logo
People in Multiple States Advised To Avoid the Sun for 2 Days

People in Multiple States Advised To Avoid the Sun for 2 Days

Newsweek28-05-2025

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources.
Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content.
Millions of residents across California, Nevada, and Arizona have been warned to stay out of the sun on Friday and Saturday as temperatures are set to soar into the triple digits.
The National Weather Service (NWS) has issued heat advisories and extreme heat watches across the three states as the Southwest braces for an incoming heat wave.
Why It Matters
Extreme heat is now considered one of the deadliest weather risks in the United States, causing an estimated 1,220 deaths annually, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The current heat advisories carry particular urgency for the Southwest, where low humidity and persistent drought have made wildfires significantly more destructive and difficult to contain. In January of this year alone, California wildfires killed at least 30 people and forced 200,000 to evacuate. More than 16,000 homes and business were destroyed.
What To Know
High temperatures across California's Central Valley, inland Southern California, Nevada, and Arizona are forecast to exceed 100 degrees Fahrenheit over the course of the heat advisories, with official warnings expecting "limited overnight relief."
In Nevada's Death Valley, temperatures are forecast to reach up to 115 degrees Fahrenheit.
Residents are urged to drink plenty of fluids, stay in an air-conditioned room, stay out of the sun, and check up on relatives and neighbors.
The sun rises in Southern California.
The sun rises in Southern California.
johnemac72/Getty
The NWS also warned residents not to leave young children and pets in unattended vehicles.
"Car interiors will reach lethal temperatures in a matter of minutes," the service warned.
The heat warnings will occur from Friday morning through Saturday evening and, in some areas in California, will continue through to Sunday morning.
Even in Las Vegas, the temperatures are above normal. NWS meteorologist Matt Woods, who works at the Las Vegas office, told Newsweek that temperatures this weekend will be around 10 degrees warmed than normal. Normal high temperatures in Las Vegas this time of year are 94 degrees Fahrenheit.
Meteorologists attributed the intensity of the heat wave to a persistent high-pressure system over the region combined with offshore wind patterns, which block cooler ocean air from reaching inland communities.
For those without access to air conditioning, local officials and organizations will be opening cooling centers.
What People Are Saying
Dr. Gregory Hartt, the ER medical director at Mercy Medical Center Redding, told Newsweek: "As temperatures climb, we anticipate a corresponding increase in ER visits due to heat-related illnesses. A critical component of heat wave preparedness is proactively ensuring adequate staffing levels, supplies, and cooling measures are in place to effectively manage the influx of patients."
NWS Sacramento, on X, formerly Twitter, on Monday: "With well above normal temperatures expected this week, Moderate HeatRisk and areas of Major HeatRisk are in the forecast. Widespread triple digits are possible on Friday, with near record to record highs. Practice heat safety!"
What Happens Next
In most cases, the heat wave will continue through Saturday evening, at the time of writing. People in the affected areas should monitor their local weather guidance throughout the surge in temperatures.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Hidden Buildings Revealed as Water Levels Plunge at Popular Texas Lake
Hidden Buildings Revealed as Water Levels Plunge at Popular Texas Lake

