Hot, Hot, Hot!

WINSTED — Connecticut residents were treated to temperatures topping 100 degrees this week as heat advisories popped up all along the East Coast, from Washington, D.C., to Massachusetts.

The first taste of this week’s heat wave came Monday after a ridge of high-pressure air became stalled over the Northeast and was expected to remain here for most of the week. Police, fire, state and environmental officials offered a range of heat-related warnings, but reported that Winsted had not had any major heat-related incidents as of Tuesday afternoon.

“It’s been quiet so far,†said Winsted Fire Department daytime driver Jim Lagassie, who scanned local reports and checked for advisories Tuesday. “The burn index is obviously high for brush fires. It’s going to be hot.â€

Lagassie said there had been no major fires in Winsted or around Litchfield County during the July 4 holiday weekend. Across the state, Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) firefighters responded to fireworks-related fires in Middletown, Bethany and Kent on Monday, July 5, and returned to the areas Tuesday to make sure they were safe.

Winsted Deputy Police Chief Robert Scannell said Tuesday that he had not heard of any heat-related calls to the department. “There’s nothing unusual here, and I’m looking at reports going back to last Thursday,†he said Tuesday afternoon. “Let’s hope it stays that way.â€

In a statement released Tuesday, Gov. M. Jodi Rell said she was contacting municipal leaders, particularly in urban centers, to consider setting up cooling shelters for the public. Shelters had already been set up Monday in New York City in anticipation of the hot weather.

With temperatures in the high 90s, officials were most concerned about the “heat index,†which measures temperature and humidity to determine what the current temperature levels feel like. Excessive humidity can make temperatures in the high 90s feel well over 100 degrees.

“This can be a tremendously dangerous situation for senior citizens, young children and those who must work outside,†Rell said. “The cooling centers are safe places for those individuals with no air conditioning or other means to escape the heat.â€

The governor asked local leaders to provide the state with locations of cooling centers so that they could be disseminated through the statewide InfoLine 211 and state Department of Social Services networks.

In a DEP release Tuesday, residents were reminded that forest fire danger levels are high because of dry conditions during the past two weeks and that the danger will remain high until there is significant rain. The Forest Fire Danger is posted on the DEP website at ct.gov/dep.

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