close

Southwest braces for more sizzling temperatures

3 min read
1 / 4

Five-year-old Ashawn Rabb runs through a fountain of water at the Red Ridge Park kids water park Thursday in Las Vegas. Children with their parents stayed past sundown to cool off in the park’s fountains after temperatures in Las Vegas hit 112 degrees.

2 / 4

Brian Stolfa of Scottsdale, Ariz., gets on his bike after cooling off in the fountain in front of Old Main on the Arizona State University campus in Tempe, Ariz. during the Tempe Bicycle Action Group swimsuit ride Saturday.

3 / 4

Tourists hug close to misters keeping cool as they walk along The Strip during a heat wave Thursday in Las Vegas.

4 / 4

Nine-year-old Gavyn Slykhuis cools off in the spray of a fountain at the Red Ridge Park kids water park in Las Vegas Saturday.

LAS VEGAS – High temperatures brought discomfort to much of the Southwest Sunday as many parts of the region were coming off record-breaking heat days and bracing for more sizzling temperatures.

Triple-digit heat was on tap for the valleys and desert regions of Southern California, while metropolitan Phoenix was expected to see a slight drop in temperatures after experiencing record-breaking heat Saturday.

Six half-marathon runners in Southern California were hospitalized Sunday for heat-related illnesses. A day earlier, paramedics responding to a Nevada home without air conditioning found an elderly man dead.

Runners in the Southern California race who required medical attention were extremely dehydrated, and some experienced cramps, said Pasadena Fire Department spokeswoman Lisa Derderian. Several other runners were evaluated along the route but were not taken to the hospital, she said.

Paramedics were deployed along the 13.1-mile race, and buses with air conditioning were provided for runners to cool off. The event was supposed to be a marathon, but it was downgraded due to low turnout last year.

Phoenix Fire Department spokesman Larry Nunez said Phoenix hasn’t seen any deaths that were classified as heat-related, but emergency workers have gotten 98 heat-related calls within the metro area since Friday morning.

The 119-degree high in Phoenix on Saturday marked the fourth-hottest day in metro Phoenix since authorities started keeping temperature records more than 110 years ago.

The high temperature forecast for the metro area for Sunday was 116.

Temperatures could drop slightly in Phoenix within the coming days as monsoon storms are expected to make their way through the state. Such storms could bring cloud cover but could produce more humidity and possibly contribute to dust storms.

Several Southern California communities set same-day record highs Saturday including Palm Springs, where the mercury peaked at 122 degrees.

Death Valley, the hottest place on the planet, reached 127 degrees Saturday. It was forecast to be 1 degree hotter Sunday. As sweltering as it will be, it’s still shy of the record high of 134 degrees, set nearly a century ago July 10, 1913.

In Las Vegas, temperatures were on the rise again after the city reported a record overnight low of 89 degrees Sunday.

With the temperature at 111 degrees early Sunday afternoon, National Weather Service forecaster Dan Berc said Las Vegas could also break its record high of 117 degrees set in 2005 and 1942. Forecasters are calling for the high to reach 116 degrees.

On Saturday, a man died and another was hospitalized in serious condition in Las Vegas heat-aggravated incidents as the temperature soared to 115 degrees.

CUSTOMER LOGIN

If you have an account and are registered for online access, sign in with your email address and password below.

NEW CUSTOMERS/UNREGISTERED ACCOUNTS

Never been a subscriber and want to subscribe, click the Subscribe button below.

Starting at $3.75/week.

Subscribe Today