Heatwave with a global grip

Long, hot summer: The Great British heatwave of 1911

Until this week, the record for the hottest July day was set during George V's rule. In an extract from 'The Perfect Summer: Dancing into Shadow in 1911', Julie Nicholson looks back
Published: 21 July 2006


On 17 July, 1911, most of the country was perspiring in 80F (27C) temperatures. It became too hot to work after midday, so the managers of the cotton mills and stone quarries in Clitheroe, Lancashire, decided to shut down in the middle of the afternoon. To compensate for lost hours, the quarrymen's day would now begin at first light, 4.30am.

The managers were delighted that the Daylight Savings Bill had not yet been made law, so they were able to take advantage of the early dawn.

The Times began to run a regular column under the heading "Deaths From Heat". And the weathermen forecast that temperatures would continue to rise.

By 20 July there had been 20 consecutive days without rain, and Richard Stratton, an elderly farmer in Monmouth, reported gathering his earliest harvest since 1865.

Schoolgirl Amy Reeves, aged 10, took off her boots and stockings and left them on the grass beside a shallow pond at Longcross near Chertsey in Surrey. She was discovered drowned later that afternoon, her head caught in the weeds beneath the water.

Two days later fires began to break out spontaneously along the railway tracks at Ascot, Bagshot and Bracknell, and the gorse on Greenham Common in Newbury caught light.

In London the sky seemed unusually clear, and in King's Lynn in Norfolk a temperature of 92F (33C) broke all previous records for that part of the country.

Motorised fire-engines tested their water jets for the first time on St Paul's Cathedral. The water reached the 365ft-high dome, well above the cross.

By the end of July the combined effects of lack of rain and scorching sun had resulted in a dangerous scarcity of grass for herds and flocks. Pastures had turned brown. Farmers were being forced to raise the price of milk.

On 28 July the nature correspondent of The Times reported that even in the deepest, most sheltered lanes it was impossible to find green leaves and with a note of despair that "the crannies and rifts in walled Sussex hedgerows where one looks for rare ferns and other treasures hold only handfuls of dry dust".

Nor was that all: "The most sorrowful sign of all is the silence of the singing birds. July is never a very musical month. This year however all the sylvan music has been mute. The silence of a parched countryside."

At the beginning of August the constitutional health of England was beginning to falter badly in the continuing heat.

Only at the London Zoo in Regent's Park were there any signs of enjoyment of the oppressive temperatures. Although the keepers' thick uniforms had been replaced with special lightweight jackets, their charges were thriving in the heatwave.

The lion cubs, cheetahs, leopards and jackals in the King's Collection had become unusually active and the lordly ungulates, the rhinoceros and giraffe, strode round their enclosures happier than they had been since leaving the large sunny plains of their homelands.

The royal party had arrived at Cowes, on the Isle of Wight, for the Regatta, "an enchanting picture of gleaming sails and gently swaying masts", and the King, George V, and the Prince of Wales, the future Edward VIII, had taken to cooling themselves with a pre-breakfast swim in Osborne Bay.

But the press had quickly discovered this secluded place. As cameramen jostled to get their shots of the sovereign and his heir in bathing dress, a statement was issued by Buckingham Palace: "If less objectionable behaviour is not observed by the photographers they are warned that steps will be taken to stop the nuisance."

Many miles from the seashore, an infinitely more newsworthy if less obviously photogenic sequence of events was taking place.

In London on the first day of the month the temperature maintained a steady 81F, and just as the dock owners were hoping that the strike action of earlier in the summer was a thing of the past, between four and five thousand men employed in the Victoria and Albert Docks stopped work, and the place was at a standstill.

That August the striking men were at least relieved to be out in the open wider streets of central London. With its narrow alleys, cramped and airless at the best of times, the East End had become intolerable in the August weather.

In filthy six-storey tenement buildings with narrow stone staircases, four or five people might share not just one room but one bed, crammed into a 12ft by 10ft space, a baby squashed in one corner, a banana crate for its cot. The air was thick with the rankness of unwashed bedding and stale food.

Even during the stifling summer nights there was little chance of rest, according to one exhausted mother, for "throughout the hours of darkness - which were not hours of silence - the sleepless folk talked incessantly."

Across the country the sun continued to burn down, and the hum of activity in meadow and field ceased. The water pump and the well in the village of High Easter in Dunmow, Essex, both ran dry.

Taking advantage of cloudless skies, many keen but inexperienced car drivers had saved up their petrol and took their chance on the roads.

Mr and Mrs George Cain from Yarmouth, Norfolk, skidded on the hot slippery tarmacadam surface of the Yarmouth streets and struck an electric cable. The car was hurled across the pavement and Mrs Cain's sister, Miss Smith, was impaled on the adjoining railings.

At Ditchling in Sussex a newspaper delivery boy drove into an oncoming horse, his van crumpling on impact as the horse was crushed to death on the bonnet.

By late August lassitude had begun to further weaken the nation's energy, as the hot weather hung over England like a brocade curtain. The relentless sunshine seemed to have bleached the colour from life, replacing it with an oppressive haze.

