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Day of action focuses on CT undocumented's healthcare needs; 7 jurors seated in first Trump criminal trial; ND looks to ease 'upskill' obstacles for former college students; Black Maternal Health Week ends, health disparities persist.

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Seven jury members were seated in Trump's hush money case. House Speaker Johnson could lose his job over Ukraine aid. And the SCOTUS heard oral arguments in a case that could undo charges for January 6th rioters.

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Rural Wyoming needs more vocational teachers to sustain its workforce pipeline, Ohio environmental advocates fear harm from a proposal to open 40-thousand forest acres to fracking and rural communities build bike trail systems to promote nature, boost the economy.

Report: NY’s Future a Hot, Wet Mess

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Wednesday, May 7, 2014   

NEW YORK - Life-threatening heat waves, heavy rain and coastal and river flooding are in store for New York, according to the Third National Climate Assessment, unless steps are taken now to slow global warming.

The Northeast has experienced a greater recent increase in extreme precipitation than any other region in the United States, according to the report. From 1958 to 2010, the Northeast saw more than a 70 percent increase in the amount of precipitation in very heavy weather events.

Kim Knowlton, co-deputy director of the Natural Resources Defense Council, senior scientist for its Health and Environment Program and a lead author of the National Climate Assessment, suggested that Superstorm Sandy was just a preview.

"In the future, because of sea-level rise, even lesser storms - storms not as intense as Sandy - will cause coastal flooding," Knowlton said.

The assessment projected that temperatures in the United States will increase another 2 to 4 degrees Fahrenheit in the next few decades, prompting more frequent extreme weather events.

When it's not raining, Knowlton said, the report predicts more deadly heat waves.

"Heat-related mortality could increase another 20 percent by the 2050s and double by the 2080s," Knowlton said. "That's really cause for concern in cities such as New York City, a lot of other cities across the country."

Some skeptics still maintain the changing climate is not caused by man-made pollutants such as heat-trapping carbon. Knowlton dismissed that.

"Based on the evidence," she said, "more than 97 percent of climate scientists have concluded that human-caused climate change is happening."

In the Northeast, the report said, agriculture, fisheries and ecosystems increasingly will be compromised by climate-change impacts during the next century.

Knowlton said the report confirmed that the average temperature in the United States has risen by about 1.5 degrees since 1895, and 80 percent of that increase has happened in the past three decades.

"We really can't afford to lose another decade in dealing with the issue of climate change," she said. "So we're now at the point where we have so much information, so much evidence - as this report will show - we can no longer plead ignorance."

The report is from the National Climate Assessment and Development Advisory Committee, at the U.S. Global Change Research Program. It was reviewed by the National Academy of Sciences, as well as members of the public.

The report is online at globalchange.gov.


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