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  • Currently in Chicago — June 15, 2023: Spotty shower or isolated thunderstorm.

Currently in Chicago — June 15, 2023: Spotty shower or isolated thunderstorm.

Plus, new data show Black and Brown New Yorkers suffered the most from wildfire smoke

The weather, currently.

Spotty shower or isolated thunderstorm.

Takeaways for Chicago's weather:

1. Above Average By The Weekend

2. Only Spotty Showers

3. Keeping It Cooler Lakeside

Clouds early Thursday then clearing for partly cloudy skies with slight chance for a spotty afternoon shower or isolated thunderstorm as highs hit the upper 70s. Fantastic Friday with sunshine and highs in the middle 70s. A warmer weekend with partly to mostly sunny skies and highs near 80 degrees Saturday and then the middle 80s for Sunday. A spotty shower possible Monday with a high near 80. Cooler lakeside each day by at least 5 to 10 degrees.

What you need to know, currently.

New data show marginalized New Yorkers were affected the most from wildfire smoke during this month’s orange skies — the worst wildfire-related pollution event in recorded US history.

Asthma ER visits surged in NYC by 10% during the period from June 7-9 when the smoke was the worst, and followed a demographic pattern that is too-familiar when it comes to racial and income disparities in public health and climate.

Here’s Arya Sundaram, from Gothamist:

The foul air from Canada’s wildfires was bad all over, but the impact hit hardest in neighborhoods in northern Manhattan, the Bronx, central Brooklyn, and the Rockaways, which had the highest number of asthma-related emergency department visits, according to the data.

Between Tuesday, when the city’s air quality reached unhealthy levels, and Saturday there were over 1,000 asthma-related emergency department visits across the city, according to data from the city Department of Health and Mental Hygiene. That’s a 10% jump from the same period last year.

Some 70% of the asthma-related visits during the period were in ZIP codes with predominantly Black or Hispanic residents. And 60% were in ZIP codes with higher poverty rates than the city overall.

Arya Sundaram

Compounding health effects from pollution and climate change fall hardest on communities of color for many reasons, writes Gina Jiménez from Inside Climate News: They are often pushed to live in polluted neighborhoods due to racist housing policies, they are less likely to be able to access preventative health care due to lack of funding, and suffer climate-related mental health problems more acutely as a result.

Climate equity is the same thing as racial equity.

What you can do, currently.

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—Eric Holthaus