ActivePaper Archive RECORD-BREAKING - Chattanooga, 10/2/2019

RECORD-BREAKING

SUMMER HEAT LINGERS INTO OCTOBER

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STAFF PHOTO BY C.B. SCHMELTER

A jogger running along Market Street passes a sign displaying the temperature Tuesday.

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STAFF PHOTO BY ERIN O. SMITH

Chichi plays in the creek as Cody Roney, director of Lula Lake Land Trust, calls her at the Lula Lake Core Property on Tuesday in Lookout Mountain, Ga.

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Eight days into autumn, the temperature in Chattanooga rose to a blistering summertime-like high of 97 degrees Fahrenheit on Tuesday, setting a new record for the highest temperature ever in Chattanooga during October.

Even as the days are getting shorter, the National Weather Service isn’t forecasting any relief from the heatwave until at least this weekend, with the high forecast to rise to an even higher record of 98 degrees in Chattanooga by Thursday.

“This is extraordinary for this time of the year, but we’ve had persistent high pressure with a lot of southerly flow keeping air masses very warm with limited cloud cover,” said meteorologist Derek Eisentrout, with the National Weather Service office in Morristown. “Even with less than 12 hours of sunlight after the autumn equinox [on Sept. 23], temperatures are still getting into the 90s every day this week.”

While Montana was hit with a historic winter storm over the weekend that dumped up to 4 feet of snow in the town of Browning, the hot and dry summer lingers on in the Southeast, with record temperatures expected this week across most of the sunbelt.

The record warm start to October follows the second warmest September on record in Chattanooga, according to the National Weather Service. Eisentrout said only 1925 had a warmer September, and even that year had more rain.

Last month, Chattanooga recorded only 0.56 inches of rainfall, or less than 13% of the normal monthly level.

Despite the dry September and below average precipitation in August, however, rainfall so far this year in Chattanooga still remains nearly 6.8 inches above normal due to the heavy rains early in the year.

“It seems like whatever pattern we’re in, we get stuck in this year, with persistent rainy weather early this year and now continued hot and dry weather,” Eisentrout said.

The hot and dry weather pushed temperatures above 100 degrees twice in September in Chattanooga and helped boost demand for electricity in the Tennessee Valley to the highest average peak for the month in TVA’s history as air conditioners were in high use to cool homes and businesses across the Tennessee Valley.

TVA’s peak demand hit 28,551 megawatts on Tuesday, when temperatures across TVA’s sevenstate region rose to an average 95 degreees. That was the second highest peak power demand ever for TVA in October, surpassed only on Oct. 5, 2007, when TVA’s peak power demand jumped to 26,623 MW.

Contact Dave Flessner at

dflessner@timesfreepress.com

or at 423-757-6340.