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July 5, 2016 by By AdaptNY

‘Harlem Heat Project’ Enlists Citizen Scientists in Sensor Data News Project to Tackle Heat Wave Health Risks

AdaptNY has added an important new partner – WNYC Radio – to the roster for its Harlem Heat project, launched in May. Here’s more about the latest development, and new details about the project itself.

The Harlem Heat project explores the public health risks of urban heat, using a combination of crowd-sourcing, data reporting and narrative journalism. The project is produced by WNYC, AdaptNY and iSeeChange, with community partners WE ACT for Environmental Justice and WHCR-FM90.3 helping to get the word out and explore potential solutions.

The Harlem Heat project explores the public health risks of urban heat, using a combination of crowd-sourcing, data reporting and narrative journalism. The project is produced by AdaptNY, WNYC and iSeeChange, with community partners WE ACT for Environmental Justice and WHCR-FM90.3

A pioneering news initiative this summer will bring together a unique team of non-profit journalism and community partners, including climate news service AdaptNY, to investigate how summer heat affects the health of residents of the Harlem section of Manhattan and explore ways to build community resilience.

The Harlem Heat Project will use heat-and-humidity sensors to capture hard-to-access indoor air conditions with the help of a crew of community-based citizen scientists. These “ambassadors” will also gather updates about residents via a mobile app. Reporters will document the process and the results in multiple installments over the summer.

Collaborating with AdaptNY are New York’s award-winning flagship public radio station WNYC and its health podcast Only Human, and community climate and weather journal ISeeChange. Partners from Harlem include community radio station WHCR-FM90.3, and WE ACT for Environmental Justice, active in Northern Manhattan for nearly 30 years.

‘Our main aim is to cast light on the health risks of urban heat, and show how it’s affecting residents, while involving the community in the journalistic process’ — AdaptNY Editor Adam Glenn

More people die of extreme heat in this country every year than in hurricanes and other natural disasters combined. Many heat-death victims are elderly and poor, and their deaths occur behind closed doors, out of the view of public agencies and the media.

“Our main aim is to cast light on the health risks of urban heat, and show how it’s affecting residents, while involving the community in the journalistic process,” explained AdaptNY Editor Adam Glenn, who is overseeing the project.

Added WNYC Senior Editor Matthew Schuerman, one of the team’s leaders, “The Harlem Heat Project will be one important way to get into those hot stuffy rooms where that population lives, document the dangers they face through crowd-sourced data, and identify ways to reduce the risks.”

Project partners hope that the summer project, if successful, may serve as a model solution for one of the most vexing public health threats of our time: how to monitor the heat that vulnerable residents are experiencing inside their homes, and when to intervene to save their lives.

DIY sensors will track dangerous heat

Beginning in July, the team will place the first of what will ultimately be up to 60 inexpensive sensors in Harlem residences that lack air conditioning, in order to continuously monitor indoor conditions during the hottest part of summer. Some of the sensors will even have the ability to send text alerts when the indoor temperature reaches a dangerous level.

‘We’re using do-it-yourself hobby electronics, and documenting our process along the way, so that anyone could replicate this project in their own community’ – WNYC’s Data News Editor John Keefe

Citizen-scientists in the community will be trained in how to use the sensors to capture and upload sensor data from smartphones, as well as how to watch for and respond to signs of heat stress as they talk to vulnerable neighbors during regular sensor site visits.

The heat and humidity sensor is being developed and prototyped by WNYC’s Data News Editor John Keefe.

“We’re using do-it-yourself hobby electronics, and documenting our process along the way, so that anyone could replicate this project in their own community,” Keefe said.

Real-time data from the sensors will be charted and shared online at WNYC and partner sites, along with explanations of the dangers posed at various thresholds. The team will also analyze whether temperatures indoors are warmer or cooler than outdoor temperatures to better understand the heat island effect, in which cities are often significantly warmer than surrounding areas.

From July through September, the news partners will present reports on the project’s findings. One of the key questions the project is looking to answer is just how hot it gets inside typical Harlem apartments that lack air conditioning.

‘Stories and data are two sides of the same coin … The iSeeChange Tracker empowers communities to tell their own stories’ — iSeeChange founder Julia Kumari Drapkin.

The project will also provide a window into the lives of community members, offering stories and profiles of residents. And additional reporting is planned on related topics, such as the dangers of heat, ways to keep cool, and options to strengthen community resilience to heat.

The project expects to gather insights directly from the citizen science ambassadors and participating community members through a new phone app developed by iSeeChange and NASA. The iSeeChange Tracker app newly released on iTunes, as well as the mobile website, allow community members to contribute directly to the Harlem Heat Project’s urban heat investigation.

“Stories and data are two sides of the same coin, and we need both to guide adaptation  decisions,” says iSeeChange founder Julia Kumari Drapkin. “The iSeeChange Tracker empowers communities to tell their own stories alongside the temperature, carbon dioxide, and weather data each season and to keep their own records of heat impacts.”

Building Community Resilience

As the data-gathering initiative wraps up this fall, the team will draw conclusions from its findings, then once again convene the ambassadors, as well as interested members of the Harlem community and other experts, in a collaborative media-citizen workshop. Participants will brainstorm ideas for combatting heat-related illnesses and deaths that the community, city government and other actors can implement in the future.

“The collaborative workshop is a way of using the reporting project as a lens to view the problems of urban heat islands, community resiliency, environmental health risks and more – then seek out solutions together,” said Glenn, who has run similar workshops for journalists and community members before through AdaptNY.

‘Too often, the people who are disproportionately impacted by climate change and extreme heat are not getting their voices heard. That has to change’ — WE ACT Director of Communications Brooke Havlik

“WHCR-90.3FM will provide a direct link to seniors in the Harlem community. Some don’t have air conditioners and often sit on sidewalks and stoops to cool off. We hope the project will result in programs that help them stay safe in the heat.” says General Manager Angela Harden.

“We are happy to work with AdaptNY and partners to facilitate community-based reporting on climate change as an alternative to the current model. Too often, the people who are disproportionately impacted by climate change and extreme heat are not getting their voices heard. That has to change,” said WE ACT Director of Communications Brooke Havlik.

The partners are undertaking the Harlem Heat project right at a time when the dangers of global warming are becoming increasingly clear. A recent paper by researchers at Columbia University’s Earth Institute projects that as many as 3,331 New Yorkers could die every summer due to heat exposure in the 2080s depending on the severity of global warming and our ability to adapt.

City College researchers Brian Vant-Hull and Prathap Ramamurthy are acting as informal scientific advisors to the Harlem Heat Project. Vant-Hull, who has conducted city sidewalk heat studies, said the project’s findings would be “very valuable” to the health community because of how little research is available gauging indoor temperatures, such as inside public housing.

For more about the project, visit our Harlem Heat Project page. To learn about our partners on the project, visit our partners page. 

 

Posted in Harlem Heat and tagged with Adaptation, AdaptNY, climate change, disaster preparedness, Harlem, health, heat, Manhattan, resilience. RSS 2.0 feed.
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Harlem Heat Resources

  • Excessive Heat Events Guidebook (EPA)
  • Info on NY State-subsidized cooling assistance (OTDA)
  • NCAR Heat Wave Awareness Project Database
  • NY State Temperature by Decade (NCDC)
  • Planning for Excessive Heat Events, Information for Older Adults (EPA)
  • REPORT: Northern Manhattan Heat Risks (We Act)
  • REPORT: Reducing urban heat improves livability (CCNY)
  • Report: Socioeconomic factors increase heat-related death risk in NYC
  • We Act Northern Manhattan Climate Action Plan

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