An excessive heat warning was issued for a broad swath of the Southwest U.S. Monday with temperatures expected to approach 120 degrees. Southwest Colorado will be hot, but it won’t see record-breaking temperatures.
This week, forecasters say, could prove to be the hottest days of the year around Phoenix and the desert southwest.
Mike Charnick, meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Grand Junction, said, “Highs in Durango will be in the low 90s for most of the week. While that is about 5 degree above-average, it isn’t record-setting by any means, he added.
A good chance of rain, 30 percent in Durango, and a bit higher in the San Juan Mountains, is expected through Wednesday. Then, Charnick said to expect drier conditions to return for the weekend.
The National Weather Service said it will be watching the potency of storms, and it will issue flash flood alerts as necessary when storms are above the 416 Fire burn scar.
The National Weather Service said southern Arizona will experience temperatures from 112 to 119 degrees through Wednesday.
The heat warning extended to southeastern California, including desert communities such as El Centro, Palm Springs, Twentynine Palms and Blythe, as well as north to Las Vegas and other parts of Nevada.
Parts of Utah were also issued an excessive heat warning with temperatures this week expected to approach 109 degrees. The weather service said the warning for Utah’s Dixie and Lake Powell regions will be in effect Tuesday through Thursday.
A lesser heat advisory was in effect for west Texas and southeast New Mexico into Monday evening, with high temperatures well into the triple digits, the service said. Still, it was so hot in Las Cruces Monday morning that afternoon school bus service was canceled.
Some of the highest temperatures over the next few days were expected in Phoenix, where the weather service issued a tweet to warn residents to stay hydrated and take advantage of cooler indoor buildings.
The tweet says officials “can’t stress enough that it will become dangerously hot early this week.”
Phoenix firefighters and city officials on Monday morning distributed bright red cloth visors, hand fans and cooling neckerchiefs to downtown commuters, advising them to stay inside as much as possible.
“I’m hoping to stay in the air conditioning all day, and I’m planning to take it easy,” Lisa Kirby said, who was visiting from Rhode Island for a conference. Kirby said she visited the area several summers ago and had a hard time dealing with the heat.
Fire Capt. Jake Van Hook said the department gets dozens of calls a day about heat-related illnesses during excessive heat warnings. “They range from someone who just needs to get inside to someone who needs to get urgently to the hospital,” he said.
Maricopa County public health officials say 155 people died in the Phoenix area last year from heat-caused illnesses like heat exhaustion and heat stroke.
Forecasters say monsoon moisture will slowly return to the Phoenix area from the east by the weekend.
Arizona’s monsoons are summer rains that can cause flash flooding and bring heavy winds.
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