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Fainting UPS Drivers And Climate Change

Are corporations really ready for climate change?

Clive Thompson

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How much are today’s companies seriously preparing for climate change?

I thought about this while pondering a recent grim piece in the New York Times about UPS drivers collapsing from working in increasingly unbearable heat.

Most smaller UPS trucks aren’t air conditioned, and in the package-carrying area the temperatures can rise as high as 150 degrees — as photos of thermometers the drivers have shared on social media attest. The reporter Livia Albeck-Ripka found that at least 270 UPS and USPS drivers have been sickened or hospitalized from heat exposure.

One is the 26-year-old Nicholas Gubell, a UPS driver who was on his route in Long Island when he collapsed in the heat. Paramedics had to cover him in ice packs to get his temperature down. “People are dropping like flies out here,” he told the Times. “It’s very brutal.”

Indeed. As Albeck-Rupak writes:

Last year, Jose Cruz Rodriguez Jr., a 23-year-old UPS driver in Mr. Reeves’s local, was found dead in the company’s parking lot in Waco, Texas, just days after starting the job. In June, a 24-year-old UPS driver, Esteban David Chavez Jr., died while delivering packages in Pasadena, Calif., about 10 miles northeast of…

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Clive Thompson
Clive Thompson

Written by Clive Thompson

I write 2X a week on tech, science, culture — and how those collide. Writer at NYT mag/Wired; author, “Coders”. @clive@saturation.social clive@clivethompson.net

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