City dwellers were worst affected, and that year holidays as a means of escape were in fashion as never before. Summer holidays had been increasing in popularity over the years since the 1871 Bank Holiday Act had entitled everyone to a day off on Whit Monday in May and another in early August, just as everyone was due days off at Christmas and Easter. But these new work-free days were intended for unrestricted freedom in the sun, rather than for religious contemplation.

In 1911, 55 per cent of the British population were taking the minimum of a one-day trip to the sea in the summer. Some work places, including paradoxically the railway companies themselves, had begun to introduce paid holidays longer than the customary half-day, and the double advantages of good weather and financial security for sometimes as much as a week combined with the ever-improving transport services to make England's coastline a crowded place that August.

There, in the simple, cost-free pleasures of sunshine, sand and water, a fleetingly realisable equality was to be found by the poor, the suffragettes, the trade unionists, and even the parliamentarians.

Sun-darkened skin was still considered most undesirable, the give-away sign of an outside labourer, and special creams to counteract accidental tanning were advertised in the women's magazines. The Lady helpfully advised the use of "Sulpholine" lotion, "a simple remedy for clearing the skin of eruptions, roughness and skin discoloration."

A greater hazard even than sunburn was the risk of exposing naked flesh in public. On many bathing beaches the sexes were still segregated, although at Bexhill in Sussex the experiment of mixed bathing had attracted much excited comment.

A cautious entry from a bathing-machine was the recognised means of making bodily contact with the sea, though at a shilling a time it was not cheap. In the town hall at Broadstairs, Kent, a conservative-minded town (in 1911 it was still being promoted in the South Eastern and Chatham Railway Handbook as Charles Dickens's favourite resort), a large unmissable notice in the hall cautioned that "No female over eight years shall bathe from any machine except within the bounds marked for females." It hung next to a second poster warning that "Bathing dresses must extend from the neck to the knees."

These rules were accepted unquestioningly and were clearly not seen as restrictions, for the editor of the Handbook felt able to boast that Broadstairs was "one of the freshest and freest little places in the world".

The fully enclosed bathing machine was a sort of garden shed with wheels at one end, its walls and roof made either of wood or canvas. Men and women would enter the machine from the back, while it was parked high up from the water line on the gender-segregated beach.

In the pitch-black hut, windowless in order to discourage any peering in, bathers would remove their clothes and put them up high on a shelf inside the machine to keep them dry, before struggling in the dark with the elaborate costume required for swimming.

A sharp tap from inside was the agreed signal for a horse, a muscly man or even occasionally a mechanical pulley contraption to drag the whole machine and its human contents to a line just beyond the surf.

There the bather could slip discreetly into water up to the neck, with no chance of any part of the body being exposed to the view of those who remained on the beach. At the point of entry there was usually an attendant, irrationally sometimes of the opposite sex. Some ladies looked forward to the moment of being lifted into the sea by strong local arms more than any other part of their holiday.

By early September, summer was not quite ready to release its long hold on the year.

There was a feeling that month of a youthful boldness, a feeling which stretched beyond the school walls. On 6 September Thomas W Burgess, aged 37, covered in lard and stark naked except for a pair of thick motorist's goggles and a black rubber bathing cap, stepped into the sea at Folkestone to make his 16th attempt to reach France by swimming across the Channel.

Despite numerous attempts over the last 36 years, no one had succeeded in this since Matthew Webb reached Calais in August 1875. Webb was not there to wave Burgess into the water; he had been killed in 1883 trying to swim the Niagara Falls in Canada.

Averaging a mile and three-quarters an hour and accompanied by a boat whose crew fed him a grape from time to time and 11 drops of champagne every 30 minutes, Burgess followed the irregular course dictated by the tide, a route he described as "a figure of a badly written capital M with a loop on first down stroke".

After 37 miles and with only two and a half left to swim he sensed himself entering foreign waters, and was promptly stung badly by a cluster of poisonous pink French jellyfish. To show he was in no way offended, he asked the boat crew to start singing "La Marseillaise", and to their accompaniment he landed on the beautiful deserted beach at Le Chatelet near Sangatte.

On the day of the swim the temperature recorder at South Kensington registered 92F, and people found themselves crossing over to the shady side of the street. There was still a severe water shortage in pockets of the country, wool workers in Bradford Mills being laid off because there was no water for the night-time cleaning of the wool.

On 11 September the average temperature suddenly dropped by 20 degrees and The Times forecast good news: "The condition over the kingdom as a whole is no longer of the fine settled type of last week and the prospects of rain before long appear to be more hopeful for all districts."

The Lady magazine was already devoting several pages to new autumn fashions, and sumptuous furs had arrived on the rails of Peter Robinson's. The long, hot summer was over.

The Perfect Summer: Dancing into Shadow in 1911 by Juliet Nicolson is published by John Murray, priced
 
Thousands Without Power in NYC for 5th Day

http://www.breitbart.com/news/2006/07/21/D8J0M98O0.html

y VERENA DOBNIK
Associated Press Writer

NEW YORK

A mysterious blackout during the hottest week of the year left tens of thousands of New Yorkers without power for a fifth day Friday as residents sweltered, businesses idled and city officials seethed.

"It's a total catastrophe. We've been throwing things out for four days," restaurant owner Louis Panazakos lamented as workers threw out garbage bags full of fresh pasta and sauces.

