Corpses piled up at the morgue Thursday, and aid workers went door-to-door,
checking in on elderly people in hopes of keeping the death toll from
California's 12-day heat wave from rising.
California coroner's offices said the number of deaths possibly connected to
the heat wave climbed to 98.
Withered sunflowers
are silhouetted next to power lines in Carlsbad California as a heat wave
strains the state's power grid, July 24,
2006.[Reuters] |
In Fresno County's morgue, the walk-in freezer was stuffed with bodies, with
some piled on top of others, said Coroner Loralee Cervantes. With limited air
conditioning, employees worked in sweltering heat as they investigated at least
22 possible heat-related deaths.
"It's never been like this in my years here," Cervantes said. "This is really
tragic."
The mercury dropped slightly in some areas, with Sacramento dipping below 100
for the first time in 12 days, but Fresno hit 105 and Bakersfield reached 107.
Temperatures in most parts of the state were expected to drop below 100 by
the weekend, said Kathy Hoxsie, a meteorologist with the National Weather
Service.
In Stanislaus County, which includes Modesto, officials were investigating
whether sizzling temperatures were responsible for 20 deaths. Salvation Army
workers walked door-to-door to check on elderly and other vulnerable residents.
Kern County was investigating eight possibly heat-related deaths. Among the
victims were two Bakersfield brothers who were found dead in their beds in a
home without air conditioning.
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger announced that California was making 75 cooling
centers available to residents at fairgrounds statewide. Health officials also
were contacting nursing homes to make sure they had evacuation plans in place in
case their air conditioning failed, he said.
State Sen. Dean Florez called on Schwarzenegger to declare a state of
emergency in the Central Valley, noting that residents and hundreds of cows
"Record-breaking heat requires a record-breaking response," Florez said. "The
conditions, staying this hot for this long, are simply too much for the most
vulnerable residents."
July has seen extreme heat across the country. In St. Louis, the misery was
worsened by storms that knocked down power lines last week in the worst blackout
in city history. Most of the 12 Missouri deaths attributed to the heat wave
occurred in the St. Louis area, where about 36,000 homes and businesses remained
without power Thursday afternoon.
Missouri regulators opened an investigation into whether AmerenUE and other
utilities were properly prepared for the storms, and whether they responded
adequately.