(View map full screen.)
Initial finding: due to differences in tree cover, green spaces, and dark surfaces, some areas in Spokane are as much as 13.9° warmer. A 90° day in one neighborhood could be a 104° day for another.
Is everyone equally impacted by extreme heat?
Environmental justice is the fair treatment and meaningful involvement of all people—regardless of income, race, or color—with respect to both decision-making and the distribution of environmental benefits and burdens. Are there environmental justice factors involved in the Spokane community’s experience of extreme heat events, such as the heat dome of 2021? Do extreme heat events equally impact residents or do some individuals experience greater impacts?
Correlations of Urban Heat with Race and Income in Spokane, Washington
Urban Heat Islands
What are urban heat islands?
On sunny days, dark building materials like concrete, asphalt, and dark rooftops retain more heat from light, causing those surfaces and surrounding areas to be hotter. As a result, areas with more buildings and parking lots often experience higher temperatures due to the urban heat island effect. However, strategies like increasing green space, trees, and using lighter-colored building materials can help cool down these heat islands. The urban heat island effect is made worse by climate change. It is not a cause of climate change.1
Resources
- Spokane Heat Watch Summary Report, September 2022 (Printable high-resolution version | 15 MB PDF)
- Heat.gov - serves as the premier source of heat and health information for the nation to reduce the health, economic, and infrastructural impacts of extreme heat.
- SpoCanopy - a program of City of Spokane Urban Forestry, in collaboration with The Lands Council. The Spokane Heat Watch maps will be used by SpoCanopy to help determine what communities are most in need of trees.
- "Addressing Extreme Heat in Spokane" a report by Owen Hart
- Spokane Climate Project - learn more about projected changes in temperature for Spokane
Community Partners
The Spokane Heat Watch urban heat island maps were created with the help of 40 Spokane volunteers and with the partnership of the following:
- Spokane City Council Sustainability Action Subcommittee
- The Lands Council
- 350 Spokane
- KXLY Chief Meteorologist, Kris Crocker
- National Weather Service, Spokane Office
- CAPA Strategies
- National Integrated Heat Health Information System (NIHHIS)
1 Skeptical Science, "Does Urban Heat Island effect exaggerate global warming trends?" https://skepticalscience.com/urban-heat-island-effect.htm