It's Wednesday. California's first heat wave of the summer arrives. Plus, the state cites two Half Moon Bay farms where shootings took place this year for health and safety violations. |
| The sun setting behind Joshua trees in Lancaster in 2021.Robyn Beck/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images |
|
California is in for a heat wave. |
But hotter conditions are on the way. A high-pressure system building over the Pacific and moving into the Western United States is expected to raise temperatures in California beginning today, with the highest readings expected over the weekend. |
Much of the state will be affected, with forecasters from Eureka to Los Angeles to San Diego warning of hot and dry weather in the coming days. The Central Valley will feel the heat the most. |
On Friday, Sacramento is expected to log its first triple-digit temperature of the year. Bakersfield, Madera and Merced may all exceed 105 degrees, and Fresno may reach 109 on Saturday, said Jessica Chiari, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service's San Joaquin Valley office, in Hanford. |
It will be a marked shift from the recent string of daily highs that have been running 10 degrees below normal for the region, Chiari said, adding that once the heat arrives, it is unlikely to let up for several days. |
"Right now, it looks like we're going to have fairly consistent triple-digit temperatures here going into next week," she told me. |
The heat isn't expected to break records, but it will pose unusually high risks to Californians, experts say. The abruptness of the change means that many people aren't yet acclimated to warmer weather, and will be at increased risk of heat stroke and heat exhaustion. |
"It'll feel hotter than it is, of course, because it's been so chilly as of late," Daniel Swain, a climate scientist at U.C.L.A., told reporters on Monday. "The transition will feel rather sudden. It's not that humans can't handle 90 or 100 degrees. It's that if you go quickly from chilly temperatures to 100 degrees, then you're going to have some more problems potentially." |
Swain and other experts recommend taking extra precautions to stay hydrated and cool, and keeping an eye out for signs of heat-related illnesses. You can read more about how to stay safe in extreme heat here. |
Experts also warn that the heat wave will make fireworks extra dangerous in our already fire-prone state. More wildfires are started on July 4 than on any other day, Swain said. |
The National Weather Service's office in Los Angeles warned, "The increased heat and dryness will increase the fire weather concerns, and any spark from fireworks could easily start a fire in the tall grass crop that has cured and turned brown in recent weeks." |
In some parts of the state, temperatures could drop again fairly soon. |
The National Weather Service's forecast for the next two weeks shows temperatures along the coast that will be around the seasonal average, and slightly above-average temperatures inland. Even so, the long-range forecast for July through September shows hotter-than-normal temperatures across the state. |
- See how hot it will be in your region this week.
- Learn how to stay safe in California's roaring rivers this summer.
- A teenage boy and his stepfather hiking in Big Bend National Park in Texas died last week as temperatures rose to 119 degrees.
|
Enjoy all of The New York Times in one subscription — the original reporting and analysis, plus puzzles from Games, recipes from Cooking, product reviews from Wirecutter and sports journalism from The Athletic. Experience it all with a New York Times All Access subscription. |
| If they are approved by the Legislature and Gov. Gavin Newsom, two bills would make California the first state to require large corporations to disclose greenhouse gas emissions.Rich Pedroncelli/Associated Press |
|
- Mark Ridley-Thomas: Lawyers for the Los Angeles politician Mark Ridley-Thomas asked a federal judge to order a new trial after a jury found Ridley-Thomas guilty of bribery and fraud in March, The Los Angeles Times reports.
- Seeking abortions across state lines: More than twice as many out-of-state patients sought abortions in Orange and San Bernardino Counties in the year after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade than in the year before, The Sun reports.
|
- Tulare Lake: Indigenous leaders are calling for the preservation of the Central Valley lake that reappeared after this winter's storms, The Los Angeles Times reports.
|
- San Francisco's empty offices: Fueled by remote work, office vacancy in San Francisco has reached a record high of 31.8 percent in the third year of a market downturn, The San Francisco Chronicle reports.
- Alameda County: A civil grand jury report found a series of ethical issues, including nepotism and a lack of spending oversight, in the Alameda County government, The Bay Area News Group reports.
- Half Moon Bay shooting: California cited two mushroom farms in Half Moon Bay for health and safety violations after a worker killed seven people in back-to-back shootings on the farms, NBC Bay Area reports.
|
| People walking down Temescal Alley in Oakland in 2016.Peter DaSilva for The New York Times |
|
Today's tip comes from Sophie Tivona: |
"My favorite place to visit in California is Temescal Alley in Oakland. It's a little oasis tucked away off Telegraph Avenue that has a collection of small shops run by micro business owners. You can shop from people who actually make the items in their shops — clothes, ice cream, stationery, jewelry. There's even an old-school barbershop and a record shop! The Alley also includes two beautiful, secret garden patios that serve smash burgers and bagels on the weekends. It's a true gem in Oakland, surrounded by amazing restaurants — you could spend the whole day here!" |
Tell us about your favorite places to visit in California. Email your suggestions to CAtoday@nytimes.com. We'll be sharing more in upcoming editions of the newsletter. |
We're almost halfway through 2023! What are the best things that have happened to you so far this year? What have been your wins? Or your unexpected joys, big or small? |
And before you go, some good news |
A baby red-tailed hawk has been adopted by a pair of eagles in Northern California, USA Today reports. |
Red-tailed hawks make begging calls similar to those of eaglets. The eagles most likely heard the call of the baby hawk and brought the bird back to their nest as prey for their own eaglet, the news outlet reports. |
But then they began to raise the hawk as their own. |
Thanks for reading. I'll be back tomorrow. — Soumya |
Briana Scalia and Allison Honors contributed to California Today. You can reach the team at CAtoday@nytimes.com. |
|