Atlanticmike wrote: ↑Sat Oct 09, 2021 11:52 amOh lordy!! You're way too emotional. You do realize more people die because of the cold, right? Global warming will save lives. You're so worried about the people working and living in the heat, what about the people living in the freezing cold? Why did you conveniently forget about them?
It’s a more complex situation than that. Cold snaps don’t seem to increase short-term death totals, while heat waves do. And between NOAA and the CDC, there’s disagreement on which currently causes the greater number of US deaths per year.
https://www.wunderground.com/cat6/Which ... treme-Cold
In the meantime, there’s a movement afoot to mandate air conditioning - provided by landlords for renters - in several areas, as heat waves turn more deadly and over a wider area, especially for disadvantaged, disabled, or older folks.
https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/de ... n-n1277213Jollene Brown, 67, was one of hundreds of people who died from this summer’s deadly heat waves in the Pacific Northwest. In Oregon, most of the 96 confirmed victims “lived alone in homes with no working air conditioning or fans,” according to a state report. (Stark Firs Management, which operates Jollene Brown’s building, didn’t respond to multiple requests for comment.)
An NBC News analysis of Oregon’s data, public records and obituaries found that many of those who died from hyperthermia in June were among the state’s most vulnerable residents: More than half were over age 65, and at least 13 lived in properties for older adults or in affordable housing serving low-income residents, homeless people or those with disabilities.
In both private housing and publicly subsidized properties where residents died, NBC News found landlords who didn’t provide air conditioning, which isn’t legally required. In some instances, landlords prohibited residents from having window air conditioners, concerned that the units would fall.
Extreme heat kills about 600 people in the U.S. every year — more than any other form of weather — and it will only become more common as the planet continues to warm. That makes access to air conditioning a lifesaving necessity, public health experts and advocates say.