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As extreme heat rises, so do concerns for worker safety

Extreme heat is the deadliest kind of weather disaster the United States faces, but unlike what happens amid most other extreme weather events, life has been expected to continue as normal during severe heat waves. 

Workers have faced these dangers for years with few protections. Now, as millions of Americans have baked under record-breaking heat – nearly 40% of Americans faced heat advisories last week, according to the National Weather Service – the risks they face are helping spur a broader rethink of how the country manages extreme heat and labor.

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Record-breaking heat this summer has raised risks for millions of American workers in hot conditions. This is helping to spur a rethink of how the country manages extreme heat and labor.

“We haven’t really focused on extreme heat as a climate hazard,” says Ladd Keith, an assistant professor at the University of Arizona who researches heat policy. “We’ve seen a huge change in that in the last couple of years, and that is in part due to an increasing awareness.” 

Eva Marroquin has been working construction in Austin, Texas, since 2005. Working in the summer is like stepping into an oven, she says. She’s concerned that a new Texas law might jeopardize the rest break ordinance for construction workers in her city. 

“If we start rolling back the very little protections workers have and have fought for, it will be incredibly hard to find a dignified job,” she says. 

Near the end of his first day working at the construction site, John Guerrero Jr. stopped sweating. He didn’t know the danger he was in.

It was late May, and temperatures had reached 96 degrees Fahrenheit as he helped to install interior walls, ceilings, and doors at the site in east Austin, according to a federal investigation. Drinking water and Gatorade during his three breaks wasn’t enough. By the end of the day, he died of heat stroke.

Mr. Guerrero was one of at least 279 people to die due to heat in Texas last year, according to The Texas Tribune. And at least 42 Texas workers died from heat-related illnesses on the job between 2011 and 2018, according to data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Given that there is no perfect way to measure heat-related deaths, both figures are likely undercounts.

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Record-breaking heat this summer has raised risks for millions of American workers in hot conditions. This is helping to spur a rethink of how the country manages extreme heat and labor.

This statistical uncertainty – estimates of how many people die from heat each year in the United States range from 153 to over 10,000 – is part of a broader lack of clarity, and perhaps even concern, across the country about the dangers posed by extreme heat. As summers have become hotter in recent decades, one fact has become increasingly clear: The U.S. treats heat emergencies differently from other natural disasters.

Extreme heat is the deadliest kind of weather disaster the U.S. faces, but unlike what happens amid most other extreme weather events, life has been expected to continue as normal during severe heat waves. While a hurricane might shut a city down, a bad heat wave often doesn’t. Thanks to air conditioning, many Americans can avoid the worst dangers. But certain workers – like those in construction, transportation, and agriculture – can’t.

Adrees Latif/Reuters

Workers mow the grass at an apartment complex during hot weather in Houston, July 17, 2023.

Workers have faced these dangers for years with few protections. Now, as millions of Americans have baked under record-breaking heat – nearly 40% of Americans faced heat advisories last week, according to the National Weather Service – the risks they face are helping spur a broader rethink of how the country manages extreme heat and labor.

“We haven’t really focused on extreme heat as a climate hazard,” says Ladd Keith, an assistant professor at the University of Arizona who researches heat policy in urban areas.

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