Climate Smart Southwest - Conference

September 20 and 21 in Tucson, Arizona

 

xl8njrm0This conference is being organized by the Arizona Chapter of Physicians for Social Responsibility (PSR) with the support of a coalition of co-sponsoring community and national organizations as well as local leaders. The purpose is to build new and fortify existing cross-cultural, community, and governmental partnerships to educate and engage community action to address the anticipated public health impacts of climate change in the Southwest.

Why It’s Very Important: Extreme weather events in the Southwestern U.S. and adjacent Borderlands are on the rise and with them, higher incidences of health-related impacts such as heat stress, newly emerging infectious diseases, asthma and other respiratory illnesses. Moreover, as the “hottest, driest part of the United States,” our region is already experiencing longer and more intense heat waves and the threat of wide scale power blackouts, a “dramatic spike” in forest fires, severe dust storms, and changes in the amount and timing of rainfall and seasonal snowmelt that threatens water resources and food security. While these events are alarming, communities in the Southwest are preparing for these risks and other impacts outlined in the new National Climate Assessment through planning and prevention strategies aimed at reducing our vulnerability to extreme weather and local climate impacts.

Who Should Attend: Community and neighborhood leaders, formal and informal educators, citizen activists, government and non-profit agency personnel; Climate scientists, and health professionals in the Southwestern U.S. Northern Mexico, and First Nations who have an interest in community based action for preparedness to develop more resilient neighborhoods, towns, cities, borders regions, and tribal lands; National leaders and members of PSR, environmental groups, and policy making agency representatives.

For more information or to register for the conference, click here.

via Conference: Climate Smart Southwest.

National Wildfire Preparedness Upped to Highest Level

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Fires burning across central Idaho (Photo credit: NASA)

United States wildfire managers today raised the National Preparedness Level to its highest point, Level 5, for the first time since the summer of 2008. (See news release below). The designation signals a high level of wildfire activity that is putting a strain on the nation’s fire-fighting capabilities.

Large fires are burning throughout the West, in Alaska, Arizona, California, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming.

The National Interagency Fire Center (NIFC) in Boise, Idaho, issues daily updates on all major (and many minor) wildfires.

 

Arizona legislator: State benefits should go to all fallen firefighters

From today’s Prescott Daily Courier:

Arizona House Speaker Andy Tobin is drafting bills to help the families of the 19 fallen Granite Mountain Hotshots.

One draft bill would provide full-time employee benefits to the Granite Mountain Hotshot crew members from the Prescott Fire Department who died battling the Yarnell Hill wildfire about 20 miles south of Prescott on June 30. Thirteen of the deceased hotshots were seasonal workers so their families don’t get any benefits such as health care.

The draft bill grants full-time state employee benefits to any first responder who dies on state lands. The Granite Mountain Hotshots died on state trust lands. The bill is retroactive to June 30.

“I think this was a wake-up call to a lot of folks,” said Tobin, whose district includes Prescott. Part-time employees are more and more common.

via Tobin seeks to provide state benefits for fallen firefighters - The Prescott Daily Courier - Prescott, Arizona.