Power company Con Edison initially said fewer than 2,500 customers were affected, but it increased that number tenfold Friday morning to 25,000 customers.

The new estimate stunned Mayor Michael Bloomberg who said "we might have thrown more resources into the area" had he known so many people were affected.

Bloomberg estimated that would translate to about 100,000 people considering that each "customer" could be more than one household in an area where homes are often sectioned into multiple units, and could even be an entire apartment building.

"The sad thing is, this shouldn't have happened," Bloomberg said. "We don't know why, but the most important thing _ make sure nobody dies or gets hurt and then help Con Ed to get it back up."

The blackouts started Monday in a handful of neighborhoods in Queens. Two LaGuardia Airport terminals lost power Monday night and again on Tuesday.

Since then, hundreds of businesses have been idle, and the city's jail complex on Rikers Island has had to operate on backup generators. Some building's elevators were not running, and traffic lights at some intersections were not working.

"This is outrageous," City Councilman Peter F. Vallone Jr. said. "When is this going to be fixed? If it's going to be days, they should tell people it is going to be days."

Con Edison said its revised number followed a block-by-block cable inspection in northwest Queens on Thursday night. That led to the higher number _ and escalated the rhetoric against Con Edison, the main power company in New York City and Westchester County.

Queens District Attorney Richard Brown issued a statement Friday saying his staff was conducting a review to determine whether criminal charges are warranted.

"To know that elderly and sick Queens residents were without vital services for days because of Con Edison's lies is just criminal," Assemblyman Michael Gianaris said.

Bloomberg demanded that the utility investigate and deliver a report on the cause of the outages in Queens within two weeks.

A series of heavy-duty circuits that supply the area began to fail Monday evening, just hours after the sweltering state set a record for electricity use. More circuits failed Tuesday and more again Wednesday, even after the city's heat wave ended and demand for power plummeted.

The blackouts were at their worst on Wednesday, when 10 of the 22 feeder cables that supply the area with power were down simultaneously. The temperature had hit 100 degrees in the neighborhood the day before.

Just why heat would have triggered a problem in Queens, but not elsewhere, was unclear.

"We're trying to get them up as quickly as possible. We're working 24/7, and we're hoping that the bulk of the customers that are out will be back on Sunday," said Alfonso Quiroz, a spokesman for Con Edison.

Con Edison trucks lined a street in Queens while workers were busy digging to fix power lines. Most of the street's shops were shuttered, but the owner of VIP men's clothing store, Bobby Collazo, was attending to a customer in the dark. He said he had lost more than $1,000 because of the outages, nearly a third of his monthly gross income.

"In 2003 it took a day and a half to turn on all of the lights in New York City and now this little store here has been closed for three days _ with the big Con Ed power station a few blocks away," he said, referring to the massive blackout of three years ago that darkened much of the Northeast.

Con Edison is the subsidiary of Consolidated Edison Inc., one of the nation's largest investor-owned energy companies. It has approximately $12 billion in annual revenues and $25 billion in assets.
 
Con Ed: Blackout's 10 times worse than originally reported

http://www.nydailynews.com/front/story/436887p-368106c.html

A blackout affecting an estimated 100,000 people in Queens - which entered its fifth day Friday - is 10 times worse than the power company had previously reported, Con Edison said.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg, speaking on his weekly radio show, said he was "annoyed" by the new estimate - 25,000 customers without power - because "we might have thrown more resources into the area." Bloomberg later made the "100,000 people" estimate at a news conference. The term "customer" can refer to more than one household, or even an entire apartment building.

"The sad thing is, this shouldn't have happened," Bloomberg said. "We don't know why, but the most important thing - make sure nobody dies or gets hurt and then help Con Ed to get it back up."

"And then we'll go and try to figure out why and point fingers and beat people over the head and all that sort of thing," added the mayor.

Con Edison said its revised number followed a block-by-block cable inspection in northwest Queens on Thursday night. It said previous estimates came from the number of customers who called to complain.

Similarly, Con Edison said Friday that 35,000 customers in Westchester County - not the 25,000 reported earlier - lost power after Tuesday's storm. About 6,000 were still out on Friday morning.

"They have no way of measuring whether or not there's power to your house" until workers make it to that location, Bloomberg said. "They cannot tell from their computers."

"Their estimates at the beginning were based on how many people called up and said, 'My power's not working.' ... You can question whether that's an intelligent way to do it," the mayor said.

The rhetoric was ratcheted up as other politicians jumped into the fray. Assemblyman Michael Gianaris of Astoria called for a "criminal investigation of Con Edison on the grounds of reckless endangerment."

Bloomberg said he was told the utility now hopes to fix most of the problems by the end of the weekend.

The blackouts started Monday evening. Two LaGuardia Airport terminals were without power Tuesday; the Rikers Island jail complex used backup generators. A number of subway problems around the city this week were believed to be heat or power related, including severe interruptions in Queens on Wednesday, when the temperature hit 100 degrees in some neighborhoods. By Friday, hundreds of Queens businesses remained idle and homeowners had no use of appliances and, sometimes, elevators.

Bloomberg said the city expected to restore traffic lights by the Friday afternoon rush-hour, with traffic agents posted at remaining intersections.

Uniformed officers were showing a "significant presence" and two burglary arrests were made on Thursday night at blacked-out homes, said Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly.