Newsweek

time2 hours ago

  • Newsweek

Hidden Buildings Revealed as Water Levels Plunge at Popular Texas Lake

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Hidden structures have resurfaced at Lake Corpus Christi in Texas as record-low water levels expose bridges, boathouses, and roads long lost beneath the reservoir. The sites revealed by an ongoing drought have captured the attention of local historians and residents, as reported by KIII News. Water storage at the lake dropped to less than 20 percent of capacity last December, prompting Corpus Christi city officials to declare Stage 3 of the City's Drought Contingency Plan. Newsweek reached out to the city, which manages the lake, via email for comment. Why It Matters The exposure of submerged landmarks highlights not only the impact of persistent drought on South Texas water supplies but also brings historical sites into public view—for better or worse. As critical reservoirs like Lake Corpus Christi reach historic lows, regional water restrictions intensify, threatening the daily lives of residents and the stability of local ecosystems. The drought has left visible traces of the area's past, underscoring the challenges it faces for its present and future. What To Know Lake Corpus Christi stood at just 18.4 percent full as of June 6, 2025, according to the official water monitoring site, Water Data for Texas. Current storage was reported at 47,379 acre-feet, sharply down from its 256,062 acre-feet conservation capacity. The water surface was 14.98 feet below the conservation pool elevation. Over the past year, the lake has seen a steady decline: it was 35.8 percent full one year ago, dropping to 27.7 percent six months ago, and 22.6 percent three months prior to the latest measurement. A stock image of a lake drying up. A stock image of a lake drying up. MriyaWildlife/Getty Bridges, roadway remains, and the shells of old boathouses have become visible across the exposed lake bed. Live Oak County historian Conrad Conrad has been working to identify these structures, including an automobile bridge built to provide access before the original river valley was flooded in the late 1950s. Remnants of a 1930s boathouse and structures constructed by the Civilian Conservation Corps during the Great Depression have also resurfaced. Drought in other parts of Texas has contributed to the exposure of structures and other things, such as hidden pecan groves at Lake Travis in Austin, in the summer of 2023. Later that year, plummeting lake levels revealed a porta-potty in the lake bed. According to the most recent report from the U.S. Drought Monitor, nearly 12 percent of the Lone Star State is experiencing exceptional drought, primarily concentrated in the southern and western parts of the state. What People Are Saying U.S. Drought Monitor, in a recent update: "For the second consecutive week, heavy rainfall (more than 1 inch) prompted a 1-category improvement to central and southern Texas. Despite this recent heavy rainfall, levels in the long-term monitoring wells of Bexar and Medina Counties remain near or at all-time lows." Live Oak County historian Conrad Conrad told KIII News: "It's shocking, to say the least. And the worst part is there's nothing in the future." What Happens Next Current drought restrictions are in effect for Corpus Christi residents, as Stage 3 of the city's Drought Contingency Plan has been implemented. Lawn watering is not permitted, and other restrictions are in place, including limits on car washing and outdoor watering.

