Member LoginMember Login - User registration - Setup as front page - Add to favorites - Sitemap After a deadly heat wave last summer, metro Phoenix is changing tactics !

After a deadly heat wave last summer, metro Phoenix is changing tactics

Time:2024-05-29 12:58:05 source:Global Gallery news portal

PHOENIX (AP) — Terrified of being assaulted in a shelter, Pearl Marion couch surfed with family members and friends during last year’s blistering summer so she didn’t have to sleep outdoors.

This year, the 65-year-old woman plans to spend Phoenix’s dangerously hot summer nights in a former cafeteria at the city’s main library, sleeping in a chair, her head on a table. There’s cool air, chilled water and security guards to keep anyone from stealing her bus pass.

“I love this place,” Marion said in the space where a half-dozen other people napped and charged their phones. New arrivals were asked if they needed help with housing, substance abuse or air conditioning repair.

It’s one of two overnight spaces that opened in early May after Maricopa County saw a staggering 645 heat-related deaths last year, about 50% more than the 425 confirmed for 2022.

Related information
  • New court challenge filed in Pennsylvania to prevent some mail
  • Rural basketball tournament eyes interactions with NBA
  • Chinese paddlers sweep titles at WTT Champions Incheon
  • Focus on snow and ice tourism as providers eye opportunities
  • Ukraine gets more military aid from Europe but Putin warns of consequences if Russian soil is hit
  • ​Shanghai Disney Resort launches Earth Month activities
  • Ivanka Trump beams on day out with Jared and children in sunny Miami
  • Former All Blacks head coach Ian Foster secures a new role in Japan
Recommended content
  • Zelenskyy expected in Normandy for D
  • Bodies of 3
  • Zhang wins historic all
  • Celebrity birthdays for the week of April 21
  • Albert Ruddy, Oscar
  • Taipei's Palace Museum launches high