Ambulances and fire vehicles were cruising the streets to speed response times, and a firehouse was handing out water and dry ice to residents, said the mayor and Fire Commissioner Nicholas Scoppetta. The mayor said calls to 911 were down 40 percent because police were on the scene, where residents "can grab them."

The Human Resources Administration, the Red Cross, the Small Business Bureau and other agencies will provide assistance to the neighborhood through the weekend or for as long as the blackout continues, Bloomberg said.

People who lost food or had other damage were instructed to call 311 to find out how to get reimbursed.

Bloomberg, who visited the area on Thursday, demanded that the utility investigate and deliver a report on the cause within two weeks.

Earlier story: Sweat and rage

No answers in Queens blackout

BY MICHAEL WHITE, MICHAEL SAUL and ADAM NICHOLS
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITERS

Thousands of furious Queens residents spent their fourth day without power yesterday as Mayor Bloomberg visited the crisis-hit area - and Con Ed expected no immediate end to the blackout.

Officials at the utility remained stumped about what knocked out juice to one of New York's most densely populated neighborhoods. Workers doling out bags of ice told residents it could be Monday before they're reconnected.

"Heads need to roll," City Councilman Peter Vallone (D-Queens) told reporters yesterday. "Con Ed has sent us back to the dark ages. People of this community want to storm Con Ed with ... pitchforks."

Con Ed estimated that 1,800 homes remained cut off across Astoria, Sunnyside, Woodside, Long Island City and Hunters Point last night.

Streetlights and traffic intersections were dead and usually vibrant main streets resembled ghost towns.

But community leaders put the number affected much higher.

"Maybe there's that many people with zero power," said Assemblyman Michael Gianaris (D-Astoria). "Many, many more have enough power just to turn on a light bulb.

"[This affects] hundreds of thousands of people in western Queens."

Con Ed officials offered little in the way of hope yesterday.

"We have no timetable for when everyone in Queens should come back," said Con Ed spokesman Chris Olert.

That answer left customers frustrated and angry.

"You call them and they tell you nothing," said Elena Murphy, 25, who is nine months' pregnant and was carrying a sack of ice to her Steinway Ave. home yesterday.

"I can't keep any food in my home. I've thrown out $150 worth of groceries and I have to feed my daughter on dry food.

"I'm due to have my baby any day. I had to buy a new phone that runs on a battery so that I could call somebody if I go into labor. It is unbelievable."

"We've got to go out of town today," said mom-of-two Maria Dapontes-Dougherty, 48. "We can't live like this."

The blackout also has crippled local businesses.

"We've probably lost $25,000 in business in three days," said Gianni DellaPolla, 26, a baker at Gian & Piero Bakery on 30th Ave., Astoria.

"Everything like wedding cakes, eggs, creams, we had to throw all that out."

The power cut left 1,000 seniors stuck without water and electricity on Wednesday, said City Councilman Eric Gioia (D-Sunnyside), who alerted the Red Cross to the Berkley Towers complex in Woodside.

"This wasn't just an inconvenience," he said. "This was an extremely grave situation."

Bloomberg, who early yesterday said he had no plans to visit the area, later changed his mind and held an afternoon news conference in Astoria, demanding Con Ed file a report on what went wrong.

But he said meeting residents would only get in the way of efforts to restore power.

"I could drive the streets and shake some hands and talk, but I am neither a Con Ed repairman nor a police officer not a fire officer, and I have always believed that I want them doing their job and not taking their time shaking hands with the mayor."

With Rich O'Malley

Utility will pay for spoiled food

Folks in northwest Queens who were forced to throw away food spoiled in the midst of power outages that began Monday can file a claim for reimbursement through Con Ed.

Residential customers can apply for up to $350 in lost groceries, and business owners may claim a maximum of $7,000.

For claims up to $150, residential customers must provide Con Edison with an itemized list. Claims greater than $150 must be accompanied by a list and receipts, officials said.

Commercial customers must file all records of purchase.

Those seeking reimbursement should access claim forms on the Web at www.conedison.com, or by calling (800) 75-CONED.

http://wcbstv.com/topstories/local_story_202003024.html
Jul 21, 2006 11:52 am US/Eastern
Hard At Work? Not These Con Ed Workers
Image

Ti-Hua Chang
Reporting

(CBS) WOODSIDE The power problems had Mayor Bloomberg promising swift action by Con-Ed. He said they're doing all they can, but CBS 2 caught Con Edison workers in Woodside not working.

Five Con Edison workers in two vans were caught on video, sleeping, reading newspapers, making phone calls, and removing their sign that indicates they are at work.

This lasted for nearly half an hour.

The workers were asked, "I was just wondering what you guys have been doing this past half-hour? Because I saw the manhole over here. Is this a cable repair?"

One worker said, "We're working over here on the sidewalk. I really can't say anything. We're trying our best. So, that's all I can really tell you right now."

When asked if they were on lunch break for the past half hour, the worker said, "No."

He then added, "I can't really say anything. Sorry."

A co-worker in the Con-Ed truck where this worker was interviewed slept through the entire interview.

The workers then drove off after being asked if they could say what they were repairing.

