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First-Ever White House Summit on Extreme Heat

Healthy Schools Network Executive Claire Barnett is in top row directly under 5th pillar from the left.
Healthy Schools Network Executive Claire Barnett is in top row directly under 5th pillar from the left.

From worker heat exhaustion to bridge failures, extreme heat is increasingly placing strain on lives, livelihoods, and infrastructure. Earlier this week, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration announced that the United States just experienced its fourth-hottest summer on record.  Globally, August 2024 was the warmest August in the agency’s 175-year record.

Recognizing that extreme heat is the deadliest type of disaster among all weather-related hazards, the Biden-Harris Administration hosted the first-ever White House Summit on Extreme Heat, bringing together over 100 participants from around the country and across the government. The Summit, announced by President Biden earlier in the summer, convened federal agencies and White House senior staff alongside leaders – including workers exposed to extreme heat, healthcare professionals, emergency responders, and researchers and innovators – who represent many of the communities that are fighting on the front lines of extreme heat to discuss lessons learned from this year’s extreme heat, highlight Administration progress in tackling extreme heat and advancing environmental justice, and amplify successful best practices to manage extreme heat that have been locally tailored and community driven.

At the Summit, National Climate Advisor Ali Zaidi also announced a new Extreme Heat Call to Action, which calls upon state, local, Tribal and Territorial governments, along with the private sector and non-profit organizations to lead by example and use all of the tools at their disposal to protect people from extreme heat looking ahead to 2025.

 

Summit Attendees Photo Above: Healthy Schools Network Executive Claire Barnett is in top row directly under 5th pillar from the left.

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