{"id":11406,"date":"2020-11-16t20:21:01","date_gmt":"2020-11-16t20:21:01","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/dpetrov.2create.studio\/planet\/wordpress\/100-lab-coats-track-urban-heat-in-houston\/"},"modified":"2023-02-28t18:46:09","modified_gmt":"2023-02-28t18:46:09","slug":"100-lab-coats-track-urban-heat-in-houston","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"\/\/www.getitdoneaz.com\/story\/100-lab-coats-track-urban-heat-in-houston\/","title":{"rendered":"100 lab coats track urban heat in houston"},"content":{"rendered":"
i spent this summer in washington, d.c., during a july that saw a record 28 days over 90 degrees. i groaned whenever i had to walk two blocks to the cvs near my apartment, let alone the five to get to trader joe\u2019s. the heat was suffocating \u2013 after five minutes of walking, i was going out of my way to get to shadier sides of streets and hugging buildings for shade. <\/p>\n
just outside of the cvs that i could barely get myself to walk to, there was always a man sitting on the corner, covered in beads of sweat from the thick humidity and sun beating down on his bald head. earlier in the spring, when it wasn\u2019t so hot, he asked for spare change. now, he asks if i can get him a bottle of water. <\/p>\n
heat already kills more americans<\/a> than all other extreme weather events combined. by 2100, some projections show that deaths from heat may surpass the current rate of deaths<\/a> from all infectious diseases combined.<\/p>\n and one of the greatest solutions to extreme heat is planting more trees. us cities are pouring millions into tree planting initiatives\u2013\u2013washington, d.c., seattle and houston are already on track to meet million-tree planting goals by 2030. i dove into the heat issue last summer when i wrote a piece for the guardian about the shortfalls of these plans. i found that cities<\/a> are really good at planting trees in high-income neighborhoods, and not so good at planting trees in low-income, majority minority neighborhoods, where it can be up to 15 f hotter<\/a>.<\/p>\n the issue becomes even more complex when you factor in tree micro inequalities\u2013\u2013yes, it\u2019s actually a thing. boston seems to be doing pretty well in distributing tree canopy across all neighborhoods. but david meshoulam, president of boston tree nonprofit speak for the trees, described that low-income neighborhoods rank well in tree canopy because they have big parks nearby, which factor into the neighborhood total. boston is really struggling to plant street trees, which offer that shade on your walk to the grocery store, but you can\u2019t see that in the data.<\/p>\n we really don\u2019t know where to plant trees if we look at tree totals by neighborhood, like we have been. those totals will hide those micro inequalities that cities should be targeting. so, if houston has a goal to plant 1.6 million trees, where should they put them? <\/p>\n