Residents in the area also questioned the workers. Restaurant owner Luis Figueroa said, "They say, 'Well, I don't know, we don't know yet. We're working on it.' I said, 'But I see you here eating. I saw you for an hour. You've been eating; you've been sitting down here inside the van with the A.C. on.'"

Another resident said, "They were there yesterday. They're not doing anything."

Con Edison officials refused to look at the video of their workers or to explain on camera what they were doing.

Someone from the public relations department at Con Edison spoke with CBS 2 on the phone, saying, "First and foremost, you're not allowed to speak directly to our employees...Thank you for bringing this to our attention. We'll look into it and call you."

Con Edision has yet to follow up on their promise of a return call.
 
This story is straight out of "collapse of a nation 101" - the values of the administration have spread far and wide to the city power companies, it seems -why should they tell the truth and take care of ordinary people when no one else is doing it? Ponerology - and the wide spread contagion of pathocratic, psychopathic values - money first, people last and lies all the way through - pure and simple.


I don't live in this area and know nothing about Con-Ed, but, boy, from these articles, they should all be fired and replaced by the millions of unemployed (yes, I know this is wholly naive and unrealistic of me). This also is yet another reminder of how thin the thread is that holds modern life in place - no power and everything falls apart, in heavily populated areas most especially, but, really, pretty much anywhere in the modern world.
 
But, you gotta admit, it keeps people busy and "in the dark" while Israel invades Lebanons. There are protests in Sydney, London, Amsterdam, Tel Aviv, and probably some other places - but you aren't hearing much about it. And certainly, if you don't have power you aren't concerned. Or if you don't have money for gas and food...

Yeah, collapse of a nation is right.
 
Laura said:
But, you gotta admit, it keeps people busy and "in the dark" while Israel invades Lebanons. There are protests in Sydney, London, Amsterdam, Tel Aviv, and probably some other places - but you aren't hearing much about it.
yeah. and damn it I was in central London today, and I didn't hear a whisper about this until after I had left.
 
http://www.breitbart.com/news/2006/07/24/060725013330.kmmra0ek.html

Drought-stricken Australia considers drinking recycled sewage

Jul 24 9:37 PM US/Eastern

Residents of a drought-stricken Australian town will vote this week on whether they're prepared to drink water recycled from sewage -- the first such scheme in the country and one of only a handful in the world.

The controversial proposal has divided the town of Toowoomba in the state of Queensland, which has faced water restrictions for a decade.

Local Mayor Dianne Thorley, who is leading the "Yes" campaign, said that without drought-breaking rains the town's dams could dry up within two years.

She insisted the 73 million dollar (US 55 million dollar) plan to pump purified wastewater back into the main reservoir for drinking was safe.

"Somewhere, sometime we have got to stand up and change the way we are doing things," she told AFP as the town prepared for the July 29 referendum.

"Otherwise our great grandchildren are going to be living in something like the Sahara desert."

A vocal "No" campaign opposes the proposal, and says there are unforeseeable health risks for the town's 100,000 residents.

"The scientists say it should be safe," said local councillor Keith Beer, one of three members of the nine-strong council that opposes the plan. "That is not good enough for me, for my kids and my grandkids."

Australia is in the midst of the third-worst drought in the country's history. The so-called Big Dry is affecting the eastern states of New South Wales, Victoria and Queensland, as well as South Australia and the southern island of Tasmania.

It has cost the rural economy five billion dollars and many regional communities in the world's driest inhabited continent are teetering on the brink of collapse.

Toowoomba City Council says the solution is recycling effluent and pumping it back into reservoirs for drinking -- a system known as planned indirect potable reuse.

The wastewater would pass through seven cleansing and treatment processes including ultraviolet disinfection, advanced oxidation and ultrafiltration before being pumped into the town's Cooby Dam.

It would remain in the reservoir for up to three years for testing, before being pumped through the town's existing water treatment plant.

The council says the process would remove viruses, bacteria and hormones from the water.

Supporters say it is more responsible than allowing partially treated effluent to flow into river systems and be used by other towns for drinking water often hundreds of kilometers (miles) away -- a common occurence.

Megan Hargreaves, a microbiologist at Queensland University of Technology, said recycled water was safe, but acknowledged people had to get over the "yuk factor."

"Safety wise there are no microbiological problems with recycled water," she said.

"My opinion is that recycled water is safer than the water in our dams because it has already been through a stringent treatment process."

Similar schemes are up and running elsewhere in the world.

Since 1976, authorities in Orange County, California have injected purified wastewater into an undergroud aquifer and since 1978, the Occoquan Reservoir in North Virginia has been topped up with recycled water.

In Singapore, one percent of supply has come from recycled water since 2003. But opponents say the scale of the Toowoomba project, under which 25 percent of the town's supply would be recycled, is unprecedented.

"Nowhere else in the world deliberately drinks water reclaimed from sewage to the degree proposed by Toowoomba," the No campaign website says. "Any water supply for over 100,000 people should use tried and proven methods. We are not guinea pigs."

Opponents are calling instead for new dams to be constructed, and a 33 kilometer (25 mile) pipeline to be built to bring water from a nearby reservoir.

Thorley acknowledged the vote would be tight.

"This is a quantum leap of faith for people," she said.
 
