# ** Exceptional heat warning posted on large parts of Ohio, according to NWS, cities ...
# ** Exceptional heat warning posted on large parts of Ohio, according to the NWS, in cities such as Cleveland and Toledo The heat index will make residents feel like it is about 110 degrees Fahrenheit. **
It was reported from the weather service that humidity would rise and air quality would decrease significantly. "Residents are advised to stay in homes and not be exposed to heat for long periods or do physical work outside," the service wrote.
The heat wave would not have been so unusual had it not been for the moisture left by the hurricane Barry, causing a drop in air quality and a huge rise in humidity. According to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), ** the area where air quality will be worst during a heat wave is on the East Coast, between Baltimore and Connecticut (and includes New York City). **
New York Mayor Bill de Bellasio reportedly asked his skyscrapers not to fully cool the buildings at the end of the bubble, in the hope that this would reduce the chance of a power outage in the city.
# In fact, De Blasio declared an emergency and asked any building that exceeds 100 feet not to cool below 78 degrees Fahrenheit: “We are getting into an emergency in the cold, and we need to do everything to keep the city's residents. Urban buildings are doing their utmost to reduce electricity consumption, and now civilian buildings need to do that, too, ”he said.
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