Phoenix continues to endure blistering-hot temperatures morning, noon and night, with no end in sight to the string of 110-degree days.Although nonprofits and local governments offer some refuge from the heat, limited hours leave many residents exposed to deadly conditions.Local leaders and elected officials shared their frustrations after touring several Maricopa County-area
Updated: Wednesday, April 14, 2021 - 4:50pm
A regional network designed to help vulnerable people finds itself in need of help. And lives are at stake.
The Valley’s Heat Relief Network wants to avoid a repeat of last year when 207 people in Maricopa County died due to heat related causes between May and October. That’s more than double the year before when the county health department confirmed 85 heat associated deaths.
“So we see a very direct correlation between the regional heat relief network and the numbers of partners that it has and the amount of support that we’re able to offer and the number of people who are losing their lives to the extreme summer heat,” Amy St. Peter, deputy executive director of the Maricopa Association of Governments, told the Phoenix City Council on Tuesday.