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Monroe County cooling stations to open Tuesday for intense heat

BLOOMINGTON — Eight cooling stations across Monroe County will be open Tuesday and Wednesday as intense heat returns to southern Indiana.

Cooling stations are a place where people who are in need of short-term relief from the heat can come and cool down, according to a Facebook post from the Monroe County Emergency Management. The eight cooling stations are listed below:

  • Bloomington Fire Station Headquarters
    226 South College Avenue, Bloomington
  • Ellettsville Fire Department Headquarters
    5080 West State Road 46, Ellettsville
  • Monroe Fire Protection District – Perry Station 22
    3953 South Kennedy Drive, Bloomington
  • Monroe Fire Protection District – Clear Creek Station 21 (Pet Friendly)
    9094 South Strain Ridge Road, Bloomington
  • Monroe Fire Protection District – Indian Creek Station 23
    8019 South Rockport Road, Bloomington
  • Monroe Fire Protection District – Bloomington Station 25
    5081 North Old State Road 37, Bloomington
  • Monroe Fire Protection District – Van Buren Station 29 (Pet Friendly)
    2130 South Kirby Road, Bloomington
  • Monroe Fire Protection District – Benton Station 24
    7606 East State Road 45, Unionville

The cooling stations will be open from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. starting Tuesday until at least Thursday, but may be extended if the heat wave continues.

There will not be food, showers or sleeping areas available. Pets are allowed at Monroe Fire Protection District Stations 21 and 29 but they must be in a kennel or carrier.

Monroe County will be under a heat advisory from 11 a.m. until 10 p.m. EDT Tuesday.

Temperatures will be in the mid-to-upper 90s both both Tuesday and Wednesday, according to the National Weather Service forecast. Heat index values could get as high as 100ºF.

The NWS HeatRisk indicator forecasts the risk of heat-related impacts over a 24-hour period, considering how unusual the heat is for the time of the year, the duration of the heat including both daytime and nighttime temperatures, and if those temperatures pose an elevated risk of heat-related impacts based on data from the Center for Disease Control and Prevention.

The HeatRisk is a color-coded scale that ranges from zero to four. The scale is copied below from the National Weather Service.

HeatRisk scale (National Weather Service)

The HeatRisk for Bloomington is forecasted to be a 3 (Major) on Tuesday and a 4 (Extreme) on Wednesday.