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/23/books/review/24cnd-heat.html?ei=5065&en=420f6383586b777d&ex=1154404800&partner=MYWAY&pagewanted=print

California Warns of Rolling Blackouts

By RANDAL C. ARCHIBOLD

LOS ANGELES, July 24 - Unrelenting tropical heat and humidity has driven demand for electricity to record highs in California and other states. If people could not take the weather anymore, neither could transformers and other equipment, which sputtered and shorted out and left tens of thousands of people without power today.

Authorities in California warned that the high demand could lead later this afternoon to an emergency order for rolling blackouts, a dreaded term here that brings reminders of widespread blackouts in 2003 during an energy supply crisis.

Officials declared a power emergency earlier this afternoon, cutting electricity to some businesses that had voluntarily agreed to reduce power use in exchange for lower rates. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger ordered state agencies to reduce electricity consumption by 25 percent, acting on a prediction from the state's power grid managers that demand would peak at 52,000 megawatts, a mark they had not expected to reach until 2011.

Unlike a few years ago, the culprit this summer is aging equipment unaccustomed to running high over such a long stretch, nearly two weeks in some places, of hot and humid days.

Meanwhile, lighting from thunderstorms have compounded problems in other parts of the country, leaving more than 200,000 people in the St. Louis area without electricity since Wednesday. Utility officials in Missouri said they expected to restore power to most customers by the middle of the week.

The power failures have hit Southern California's valley areas, normally the hottest spots around, particularly hard. More than 40,000 people remained without power since Saturday. The blackouts occurred in Los Angeles as well, and in some cases had the skipping effect of tornado: in some cases only a few houses on a street went dark or even just parts of houses - while others continued to blast air conditioners.

Relief appeared on the way here, with temperatures expected to fall back to the normal 70's and 80's for the rest of the week.

Still, the National Weather Service said an excessive heat warning would be in effect through 7 p.m. Pacific time in several areas of Southern California and high temperatures with high humidity would continue to oppress the entire region.

The Associated Press said today that at least eight deaths in California over the weekend might have resulted from the heat wave.

The popular MySpace social-networking Web site went off line over the weekend because of power problems at a key data center in Los Angeles, the company said. MySpace, which is the second busiest Web site in the United States behind Yahoo, lost power for six hours on Saturday and about 12 hours Sunday night and into this morning.
 
http://upi.com/NewsTrack/view.php?StoryID=20060724-063818-3430r

Lubbock, Texas, plans to pray for rain

LUBBOCK, Texas, July 24 (UPI) -- Public officials in Lubbock, Texas, are organizing a day to pray for rain.

"Nobody is going to tell God what to do and what not to do, but we are in a serious drought in West Texas and since he is the man who controls the rain clouds, we're asking him for his mercy and his help," Mayor David Miller told the Lubbock Avalanche-Journal.

The City Council and the Lubbock County commissioners are expected to adopt resolutions this week asking local residents to both pray and fast for rain this Sunday.

So far this year, Lubbock has received about half of its normal 10 inches. In the weeks since June 1, the growing season for cotton, rainfall has been a scant .75 inches, far less than the normal 4.43 inches.

Officials have tried prayers before and say they were answered. In January 2004, after a year of drought, the city and county set aside a Sunday to pray for rain and got the second-wettest year since records have been kept.
 
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2087-2291760,00.html

The Sunday Times July 30, 2006

Heatwave with a global grip

IT looks like being the hottest July on record but Britain is not alone in experiencing extreme conditions, write Jonathan Leake and Alex Delmar- Morgan.

Hot, arid weather is afflicting millions in America and in dozens of countries across Europe and parts of east Asia.

The phenomenon has surprised meteorologists who are used to seeing drought as a regional, not global, problem. This weekend they said early analysis of the hot weather, together with the size of the areas affected, suggested it was linked to global climate change.

"Greenhouse gas emissions raise the likelihood of heatwaves like this one," said Dave Griggs, a Met Office representative on the Joint Scientific Committee for the World Climate Research Programme. "By 2040 this will be just an average summer and by 2060 it will be a relatively cool one."

Data on the global heatwave have been collated by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in America. Its maps show that most of the US is 3-7C above the average for the time of year and several western states have been more than 9C higher.

In California the temperature in Death Valley reached 56.5C and in many west coast towns it exceeded 40C. An estimated 130 people have been killed by the heat and demand for power to run air-conditioning overloaded power stations, leaving some areas without electricity for up to three days.

In South America, mid-winter temperatures in Uruguay, Argentina, Chile and Brazil are up to 7C higher than average. The accompanying drought has reduced the giant Iguazu falls on the Brazil-Argentina border to a trickle.

Temperatures are averaging 7C higher than usual across southern England and Scotland. Casualties are expected: a similar hot spell in August 2003 caused 2,071 deaths, according to estimates by the Office for National Statistics.

Even Mediterranean countries were caught unawares. Last week Spain and France, hit by temperatures 7-9C above average, had to shut down nuclear power stations as the rivers supplying water for cooling became too warm.

Pakistan, Bangladesh and southern India hit 3C above normal and much of central China was up by 5C. A drought, the worst for 60 years, is affecting the Chongqing region, leaving 2m short of water.

The most comfortable places, at least in terms of temperature, were western Russia, North Korea, Siberia and Japan, which were 3C cooler than usual.

