『Phoenix Heat and Water: Managing Supply and Health in Triple-Digit Days』のカバーアート

Phoenix Heat and Water: Managing Supply and Health in Triple-Digit Days

Phoenix Heat and Water: Managing Supply and Health in Triple-Digit Days

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Phoenix is waking up to a week where water is front and center – from sizzling heat over 110 degrees to scattered storms teasing the Valley with just a hint of desperately needed rain. On Tuesday, local forecaster Jorge T Weather reported a high of 110 degrees in Phoenix with only about a 10 percent chance of isolated storms, mainly over the higher terrain north and east of the city, not right over the downtown core. That means most Phoenix neighborhoods stayed dry, with little to no measurable rain in the gauges over the past day or so, even as clouds built over the nearby mountains. Fox10 Phoenix’s latest forecast says storms have been popping up over the Mazatzal and Bradshaw Mountains, near Bartlett Lake, Wickenburg, and Salome, bringing localized downpours, gusty winds, and pockets of blowing dust toward the Valley. Those storms have been fizzling out by early evening, leaving Phoenix itself mostly hot, dry, and hazy. Overnight lows have barely dipped to around 90 degrees in the city, which keeps demand high on both drinking water and cooling systems. Looking ahead through the next few days, Fox10 Phoenix notes that high temperatures in the Valley are expected to settle into the 104 to 105 degree range – technically near or even slightly below average for this time of year, but still more than hot enough to drive heavy water use for landscaping and evaporative cooling. The pattern looks mostly dry and sunny into the weekend, so don’t expect big, soaking storms to recharge local soils or fill neighborhood retention basins just yet. Regionally, water managers are laser-focused on the bigger picture. KJZZ reports that Colorado River states, including Arizona, have rolled out plans to survive a future with less river water, with more than 25 billion dollars in potential spending on Arizona projects alone. Those efforts are aimed at long‑term water security for cities like Phoenix: think conservation programs, system upgrades, and new supplies to backstop the drinking water that comes out of the tap every day. Health officials are also reminding residents that water quality isn’t just about what comes from treatment plants – it’s about what collects around our homes. The Maricopa County Department of Public Health has confirmed its first West Nile virus death of the season and 17 human cases so far this year, and they are urging people to dump standing water where mosquitoes breed, repair screens, and protect themselves outdoors. So as Phoenix bakes under triple‑digit heat with only spotty mountain storms nearby, the message for the next couple of days is clear: your tap water remains carefully managed, but every drop counts, and what happens to water in your yard and neighborhood matters for both supply and health. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai
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