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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Heat in Phoenix claims 18


Lesleejo Ruther, 47, takes refuge Wednesday from the sun under a blanket on her shopping cart during Phoenix's record heat wave.
 (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Beth DeFalco Associated Press

PHOENIX – A record heat wave has led to the deaths of 18 people, most of them homeless, leaving officials scrambling to provide water and shelter to the city’s transient population.

For the first time in years, Phoenix’s homeless shelters opened their doors during the day to offer respite from the blistering sun, which has delivered above-average temperatures every day since June 29. Police began passing out thousands of water bottles donated by grocery stores, and city officials set up tents for shade downtown.

“I don’t know why I’m not burnt to pieces,” said Chris Cruse, 48, after taking refuge in a shelter.

Four more bodies were found Wednesday. Fourteen of the victims were thought to be homeless. Authorities did not know if a man found by the side of a road Sunday had a permanent residence.

The other three victims were elderly women, including one whose home cooling system was not on, police said.

“Most of us just run from air-conditioned box to air-conditioned box, so it’s hard to imagine how omnipresent the heat really is for the homeless here,” said Phoenix police Sgt. Randy Force.

In all of last year, the state Department of Health Services documented 34 heat-related deaths among Arizona residents. The number of illegal immigrants killed by heat-related illnesses while trying to cross the desert are counted separately.

The first deaths were reported Saturday. By Wednesday, the high still climbed to 109 degrees. Even during the coolest part of the day, the mercury has failed to descend lower than 89 degrees.

David Waing, a former truck driver who’s been living on the streets of Phoenix for the past year, said he’s been staying close to water by sleeping near one of the city’s irrigation canals.

“In the mornings, about 9 or 10 o’clock, when it starts getting really hot, we just jump in and take a swim,” he said. “The nights aren’t much better. When the wind does blow, it feels like a blast furnace.”

Both he and Cruse spent Wednesday at the Phoenix Rescue Mission watching movies in the shelter’s chapel, which was opened Monday to anyone needing a break from the heat.

The shelter was also turning on hoses so transients could wet their clothes and had ordered 300 neckerchiefs that can be dipped in water and tied around the neck, said Bob Reed, a shelter manager.

Phoenix Mayor Phil Gordon said his office was asking Congress to provide utility assistance for soaring cooling bills the same way it provides for heating bills in Eastern states.

“Fair is fair. There are too many individuals dying of heat here,” Gordon said.

Meanwhile, in Las Vegas, the high temperature failed to reach the 115-degree mark Wednesday for the first time in five days. Authorities were investigating six deaths since July 14 to see if they were heat-related.