Tired in Tornado Alley
Tired in Tornado Alley

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Tired in Tornado Alley

DAVENPORT, Iowa — The message at the Quad Cities National Weather Service, which keeps an eye on the flood-prone Mississippi River and the heart of Tornado Alley, is that everything is fine. Yes, two of the office's three top positions are vacant. No, the office doesn't have a hydrologist, despite its proximity to the mighty Mississippi, which flooded Davenport for 96 days in 2019. And, sure, the staff is down by about 42% from its typical 24 to 14, according to former employees familiar with the office. Those left are putting on a brave face. 'We feel good to meet the mission,' said Matt Friedlein, who is normally the office's science and operations officer but has been filling in as the acting meteorologist-in-charge. The mission here is crucial. This is tornado country, where the warnings that come from this office can be matters of life and death. On Tuesday, eight tornadoes roared through the region, downing trees, derailing rail cars and snapping utility poles. Like National Weather Service offices across the country, the Quad Cities office is dealing with deep cuts after the Trump administration laid off probationary workers. And while the Trump administration has claimed everything is OK — while also saying it will be refilling more than 100 NWS roles across the country — even some Republican members of Congress are sounding the alarm. 'We're fixing it,' said Rep. Mike Flood, R-Neb., who introduced bipartisan legislation Friday that would classify NWS employees as critical public safety workers and protect them from future cost-saving federal cuts. 'We're going to make them public safety. We're going to fund them.' Last week, before the administration acknowledged it planned to hire new staffers, NBC News joined a congressional tour — at the invitation of Rep. Eric Sorensen, D-Ill., Congress' only meteorologist and a critic of the administration — to see the effects of the Trump administration's cuts at the Quad Cities forecasting office for Iowa and Illinois. We found a dedicated but short-staffed office scraping by as best it could and politely avoiding a few of the most pointed questions. Were there plans to hire a new hydrologist? What would ideal staffing levels be? 'I'll have to refer you to public affairs,' Friedlein said. Ray Wolf, who retired from the Davenport office in 2023 but has kept in touch with his former colleagues, said that they were 'hanging in there' but that the nationwide cuts had left the system vulnerable to a failure. 'How long can they keep on before something invariably breaks down?' he said. 'If you keep stressing a system beyond its limits? Eventually, there's going to be an issue somewhere that's going to show up.' The National Weather Service is down about 560 employees since the Trump administration laid off workers and offered buyouts and early retirements to others, according to Sen. Maria Cantwell, D-Wash, who held a news conference Wednesday opposing the cuts. At least eight offices have stopped operating 24 hours a day. At least 10 of 122 NWS forecasting offices this year have halted or suspended the release of weather balloons that provide data to predict the weather; they simply didn't have the staff to manage. Real-time weather data collected and analyzed by the National Weather Service and its parent agency, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) — from balloons, radar, maritime buoys and satellites — forms the basis of almost all public and private weather forecasting. Meteorologists at forecasting offices are responsible for analyzing the modeling data and sending alerts to the public. Improvements to weather models are the result of applying the agencies' research. The agency has been spotlighted for cuts for months. Project 2025, a road map for conservatives ahead of the election, suggested dismantling many of NOAA's functions and privatizing that work, placing it under state control or sending it to other agencies. Staffing levels at the weather service have become a political pressure point — but even as the Trump administration approved hiring more than 100 additional staffers for critical roles, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick insisted the agency had enough resources. NOAA and NWS are part of the Commerce Department. 'We are fully staffed with forecasters and scientists,' Lutnick said Wednesday at a Senate Appropriations Committee hearing. 'Under no circumstances am I going to let public safety or public forecasting be touched.' At a House Appropriations Committee hearing Thursday, Lutnick suggested that some regional centers within the National Weather Service could be consolidated and that more balloon launches could be automated. Now, members of Congress on both sides of the aisle are pushing for change as tornadoes tear across the Midwest, hurricane season ramps up and the peak of wildfire season out west nears. Sorensen, who worked for 22 years as a TV meteorologist, has signed on to co-sponsor Flood's bill, along with Reps. Frank Lucas, R-Okla., Jared Moskowitz, D-Fla., and Jimmy Panetta, D-Calif. Sorensen said he's concerned a mistake by a worn-down meteorologist will lead to unnecessary deaths. He compared the situation to a used car — once trusty and now headed for a lapse. 'It's not running the way that it was supposed to,' Sorensen said of the service. 'Meteorologists, we're human, you know. We will make mistakes, and I don't want to ever see us in a situation where funding or a lack of funding has now caused there to be a loss of life.' Some help is on the way. The administration recently approved the agency's hiring 126 new staffers, including meteorologists, hydrologists, physical scientists and electronics technicians, a measure CNN first reported Monday. 'A targeted number of permanent, mission-critical field positions will soon be advertised under an exception to the Department-wide hiring freeze to further stabilize frontline operations,' Erica Grow Cei, a meteorologist and spokesperson for the National Weather Service, said in a statement. The National Weather Service has also opened a period of reassignment for current staffers to relocate and fill more than 150 critical positions. The union that represents weather service employees says hiring is welcome news, but hardly enough. 'It's a Band-Aid,' said Tom Fahy, the legislative director for the National Weather Service Employees Organization. 