units. And all three of these things did not end up in the same place at the same time. And nobody
could figure out still how to pressurize it. And then I assume by then everyone had figured out
how to take a shower in one way or another. Yeah. I mean, it used to be the commentary
after Katrina was that it took the U.S. government 10 days to figure out how to get a bottle of water into a major metropolitan area in the United States.
And it appears as though that dynamic has not changed a whole lot.
Michelle Edelman McCormick, general manager at Marshfield Village Store, a worker-owned co-op.
We did reach out to FEMA, and a spokesperson told us that in Marshfield,
FEMA was only tasked to provide bulk water for state showers,
and that FEMA was never requested to provide any other resources.
Now, if you were on the East Coast this summer, you could probably see or smell the smoke from
the wildfires burning in Canada.
And given that, you probably grasp just how bad things were close to the wildfires in places like
the Cree Nation of Nemeska, an indigenous community in Quebec. The smoke was so bad there that they
didn't know whether it was night or day at times. That's Will Nichols, a Cree from Misticinny,
which has also been choked in smoke this summer. He's the editor-in-chief of Nation News. When did the forest fires in northern Quebec start this
summer? Oh, God, seems so long ago. Yeah, it was the beginning of June. He thinks the provincial
government should have done more to protect the hunting camps that many Cree rely on for their
livelihoods. And our camps aren't simple camps. They're actually houses
and whatnot.
You have ATVs there, you have
snowmobiles, you have generators,
a home.
That's all gone.
How long is it going to take to recover from all of that?
I'm not
sure. It's going to be years.
You're talking
the size of these places are, you know, in millions of hectares.
You're talking about animal life.
That's going to have a hard time recovering from that.
With the Crees, about a third of our population trap, hunt, and gather.
We have treaties that we've made that guarantee our way of life.
My question is, why aren't you doing something to ensure that?
That was Will Nichols, a member of the Cree Nation of Misticini in Quebec.
He was living with the smoke of wildfires.
We also heard from Michelle Edelman McCormick about intense flooding in Vermont
and Frank Lavecchio about trying to keep people alive
who had spent too much time out in the deadly heat of Phoenix.
Just three stories of many more
from what was likely the hottest month ever recorded.
It's Consider This from NPR.
I'm Scott Detrow.