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Yes, North Idaho has not seen any heat-related deaths so far

Kootenai Health Northern Lakes Fire Department Post Falls Police Department Kootenai County Emergency Management  WHAT WE FOUND To answer this question the KREM 2 Verify Team reached out to a multitude of North Idaho public officials to gain information. Additional details cane from Craig Etherton, Coeur d Alene Fire Department s spokesperson. We haven t [had heat-related deaths] in our area yet, Etherton said. I think, just for right now, we re weathering it well. Despite Spokane County being mere miles away, no heat related deaths are being reported in North Idaho. According to the Panhandle Health District, not a single heat-related death has been reported within the five counties the district serves.  

Unprecedented: Northwest heat wave builds, records fall

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — Intense. Prolonged. Record-breaking. Unprecedented. Abnormal. Dangerous. That’s how the National Weather Service described the historic heat wave hitting the Pacific Northwest, pushing daytime temperatures into the triple digits, disrupting Olympic qualifying events and breaking all-time high temperature records in places unaccustomed to such extreme heat. Portland, Oregon, reached 112 degrees Fahrenheit (44.4 Celsius) Sunday, breaking the all-time temperature record of 108 F (42.2C), which was set just a day earlier. In Eugene, Oregon, the U.S. track and field trials were halted Sunday afternoon and fans were asked to evacuate the stadium due to extreme heat. The National Weather Service said it hit 110 F (43.3 C) in Eugene, breaking the all-time record of 108 F (42.2 C).

Record-breaking heat hits Pacific Northwest

The Skanner News - Unprecedented: Northwest Heat Wave is Breaking Records

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) Intense. Prolonged. Record-breaking. Unprecedented. Abnormal. Dangerous. That’s how the National Weather Service described the historic heat wave that is hitting the Pacific Northwest, pushing daytime temperatures into the triple digits and breaking all-time high temperature records in places where many residents don’t have air conditioning. Sunday’s forecasted temperature in Portland, Oregon 112 degrees Fahrenheit (44 Celsius) would break the all-time temperature record of 108 degrees, set just a day earlier. The forecast calls for another 112-degree day on Monday. The temperature was expected to rise to an all-time record of 104 F (40 C) at the Seattle-Tacoma International Airport on Sunday and surpass that to reach a blistering 111 F (43.9 C) on Monday, as the excessive heat warning continues for the region.

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