'We're still doing triage. We're still plugging the holes and unnecessary vacancies across the country, and 126 [hirings] only starts to provide the healing we need across the country.' In addition to making weather service employees public safety employees, Flood's bill would require an assessment of the NWS workforce and prioritize hiring staffers who regularly launch weather balloons. The Quad Cities forecasting office has been able to keep up with weather balloon releases only because it has gotten help from visiting NWS staffers on temporary assignments. In Sorensen's district, forecasting dictates when farmers plant crops or apply pesticides, when riverfront businesses lay out sandbags to meet Mississippi floodwaters and how pilots approach Quad Cities International Airport. But forecasters earn their keep during this time of year, when the air occasionally becomes heavy, sirens howl and the sky darkens or even turns green. About two weeks ago, on May 20, funnel clouds reported near the Quad Cities airport forced travelers to take cover in the basement and federal air controllers to leave the glass tower that overlooks the landing strips. Schoolchildren at Geneseo Middle School nearby huddled against the wall with hands covering their heads for about 45 minutes, 'Midwest life,' Nathan Dwyer, 12, said of the well-rehearsed ritual, which is directed, in part, by meteorologists who analyze federal radar systems and then send off warnings that light up smartphones and provide the radar images you see headlining TV newscasts. The cuts to weather service staffing has left some in the community — including Nathan's mom — wondering whether they will continue to have the same level of safety and emergency information as in the past. 'I want to be confident that if there is severe weather heading my way that I'm informed,' said Megan Dwyer, a farmer near Moline, Illinois. 'I want senior meteorologists that are behind the scenes making sure that these models are being updated and accurately reflect what's happening.' On May 20, that's exactly what happened. Alex Gibbs, the lead meteorologist at the Quad Cities National Weather Service, fired off tornado warnings after he recognized a 'typical setup' for tornadic rotation on radar. 'I've been doing it for 15 years. It's like riding a bike, honestly,' he said. Much of what makes up a tornado warning comes from the specialized computer systems and decades of data that now power the weather models that can forecast extreme weather — but not all of it. Meteorologists like Gibbs remain a crucial piece of the system. Gibbs said he honed a 'gut' instinct for recognizing the patterns that develop into tornadoes when he was chasing storms in graduate school. In the end, nothing touched down, and the event was just a scare. On Tuesday, the region counted eight small twisters, which downed trees and derailed train cars. Some in the Quad Cities are concerned that there will be little margin in a major severe weather outbreak and that long hours will grind down the 14-person staff down over time, leaving the community vulnerable. Wolf, the retired Davenport meteorologist, said he's worried. As many as 12 employees used to simultaneously staff severe weather outbreaks, he said. The cuts leave fewer people for reinforcements, particularly if other forecasting offices are tied up in their own weather crises. '​When you have a staff of 14 and you need 10 people, now, all of a sudden, you're in a world of hurt,' Wolf said. 'If we have a big, severe weather event in the next week or two, I'm sure they will carry on and do a really good job with it as they have historically. The challenge comes when you're stressing the whole system time after time after time.' Brian Payne, the emergency manager for Scott County, Iowa, who works closely with the office, said that it was providing a similar level of service so far and that he hadn't noticed any issues. 'We rely very heavily on them,' Payne said, adding that he was concerned about staffing and change at the agency. 'They sound tired.' A former National Weather Service employee with knowledge of the situation in Davenport said the staff's professionalism and dedication were preventing worse outcomes. 'They all pitch in and work the hours and crazy shifts to get the job done,' said the former employee, who was concerned that speaking out would make the office a target. 'I just feel bad for the staff. There's a lot of weight on their shoulders.' Sorensen said employees fear retribution and are scared to speak out. 'These are my friends. These are my colleagues. I went to college 25 years ago with the meteorologist-in-charge here,' Sorensen said, referring to Friedlein. 'They're nervous that what they say may have a political ramification, and then somebody much like a bully back in high school will come and knock them down for no reason, right?' The concerns in the Quad Cities office reflect a challenging national staffing picture. The office is one of 35 of 122 forecasting offices without permanent meteorologists-in-charge to lead them, according to an agency list. As of last month, about 43% of forecasting offices had staffing vacancy rates above 20%, according to Fahy. At least six offices have vacancy rates high enough that they have shuttered overnight services, leaving the areas they service vulnerable to overnight surprises. Congressional Democrats from California, where offices in Sacramento and Hanford are closed overnight, have railed against the cuts, calling them the 'beginning of a public safety crisis with potentially catastrophic consequences.' In Florida, John Morales, a meteorologist for NBC South Florida, said that the quality of hurricane forecasts would be 'becoming degraded' because of staffing shortages and weather balloon cuts and that he couldn't be confident in them. Flood, the Nebraska Republican, said he found an office sapped of life when he visited with staffers in the agency's Omaha-area office as the federal government was offering early retirement. 'I could see it in their eyes. They were burnt-out. They were concerned. There were people there that, you know, have been there for 30 years that were taking the retirement buyout,' he said. When the office could no longer launch weather balloons, Flood said, his constituents took notice, and he felt compelled to intervene. 'This is not a partisan issue,' Flood said. 'People understand how valuable the National Weather Service is. And a lot of times people take them for granted because they've always been there.' This article was originally published on

