Current:Home > My'Reverse winter': When summer is in full swing, Phoenix-area AC repair crews can be life savers -VisionFunds
'Reverse winter': When summer is in full swing, Phoenix-area AC repair crews can be life savers
Rekubit View
Date:2025-04-06 15:50:59
The road to Sun City sure is hot.
By 7:30 a.m. on a Tuesday in late July, the air was 98 degrees and the pavement was 117.
This time of year in metro Phoenix is sometimes called by locals “reverse winter,” a time when many don’t wish to venture out. But some are compelled to bear the heat to keep everyone else comfortable.
It has always been hot in Phoenix, America's hottest big city. But the numbers don't lie: It is getting even hotter, the high temperatures pushed higher by climate change, the lows rising with urban growth. The Arizona Republic, part of the USA TODAY Network, chronicled one week of the heat in Phoenix, aiming to draw the full measure of what life is like in an Arizona summer.
On this day, staff from AirZona HVAC got to work installing a new air conditioner at a retiree’s winter home.
The sun shone down as it routinely does, sharp ultraviolet, irradiating gravel yards and blanching deep blue from the early morning sky. On a quiet residential road, a solitary quail chased its own forehead plumage across the street, between rows of single-story ranch-style retirement homes in shades of sand, cream and taupe.
Company owner Gerald Sandoz said he’s been doing this for decades, 23 years around Phoenix.
“My life revolves around the summer,” he said.
And much of his life revolves around his company. Up about 5 or 5:30 a.m., working till 8 p.m. He does most sales calls, his wife answers the phone, his brother-in-law oversees installations, his son is a lead technician. Some of their other nine employees came handpicked from Sandoz’s Evangelical Quaker church. He values honesty.
In the summer months, residents ask a lot of undermaintained air conditioners, clinging to cold air like life support. When they go bust, they call Sandoz, sweltering and frustrated. He concedes almost all would prefer not to need him. But he finds satisfaction in being helpful, and his faith keeps him cool with the orneriest caller.
He works across the Phoenix area and he’s chatty. He said he met folks with stories to tell, former sports stars or a woman who claimed to have married a prince. He’s had customers come to the door stark naked to try to stay cool while their air conditioner is down. One customer paid in hundred dollar bills from a stash in the drywall behind a painting; Sandoz preferred not to ask where it came from.
Scott Trimble, 60, and Bruce Furman, 61, labored inside the uncooled home, already 90 degrees at 8 a.m. They removed the old air handler — it weighed maybe 100 pounds — from a ground-level closet, dodging a bit of mold. It beats wrenching in a stifling attic or on a sun-beaten roof; one time Furman said he clocked an attic at 147 degrees.
“I figured I'd be thinner,” Furman jokes of their saunalike workplace.
They sweat through red uniform shirts and pause for water. Furman might put down five to seven bottles in a day.
It was the second day at work for Patick Woods, 21. He also found the job through church. He swept stones and dust from a concrete pad — it helps with leveling and customers notice the details, Sandoz explained.
Sandoz wheeled a roughly 250-pound condensing unit into place on a hand truck with the grace of a ballroom dancer. Forget Ginger Rogers matching Fred Astaire backward, and in high heels, Sandoz can do it in flip flops. Not his norm, but they’re busy today, they have appointments from Buckeye to Mesa, a span of 60 congested miles.
A typical installation goes for about $9,500 he said, and might take four to five hours. For an installation in an attic, they expect to work all day.
And he’s grateful for it. In the hot, high season, he loads up on work and takes no vacations, so he can survive the doldrums of winter. He has a modest outfit: two vans, one pickup. He worked for larger companies and he likes it small.
“I wouldn't want to grow too big,” he said. “Because I feel like we grow too big, you start to lose the personal touch with your customers and you kind of forget who you're working for.”
Contributing: Richard Ruelas and Lane Sainty. Investigative reporter Andrew Ford can be reached at [email protected].
One week in the Phoenix heat:Living and dying in America’s hottest big city
When heat hurts:ER doctors treat heatstroke, contact burns on Phoenix's hottest days
'Hotter than it's ever been':How this 93-year-old copes with Phoenix's 100-degree heat
Measuring heat:How to do it correctly, according to scientists, and why it matters
Dying in America's hottest city:Meth and heat are a deadly mix. Users in Phoenix rarely get the message
'Reverse winter':When summer is in full swing, Phoenix-area AC repair crews can be life savers
Working outsideWithout legal protections, farmworkers rely on employers to survive extreme heat
Keeping cool at the zoo:Extreme heat takes a toll on animals and plants. What their keepers do to protect them
veryGood! (131)
Related
- Arkansas State Police probe death of woman found after officer
- First lawsuit filed against Pat Fitzgerald, Northwestern leaders amid hazing scandal
- China is restructuring key government agencies to outcompete rivals in tech
- Why we usually can't tell when a review is fake
- The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
- Does Nature Have Rights? A Burgeoning Legal Movement Says Rivers, Forests and Wildlife Have Standing, Too
- Bebe Rexha Is Gonna Show You How to Clap Back at Body-Shamers
- Titanic Submersible Passenger Shahzada Dawood Survived Horrifying Plane Incident 5 Years Ago With Wife
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- Timeline: Early Landmark Events in the Environmental Justice Movement
Ranking
- Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
- Germany moves toward restrictions on Huawei, as Europe sours on China
- The Dominion Lawsuit Pulls Back The Curtain On Fox News. It's Not Pretty.
- Bison gores woman at Yellowstone National Park
- South Korea's acting president moves to reassure allies, calm markets after Yoon impeachment
- Biden and the EU's von der Leyen meet to ease tensions over trade, subsidy concerns
- Fox News stands in legal peril. It says defamation loss would harm all media
- How to prevent heat stroke and spot symptoms as U.S. bakes in extreme heat
Recommendation
Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
Businessman Who Almost Went on OceanGate Titanic Dive Reveals Alleged Texts With CEO on Safety Concerns
Herbivore Sale: The Top 15 Skincare Deals on Masks, Serums, Moisturizers, and More
Tomato shortages hit British stores. Is Brexit to blame?
Moving abroad can be expensive: These 5 countries will 'pay' you to move there
Rupert Murdoch says Fox stars 'endorsed' lies about 2020. He chose not to stop them
DOJ sues to block JetBlue-Spirit merger, saying it will curb competition
Delta Air Lines pilots approve contract to raise pay by more than 30%
Tags
Like
- 'Survivor' 47 finale, part one recap: 2 players were sent home. Who's left in the game?
- Warming Trends: Swiping Right and Left for the Planet, Education as Climate Solution and Why It Might Be Hard to Find a Christmas Tree
- Kourtney Kardashian Seeks Pregnancy Advice After Announcing Baby With Travis Barker