Las Vegas Review-Journal

Air on side of caution: Quality advisory issued

Blazes in neighborin­g states partly to blame

- By Katelyn Newberg Las Vegas Review-journal

Wildfires in California and Arizona clouded the air in the Las Vegas Valley on Tuesday, prompting Clark County to issue an air quality advisory for Tuesday and Wednesday.

The Department of Air Quality said in a news release that elevated levels of smoke contribute­d to the advisory. Dust particles in smoke can contribute to ground-level ozone, which can cause coughing, wheezing and shortness of breath, the department said. A seasonal ozone advisory remained in effect.

Air quality in the Reno-sparks area in Northern Nevada has been affected by smoke from wildfires in California and Nevada, creating some of the worst pollution levels ever recorded there, according to the Washoe County Health District.

Two Nevada National Guard helicopter­s were sent to California on Monday, likely to help fight the Mendocino Complex fires near Lakeport, California, that have burned more than 56,000 acres. Lakeport, in Northern California, is at least a 10-hour drive from Las Vegas.

In addition to smoky air, the Las Vegas Valley is facing the possibilit­y of thundersto­rms over the next

WEATHER

several days.

Scattered showers are forecast for Wednesday and Thursday, National Weather Service meteorolog­ist Kate Guillet said, with about a 20 percent chance of rain in the afternoons and evenings.

Temperatur­es are expected to drop from Tuesday’s high of 109 degrees to 107 on Wednesday and Thursday. The chance for thundersto­rms will start to decrease Thursday, according to forecasts, and rain is more likely to fall over the Spring Mountains than the valley by the end of the week.

Morning lows will stay in the mid80s through the week, Guillet said.

By Friday, the valley should start to dry out with a slight chance of rain in the forecast, weather service meteorolog­ist Ashley Wolf said, and the weekend likely will stay dry and sunny. Friday’s forecast high is 106, and Saturday will kick off the weekend with a high near 107, she said.

The normal high for this time of year is about 104.

Contact Katelyn Newberg at knewberg@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0240. Follow @k_newberg on Twitter. Review-journal staff writers Max Michor and Mike Shoro contribute­d to this report.

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