Official overseeing the National Hurricane Center testified to Congress it's fully staffed—it's not
Official overseeing the National Hurricane Center testified to Congress it's fully staffed—it's not

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Official overseeing the National Hurricane Center testified to Congress it's fully staffed—it's not

The National Hurricane Center is 'fully staffed' and any suggestion that the Trump administration fired meteorologists at the National Weather Service is 'fake news,' 'preposterous and silly,' Commerce Sec. Howard Lutnick testified to Congress this week. But the administration did fire meteorologists, and the nation's top hurricane forecasting office is not fully staffed as the season is underway. The NHC, like many other parts of the NWS, has a staffing shortfall currently, with five vacancies at the center in Miami, including at least four meteorologists. None of the NHC positions can be filled due to the federal hiring freeze, though the NWS was able to get an exemption for 126 mission-critical vacancies at other forecast offices around the country. The critical staffing issues — which have meant some forecast offices are no longer monitoring the weather 24/7 or launching twice-daily weather balloons — have raised concerns that forecast accuracy will suffer during this hurricane season. 'We are fully, fully staffed. There are no openings on the National Hurricane Center, zero. It is fully staffed,' Lutnick said before a Senate appropriations subcommittee during hearings on the Commerce Department budget on Wednesday. Lutnick claimed again on Thursday the NHC is 'fully staffed,' and falsely stated local weather service forecast offices are fully staffed in an appearance before the House Appropriations Committee. 'It is fake news and inappropriate to suggest a single meteorologist or hydrologist was fired,' Lutnick said. 'That is preposterous and silly.' The Trump administration cut about 100 jobs at the NWS, including meteorologists and hydrologists, according to a fact sheet from Democratic Sen. Maria Cantwell's office. The NWS lost even more meteorologists, including many with decades of experience, from early retirement and other incentives the Trump administration offered in order to reduce the size of the federal workforce. In total, the agency has lost about 560 employees during the course of the administration, bringing total staffing levels below 4,000, according to the NWS Employees Organization. This is about 18% below 'necessary staffing levels' and 33% below 'normal' staffing levels. Many local NWS offices are so short on meteorologists in the wake of Trump administration firings, buyouts and early retirement incentives that the agency has authorized internal transfers to fill critical gaps, in addition to the 126 new hires. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration reiterated Lutnick's claims in a Thursday statement: 'The National Hurricane Center is fully staffed to meet the rigorous demands of the hurricane season,' spokesperson Kim Doster said. 'Future positions that may be advertised at the NHC will provide additional support and a deeper bench for our ongoing around-the-clock operations.' A Commerce Department spokesperson did not respond to requests for comment. The hurricane center's staff website shows all but one of its vacancies, which include at least one hurricane specialist, one hurricane forecaster and two meteorologist/programmers. One staff member who took an early retirement offer is still listed on the roster, according to an NWS employee familiar with the matter.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store