ReportWire

Tag: national weather service meteorologist

  • California’s October heat wave to again peak this weekend, as health concerns mount

    California’s October heat wave to again peak this weekend, as health concerns mount

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    After days of record-breaking temperatures, weather officials are warning that California’s unusual October heat wave is expected to peak again this weekend, with millions facing another round of dangerous heat through Monday.

    Temperatures are expected to remain 10 to 15 degrees above average for this time of year, with much of the state under a significant heat risk — with the Bay Area and inland Southern California classified as major to extreme heat risk. The National Weather Service defines extreme heat risk as “rare and/or long-duration extreme heat with little to no overnight relief, likely to affect “anyone without effective cooling and/or adequate hydration.”

    Across the majority of the Bay Area, officials warned of highs up to 105 Friday and Saturday, with even coastal areas reaching up to 95 degrees. The weather service warned that the hot conditions there could have “life-threatening impacts or major impacts to commerce and travel.”

    The unseasonable heat has become a concern for the San Francisco 49ers game Sunday at 1 p.m., ensuring that fans and players at Levi’s Stadium will be out in the heat of the day.

    Highs in Santa Clara are expected to soar into the mid 90s Sunday, according to Roger Gass, a National Weather Service meteorologist for the Bay Area. An analysis from SFGate found that Sunday’s game will likely be the hottest ever in the stadium, which has drawn concerns about uncomfortable heat — if not dangerous — since the stadium opened in 2014, as the majority of seats are positioned in the direct sun.

    “We’re expecting [highs] anywhere from 93 to 96 degrees on Sunday,” Gass said. “It’s among the warmest” for this time of year in Santa Clara.

    Earlier this week, the San José Mineta International Airport — the closest climate site to Levi’s Stadium — hit 100 degrees over three consecutive days for the first time, among a slew of hot temperatures records set this week.

    Not far away in Mountain View, Stanford’s football team will kick off Saturday against Virginia Tech, where highs are expected to reach into the mid-90s.

    “We are most concerned for people without adequate access to cooling,” Gass said. “Take frequent breaks in the shade if possible, don’t over exert yourself by any means.”

    Heat deaths have become a growing crisis across California and the U.S. as climate change has made heat events more frequent, more persistent and more dangerous. Extreme heat has killed more Americans on average over the last three decades than hurricanes, floods and tornadoes combined, according to the National Weather Service.

    Earlier this week, five students at a school cross country meet in Riverside County required medical attention after experiencing “general weakness,” including three who were taken to the hospital for further evaluation, according to the Riverside County Fire Department, which responded to the scene.

    In June, a woman in San Diego County died while hiking on an unusually warm day, a death that local officials told NBC 7 San Diego appeared to be heat-related.

    This weekend, Southern California’s coastal areas are mostly excluded from the major heat concerns, but in the Los Angeles and San Diego county mountains, valleys and foothills, weather officials warned temperatures up to 108 are possible from Saturday through Monday, creating “a high risk for dangerous heat illness for anyone, especially for the very young, the very old, those without air conditioning, and those active outdoors.”

    The hottest temperatures across the state are forecast for the Coachella Valley and Palm Desert region, where highs could reach up to 112 this weekend.

    Officials across the state have opened cooling centers for anyone without air conditioning and are working to increase awareness about the signs of heat illnesses.

    “It’s important for Californians to continue taking action to protect themselves, including checking in on friends and neighbors, who can be vulnerable to heat when they are alone,” Amy Palmer, a spokesperson for California Governor’s Office of Emergency Services, said in a statement.

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    Grace Toohey

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  • California ski resorts look to the latest storm for snow to help kick off the season

    California ski resorts look to the latest storm for snow to help kick off the season

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    As skiers and snowboarders flock to the Lake Tahoe and the Eastern Sierra slopes this holiday weekend, National Weather Service meteorologists say the latest storm is expected to drop only a limited amount of snow in Southern California.

    The only area that could record even as much as 1 to 2 inches of snow over the weekend is the high mountain peaks of the Eastern San Gabriel Mountains, said John Dumas, meteorologist with the National Weather Service.

    In a post on X, formerly Twitter, operators of the Mt. Baldy Resort in the San Gabriel Mountains, said they expect to open their snow play area Saturday and Sunday as well as a chair lift “through the holidays.”

    “We expect more snow after Christmas through the New Year,” according to the post.

    Big Bear Mountain Resort in the San Bernardino Mountains is expected to see rain and snow flurries Friday evening but should have little to no snow accumulation over the weekend.

    Looking out of his office window and seeing blue skies, Justin Kanton, Big Bear’s public relations director, said the limited trails open for skiing should remain open over the weekend, and the amount of snow in the area has been great so far for visitors, especially students on winter vacation.

    As the Big Bear resort waits what the storm might bring, Katon cautioned visitors to prepare ahead of traveling to the area by checking the weather report, looking for road closures and identifying whether snow chains are necessary for travel.

    “What [you] don’t want is to get halfway up the hill and CHP turns [you] around because [you] don’t have the right kind of traction,” he said.

    Other parts of the state have already received enough snow to kick off the ski season.

    Over the next three days Mammoth Mountain in the Eastern Sierra is predicting about three inches of snowfall. The National Weather Service forecast for the Lake Tahoe area is partly cloudy with a slight chance of snow Friday, Saturday and Monday. Lake Tahoe’s resorts are reporting between six and 48 inches of base, with higher-elevation resorts operating up to third to a half of all trails.

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    Karen Garcia

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