Currently in the Twin Cities — August 31, 2023: A warm and windy day

Plus, an American train renaissance is underway

The weather, currently.

A warm and windy day

A warmer and windy day is in store for Thursday as the heat starts to build back toward Minnesota. We won’t be hot yet with highs in the low 80s but south winds will blow at 15-25 mph by afternoon.

It’s the last day of meteorological summer and we’re finishing it as the 5th hottest summer on record in the Twin Cities. What’s remarkable is that this comes just two years after clinching the hottest summer ever spot in 2021. This year beat all but one ‘dust bowl’ year (1933) for average summer temperature. The heat wave ahead will mark our second rare, late-season blast of heat.

What you need to know, currently.

The Washington Post has a new engrossing feature story (gift link) on the privatized future of high speed rail in America. It brings up some interesting scenarios about the near-term future of trains in the world’s most car-dependent country.

Transportation (specifically, by car) is the largest source of energy use in the United States, so any displacement of cars for trains is a big deal for the climate. Amtrak has been strategic about this in announcing its expansion plans, focusing on car-centric routes like Dallas-Houston, Miami-Orlando, Colorado Springs - Fort Collins, and Los Angeles - Las Vegas.

A newcomer to America rail is the private high speed rail company Brightline, which to me sounds like the train version of the Megabus displacing Greyhound back in the early 2000s.

From the article:

Fifty million trips are made between Southern California and Las Vegas each year, mostly via private vehicles, according to project ridership studies. Brightline wants to capture 11 million of those trips annually.

An interactive map of Amtrak’s proposed expansion shows that, thanks in part to Amtrak Joe, by 2028 the US will have a vastly improved rail system, and it’s about time.

What you can do, currently.

One of my favorite organizations, Mutual Aid Disaster Relief, serves as a hub of mutual aid efforts focused on climate action in emergencies — like Hurricane Idalia. Find mutual aid network near you and join, or donate to support networks in Florida: