OEMC, cooling centers, air conditioning and more: What's changed about extreme heat response since deadly 1995 Chicago heat wave
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CHICAGO (WLS) — It was 30 years ago this week that the deadly heat wave of 1995 hit Chicago.

It changed how the city responds to emergencies.

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ABC7 took a closer look at how the tragedy led to the development of the city’s Office of Emergency Management and Communications, and why it remains critical today.

The heat wave of 1995 is considered one of the deadliest weather events in this country. The OEMC was not in existence until several months later. But officials here have learned a great deal.

In July 1995, the sun and warm temperatures turned into blistering heat.

SEE ALSO | 30 years later: How deadly 1995 heat wave exposed deep flaws in Chicago’s emergency systems

“It’s almost like it caught everyone off guard about two days in. When the 911 calls started spiking and we started seeing those large scale fatality numbers,” said Kaila Lariviere with the OEMC.

While many healthy young people found reprieve on the lakefront, many vulnerable people, including the elderly population, were suffering in silence, because they did not have access to air conditioning.

“It really seems like everyone was just kind of excited for the heat, and then before they knew it, it was really bad,” Lariviere said.

Triple-digit temperatures for several days in a row became a crisis for Chicagoans confined to their homes. And as the casualties mounted, it overwhelmed the city’s services. They had to bring in trucks to store the bodies at the Cook County Medical Examiner’s Office.

“What we learned following the ’95 heat wave is there’s things we could’ve done better as a city coming together,” Lariviere said.

READ MORE | 30 years later: Organizers remember 1995 heat wave victims, advocate for vulnerable Chicagoans

These days, the OEMC is where everyone comes together. The office coordinates with the city, county, state, and other agencies, like ComEd.

“We’re shoulder-to-shoulder with the city to understand, what are their priorities with outages,” said ComEd Vice President Nichole Owens.

Each organization can coordinate a measured response while looking at what’s going in real time from 35,000-plus cameras in the city.

“Well, we, certainly now, we have caravans that we use. That’s another learning from the incident, where sometimes we have to take resources such as water, such as ice, to different locations,” Owens said.

Since 1995, many more changes have been implemented to mitigate the number of heat-related deaths:

  • There is a coordinated “Wellness Check” system for the city’s most vulnerable, collaborating with churches and non-profits to do door knocks.

  • City 311 Services were enhanced.

  • Cooling centers are open across the city and suburbs during extreme heat.

  • The city is “greener” with more trees and green roofs to combat urban heat.

  • A citywide heat emergency plan was established that includes issuing public alerts.

“I’m not going to let 1995, the 1995 heat wave happen again on my watch, at least the outcomes of it,” Lariviere said.

Of course, it is impossible to know, but officials believe if the OEMC had existed in its current form back in 1995, most if not all of the 739 lives lost could have been saved.

The OEMC was not fully operational until months after the deadly heat wave.

Now, 911, 311, and emergency management are all under one roof, coordinating the city’s response to everything from severe weather to large-scale public events like Lollapalooza and parades.

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