GAIA
and MEDIA
This morning, January 20, 2015, 680New
radio announced by 8:00 a.m. that Toronto Public Health had declared an Extreme
Cold Weather Alert warning.
The high today was forecast as -5 C and
the low a -12 C with winds at night creating a wind chill factor of up to -19
C.
The on-line Toronto Star today has
a critical article attacking Toronto Public Health and the system in general
for not declaring a Cold Weather Alert for Monday when a man died overnight at
a bus shelter dressed in a T-shirt and shorts. [http://www.thestar.com/news/gta/2015/01/06/how_many_torontonians_does_it_take_to_declare_an_extreme_cold_weather_alert_keenan.html]
Last week, as well, 680News radio
reported that a Toronto councilor has recommended the city treat temperatures
below -10 Celsius as hazardous and activate emergency weather centres and
warnings.
680News also ran some ads warning that
hypothermia can occur even if the temperature is above 0 Celsius.
It also reported a study which found
that people's body temperature drops when shown a video of cold
weather conditions. An example of the
power of mind over body.
And 680News, in its 4 times per hour weather
reports, continues to treat temperatures below -5 Celsius as 'dangerously cold’
if wind chill is taken into account.
Now I am not a fan of winter cold.
I do not ski or skate and wish every homeless person had access to heated
daytime areas and permanent homes, but as someone living in the second
warmest part of Canada outside of the Vancouver area, I find the attack on normal
Canadian weather disconcerting.
According to the American National
Weather Service chart at
http://www.nws.noaa.gov/om/winter/windchill.shtml, on a calm, windless day, only below -50 F (-46 C) can one get frostbite in less than 5 minutes on exposure body
parts. Yes, frostbite can occur in 5
minutes at higher temperatures such as -10 F
(-23.33 C) but only if you are
uncovered in 60 mile per hour winds—but how often do you go out in gale
force weather!
Environment Canada’s website ( http://www.ec.gc.ca/meteo-weather/default.asp?lang=En&n=d9553ab5-1#extremeCold)
states that for South-central and Southwestern Ontario it does not
declare a cold weather alert unless “the temperature or wind chill is expected
to reach minus 30°C for at least two hours”.
And if a Toronto councilor has his way,
the extreme cold weather trigger would rise to a -10 Celsius
-- and be in effect most nights in the GTA from mid-December through
January and February!
The reality is that Toronto at least is
having an unusually mild winter so far: warmer temperatures and
only one modest snow storm.
Yes, the homeless and anyone who goes
out in summer dress in sub-zero Celsius temperatures for any length of time is
at risk, but that is not the norm for the 2.79 million people of Toronto
today and the 5.5 million in the GTA (Greater
Toronto Area).
But the mindset – whether a
perverse side effect of the belief Global Warming should increase our winter
temperatures, self-interest to make weather 'newsworthy' and to get an
audience by exaggeration and hype, or well-meaning advocates for the poor
-- feeds into the psychology of cold
found in the aforementioned study.
If we are constantly bombarded with
weather reports that treat normal or mild winter weather as 'dangerously cold' ,
our minds will take over and make us actually feel colder
– fulfilling the false media message.
To defend and protect us from this psychological paranoia,
I suggest that Canada officially revert to Fahrenheit from Celsius, or at least have forecasts give both numbers
and ensure we teach Fahrenheit to all school age children.
We switched to Celsius as part of metrication some 40
years ago but the U.S.A. did not and kept the more useful – and psychologically
better – Fahrenheit scale.
On the Celsius scale, water freezes at 0 C and
boils at 100 C, but on the Fahrenheit scale, that freezing point is 32 F and
the boiling point is 212 F.
Consequently our American cousins do not get psychologically
upset if the outdoors in winter are even close to 0 F = -17.8 C. After all, NFL Superbowl playoffs and even
the ‘big game’ have been e played outdoors in frigid January
weather.
The aptly nicknamed Freezer Bowl (January 1982) was
played in the coldest temperature in NFL history in terms of wind chill.
Air temperature was −9 °F
(−23 °C), but with a sustained wind of 27 miles per hour (43 km/h), the
wind chill
was −37 °F or −38 °C. For The
Ice Bowl, the 1967 final, the game-time temperature at Lambeau Field was
about −15 °F (−26 °C), with an average wind chill
around −36 °F (−38 °C) [All figures using the current,
revised National Weather Service wind chill index].
(See Wikipedia.)
Certainly we
often see U.S. and Canadian football games with snow falling and gusty winds and
heaters on the side to keep players from hypothermia.
So, maybe the best gift you can give and get at
Christmas or Chanukah or Kwanza or Chinese New Year is a Fahrenheit thermometer
– and the chance to stay ‘mentally’ warm.