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Heat Advisory Issued for New York as Manhattanites Seek Relief

By Leslie Albrecht | July 5, 2010 12:39pm | Updated on July 5, 2010 5:06pm

By Leslie Albrecht and Jennifer Glickel

DNAinfo Reporter/Producers

MANHATTAN — Officials warned New Yorkers to stay inside and drink plenty of water as a record-breaking heat wave continued to scorch Manhattan on Monday.

Temperatures were heading to 99 degrees Monday and Tuesday, with humidity making the heat feel like at least 100 degrees. At 5 p.m. on Monday, it was 97 degrees in Midtown Manhattan.

The National Weather Service issued a heat advisory that will stay in effect until 7 p.m. Wednesday.

People struggled to stay cool on Monday in the scorching temperatures.

"I've splashed two bottles of water on myself today, but the water just evaporates within a few seconds," said Brooklyn resident Demetrice Gumbs, 20, who spent Monday selling maps of Central Park.

Nancy Velasquez, foreground, and Muneca Sanchez, take in the sun on the beach in Coney Island Sunday.
Nancy Velasquez, foreground, and Muneca Sanchez, take in the sun on the beach in Coney Island Sunday.
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AP Photo/Tina Fineberg

"The umbrella isn't working," Gumbs said. "I feel like I'm in an oven!"

Others weren't as bothered by the heat, like Angela Tuttle, 40, who was in town from Fort Worth, Texas to attend a seminar at Columbia University.

"Being from Texas, this weather is nothing," Tuttle told DNAinfo.

"I would choose to be outside in the heat instead of being indoors with the air conditioning any day."

The city opened cooling centers where people could seek relief from the scorching temperatures in air-conditioned buildings.

The near triple-digit heat is expected to keep the city in its sweaty grip until Thursday, when the high temperature is expected to drop down to 90 degrees.

On Saturday, the city could get some relief from a cooling rain shower that could push temperatures down to 85 degrees, according to the National Weather Service.

Con Edison expected power usage to reach an all-time high Monday and asked customers to conserve power by unplugging appliances and keeping lights switched off. The electric company deployed extra crews to respond to problems in the power grid.

A child cools off in the East River during a visit to the Brooklyn Bridge Park on  Monday as temperatures climbed into the high 90s.
A child cools off in the East River during a visit to the Brooklyn Bridge Park on Monday as temperatures climbed into the high 90s.
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AP Photo/Mary Altaffer

The city's previous power usage record was set on August 2, 2006, when New Yorkers gobbled 13,141 megawatts. The high back then was 97 degrees, according to news reports.

Sunday was New York's hottest day of the year with a high of 97 degrees.

Sanjana Ali, 11, cools off in a water fountain on the Lower East Side on Monday.
Sanjana Ali, 11, cools off in a water fountain on the Lower East Side on Monday.
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AP Photo/Mary Altaffer