"The high pressure zone that is carrying warm air to Europe from the south is also bringing cool air down from the Arctic over Russia," said John Kennedy, who monitors global climate at the Met Office.

"It is one of the few cool spots. But if this weather holds then July will be Britain's hottest month since records began."
 
http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/H/HEAT_WAVE?SITE=7219&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT&CTIME=2006-07-31-07-05-44

Heat Wave Rolling Over Plains, Midwest

By AMY FORLITI
Associated Press
31 July 06

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -- The upper Midwest and Plains states were bracing for another day of sweltering weather, with numerous heat warnings in place from Michigan to Oklahoma. Temperatures wer expected to climb into the 90s or 100s, and spark thunderstorms.

Nate Olson, wearing short sleeves and stocking up with extra water, was ready for the heat Monday morning, saying, "the past week's been pretty bad."

Olson, who cleans sewers for the city of Bloomington, said that last week, one of the workers on his crew got sick in the heat and was taking a couple of days off. But Olson, 20, said he would be working until 3:30 p.m.

"I have a big water jug," said Olson. "You just have to keep drinking all day long."



It was 87 degrees at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport at 9 a.m. Monday, a day that was shaping up to be the Twin Cities' ninth consecutive day above 90 and the 17th in July.

The heat index, a measure of temperature plus humidity, was expected to approach 105 to 110 on Monday in the Twin Cities.

Forecasts for above-normal highs were also posted for Monday along the East Coast, where triple-digit readings were in the offing by midweek from the Carolinas through southern New England.

Officials cautioned people to drink plenty of fluids, not to overexert themselves, and check on the elderly and those who don't have air conditioning.

In Cleveland, James Gilbert, 28, an unemployed car detailer was out looking for work on a muggy, 81-degree Monday morning with the temperatures headed into the 90's. He approaches staying cool methodically.

"Try to keep a lot of powder on and take a shower, a cold shower and put powder on," said Gilbert, wearing a long white T-shirt. "Basically you've got to bear with it. Try to finish what you're doing and get back into the cool air of the house and shade somewhere."

On Sunday in Bismarck, N.D., the thermometer hit 112 - 10 degrees above the previous record for the date and just two degrees shy of the all-time high set in 1936.

In Fargo, actors in Trollwood Park's performance of "Fiddler on the Roof," who wear wool coats for one scene, were assigned air-conditioned rooms during intermission. Men waited until the last minute to put on their beards, to prevent the adhesive from wearing off. Dancers at a German folk festival, also in Fargo, eliminated a couple of numbers because of the heat and attendance was down.

"A lot of the seniors in the community enjoy this festival a lot, and with the heat it's tough for them to come out," said festival coordinator Marijo Peterson.

Ahead of the heat wave, thunderstorms across Michigan on Sunday blacked out about 55,000 power customers. Almost all were back on line Monday, but the high heat promised to be the big problem by the afternoon.

"Mother Nature's giving us a different kind of kick today," DTE Energy Co. spokeswoman Lorie Kessler said. She said the utility expected to be able to handle the demand but urged the public to avoid unnecessary electricity use.

In Oklahoma on Sunday, temperatures reached 106 degrees in Stillwater and 104 degrees in Muskogee. For Oklahoma City, where the high was 102, it was the 17th time this year that the state capital has reached triple digits. That's compared with just twice last year and not at all in 2004.

In Maryland, 12 people ranging in age from 14 to 65 were taken to hospitals Sunday after suffering heat-related illnesses at an international gathering of young people. The jamboree in Harford County was organized by the Polish Scouters Association.

At a Boy Scout gathering at Michigan State University in East Lansing, youths stayed in mostly un-air-conditioned dorms, and organizers had 20 to 25 medical professionals on hand.

Scouts were being warned to pay attention if they started feeling the effects of the heat. "Get indoors, take it easy," Order of the Arrow director Clyde Mayer said. "The Boy Scout motto is, 'Be prepared.' And I think our guys will be."

---

Associated Press writers Tom Sheeran in Cleveland and Murray Evans in Oklahoma City contributed to this report.
 
http://twister.sbs.ohio-state.edu/text/severe/records/06073105.KUNR

Heat Records Broken in South Dakota

RECORD EVENT REPORT
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE RAPID CITY SD
1115 PM MDT SUN JUL 30 2006

...CORRECTED FOR WRONG DATE...

...ALL TIME RECORD HIGH TIED IN WESTERN SOUTH DAKOTA TODAY...
...NUMEROUS DAILY HIGH TEMPERATURE RECORDS SET TODAY IN WESTERN
SOUTH DAKOTA AND NORTHEASTERN WYOMING...

LIST OF ALL TIME RECORD MAX TEMPERATURE TIED TODAY, JULY 30TH.

LOCATION NEW ALL TIME OLD RECORD
RECORD HIGH

MOUNT RUSHMORE 100 100 LAST 7/11/1985


LIST OF DAILY MAX TEMPERATURE RECORDS SET OR TIED TODAY, JULY 30TH.

