National Guard Aids In Heat Wave
Troops Help Evacuations In St. Louis; Heat Blamed For 18 Deaths Nationwide
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Play CBS Video Video Feeling The Heat A coast-to-coast heat wave is being blamed for at least four deaths and is making a lot of Americans miserable. Trish Regan has more.
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Video Avoiding Heat-Related Illness Much of the U.S. remains in a heat wave. In New York, the temperature soared into the 90s and almost hit a record high. Dr. Emily Senay tells Harry Smith how to stay safe in the sweltering heat.
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Video Intense Heat Across The U.S. For a second day in a row, temperatures are expected to soar near triple digits across much of the United States. Trish Regan reports.
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Lightning flashes overhead as traffic sits at a standstill after an auto accident after severe weather moved through the St. Louis area Wednesday, July 19, 2006. (AP Photo/Post-Dispatch)
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The grounds crew tries to cover the field as the wind whips the tarp around before a baseball game between the St. Louis Cardinals and the Atlanta Braves at Busch Stadium in St. Louis Wednesday, July 19, 2006. (AP Photo/Post-Dispatch)
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Cassidy Purvis, 5, lounges on a tube in the pool as she and her playmates cool off at the Gateway Learning Center, Wednesday July 19, 2006, in Hattiesburg, Miss. (AP Photo/Hattiesburg American)
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The cooling waters from a fire hydrant provide some relief to some children in St. Louis on Monday, July 17, 2006. (AP Photo/James A. Finley)
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Photo Essay The Heat Is On Temps in the upper 90s coupled with high humidity send heat indexes soaring past 100 degrees in Midwest, Northeast.
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News Tools Disaster Links Looking for disaster-related information on the Web? Go to the CBS News Disaster Links web site put together by CBS News Producer and Technologist "Digital Dan" Dubno.
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Interactive Summer Break Make your summer a success with information on travel, beaches, parks and events.
With forecasters expecting another day of 100-degree heat, utility crews raced to restore electricity, and Gov. Matt Blunt declared a state of emergency, granting the mayor's request to send in nearly 300 troops to take people to air-conditioned public buildings and to clear debris.
“We can't overemphasize the danger of this heat,” Mayor Francis Slay said. “The longer the heat goes on and the power is out, the riskier it is.”
The summer storm tore through the Midwest on Wednesday, ripping roofs off buildings, toppling trees and injuring more than 30 people. The city's light rail system was down, and a building partially collapsed, injuring at least two people.
At least 486,000 customers lost power, according to utility company AmerenUE.
"The only clue we had that anything was going on, because it wasn't raining, is the fact that the power kept flickering," a St. Louis resident told Erica Van Ross of CBS station KMOV.
Police used public-address speakers from their squad cars to announce locations of the community centers and other places designated as cooling centers. Volunteers went door to door, checking on people with no power to run fans or air conditioners.
The heat wave has been blamed for at least 18 deaths across the country in the last week.
Utility workers urged customers to find a cool place to stay. They warned that power could be out in some areas for three to five days.
The day's high was 97 degrees, but the humidity made it feel like 111. The region could get some relief on Friday, when the high was expected to drop to the mid-80s.
The storms tore through the city a day earlier, ripping off a section of airport roof and dumping it on a highway. Windows were blown out of a hotel restaurant and a press box at baseball's Busch Stadium. At least three buildings collapsed, and more than 30 people were injured.
“I've never seen this many people without power, this much debris, buildings collapsed, lines down,” the mayor said.
By Friday evening, power had been restored to 160,000 customers, but new reports of outages kept coming in.
St. Louis-based AmerenUE, the utility serving Missouri and Illinois, said it would restore power to hospitals, nursing homes, water-treatment plants and other “critical facilities” first.
“If you're out of power, go to family, a friend or a cooling shelter,” Vice President Richard Mark said. “Take whatever means necessary, but stay out of your home.”
City Health Director William Kincaid cautioned that the city's older housing, much of it made of red brick, can heat up like furnaces in the summer heat.
“It could be a very dangerous day,” Police Chief Joe Mokwa said.
John Swapshire, 39, grabbed the next-to-last window fan at a hardware store for $14.99. The electricity at his home was out, but he had a gas-powered generator.
“I had to go to six stores to get this. They were either closed because of the electricity or sold out,” Swapshire said. “I don't think you can buy a cube of ice in all of St. Louis, either.”
Stanley Shelton, 53, found a cool spot under a tree in a downtown park where piles of broken limbs and branches covered the grass.
“I've never experienced anything like this. I don't know anyone with power,” Shelton said. “I'll just sit in my yard with a big jug of water and wait for it to pass. Maybe I'll take a couple cold showers. That works too.”
The death toll from the heat wave that has gripped much of the country for the past week rose to at least 18 people in seven states. Four more people died in the Chicago area, bringing the total number there to seven, officials said. Two have died in the Philadelphia area, two in Oklahoma City, two in Arkansas, two in Indiana and one each in South Dakota and Tennessee.
In St. Louis, officials reported the death of a 93-year-old woman who had air conditioning but no power. In Indiana, a 25-year-old woman taking medications that might have affected her body's ability to stay cool died from heat exposure when temperatures inside her apartment reached 100 degrees, officials said Thursday.
In Wisconsin, a 6-year-old girl was killed Thursday when storms knocked part of a tree onto a tent at a park.
The storms also brought heavy rain, hail and 80 mph winds to Illinois on Wednesday night. Roughly 89,800 homes and businesses remained without power Thursday, but the weather was cooler in the central and northern parts of the state, with temperatures in the upper 70s or lower 80s.
Three people were injured in St. Louis when a residential building collapsed in a neighborhood south of downtown, police said. The historic Switzer building near the Mississippi River, once home to the famous licorice maker, also partially collapsed.
Many of the injuries were to baseball fans waiting for a St. Louis Cardinals-Atlanta Braves game. Winds blowing at nearly 80 mph blew out press box windows and ripped the tarp, injuring at least 30 people, five of whom were taken to hospitals, said Norm Corley, a supervisor with Accu-Care, which handles medical problems at the stadium.
©MMVI, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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