IN SOUTH DAKOTA

LOCATION NEW RECORD HIGH OLD RECORD

MAURINE 10 SW 112 106 1975
MILESVILLE 5 NE 111 104 1988
DUPREE 110 105 1988
RAPID CITY AIRPORT 109 104 1988
FAITH 109 104 1988
REDIG 11 NE 108 103 1988
FORT MEADE 105 104 1988
SPEARFISH 104 103 1995
WFO RAPID CITY 104 100 1900
LEAD 96 93 1988

IN WYOMING

LOCATION NEW RECORD HIGH OLD RECORD

NEWCASTLE 106 103 1995
COLONY 104 102 1935
GILLETTE 4SE 102 100 1988
SUNDANCE 99 97 1934
 
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20060731/D8J790M00.html

Midwest, Plains Hit by Blowtorch Heat

Jul 31, 7:19 PM (ET)

By CARLA K. JOHNSON

CHICAGO (AP) - The blowtorch heat that blistered California last week gripped the Midwest on Monday, prompting communities to throw air-conditioned buildings open to the public and endangering millions of people with outdoor jobs - including NFL players in training camp.

Temperatures throughout the Midwest and Plains exceeded 100 degrees. The heat index, a measure of temperature plus humidity, climbed as high as 110 in some places. The National Weather Service issued heat warnings for such cities as Chicago, Cincinnati, Dayton, Ohio, and Tulsa, Okla.

Cheryl Harriston struggled to stay comfortable as she handed out fliers supporting an increase in the minimum wage at an intersection in Columbus, Ohio.

"I have my water, my hat, and I stand in the shade a lot," Harriston said. "And, when I feel that cool breeze, I really take a minute to appreciate it."

The Midwest could get some relief by Wednesday, but the worst of the heat was expected to drift into the Northeast on Tuesday, bringing scorching temperatures to New York, Washington and Boston.

NFL teams closely monitored players for signs of heat-related illness. The heat prompted the Chicago Bears to cancel morning practice at training camp in Bourbonnais, Ill. On Sunday, the Tennessee Titans let defensive tackle Albert Haynesworth leave practice early with dizziness.

Chicago resident Tony Tesfay, 43, left his basement room at a halfway house first thing Monday and rode his bicycle to one of the city's cooling centers - air-conditioned recreation centers and other buildings that were opened to the public to prevent a repeat of 1995, when a heat wave killed 700 people in Chicago.

"I was pedaling slow, not too hard, so I could keep hydrated," he said. "It took me about 15 minutes. It wasn't too bad."

In California, the sweltering heat that punished the state for two weeks subsided, but the number of confirmed or suspected heat-related deaths climbed to 164 as county coroners worked through a backlog of cases.

Cities across the Midwest urged neighbors to check on the elderly and disabled. Utilities expected to set records for power usage and asked customers to conserve electricity to prevent blackouts.

In Chicago, officials made available a special telephone line to request checks on vulnerable neighbors and friends. The Department of Human Services and police responded to nearly 50 such requests by early Monday. The city's Department of Aging also telephoned more than 300 senior citizens to offer help, such as rides to cooling centers.

The Cook County medical examiner's office reported two heat-related deaths Monday. Both victims were men in their 50s or 60s with heart disease. In Oklahoma, authorities reported two more deaths that happened over the weekend.

In Wisconsin, sheriff's deputies put a high priority on responding to calls about disabled vehicles. "When it's 100 degrees and you've got kids in the car, that's not good," said Waukesha County Sheriff's Lt. Thom Moerman.

Burlington County, N.J., offered free fans to poor people and the elderly.

The weather posed special risks for people with outdoor jobs, such as construction workers and delivery drivers.

Jerry Wall, who collects coins from parking meters in Tulsa, Okla., said he tries to work in the shade of buildings whenever possible. But "there's no good way to do it on days like today," he said.

In the Minneapolis suburb of Bloomington, a youth swim team cut practice short because the water temperature rose to 80 degrees, about 10 degrees above normal. "When the water is a lot hotter, you get more fatigued a lot easier," said Jenny Bussey, 17.

Cleveland's mayor said city recreation centers would be open Monday and Tuesday to provide relief from the heat. The mayor of Akron, Ohio, opened four cooling centers.

"So many of us live and work in air-conditioned environments, we may not realize how dangerous this oppressive heat truly is for those who do not," Mayor Donald Plusquellic said.

By the evening rush hour, authorities closed a bridge spanning the Cuyahoga River in Cleveland because the heat had caused the steel to expand and prevented parts from fitting together properly.

In Nebraska, high temperatures, a drought and strong winds combined to feed enormous wildfires near the Panhandle town of Harrison.

Chicagoan Danita Winfield, who does not have air conditioning in her apartment, planned to visit the city's 24-hour cooling station Monday night.

In the meantime, she said, "I sit out in the front of the complex for a while until I really get tired, then I go in the house and make a pallet on the floor because we do have a little breeze that comes through the window."

In Terre Haute, Ind., the heat was a concern for many players attending the season's first Indianapolis Colts practice. Two-time MVP Peyton Manning said players have taken the danger seriously ever since the death of Vikings tackle Korey Stringer, who collapsed five years ago from heat exhaustion in training camp.

"So guys try to be smart about it," Manning said.
 
Laura do the C's have any comments on this current heat blume? I find it coincidental that while war rages on in the middle east the US itself is scorched by mother nature.
 
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