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Boston — For Arwa Ait-Chaib and her mother, Wafa El Hidar, summertime in Chelsea, Massachusetts, means trying to beat the heat. 

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“There are always some days that I feel like we live in the middle of the Sahara desert,”  Ait-Chaib told CBS News.  

Their Chelsea neighborhood, located just across the river from Boston, offers little shade.

“We had no trees over here at all,” El Hidar said.  

Chelsea is plagued by what is known as the Urban Heat Island effect, where dense development and a lack of green space can cause some neighborhoods to bake.

“I just can’t stand it,” Ait-Chaib said. “It’s like, I feel sticky. It’s humid out, and if you go out the sun immediately burns your skin.”     

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Research from the nonprofit Climate Central shows peak temperatures in such urban areas can be 15 to 20 degrees Fahrenheit hotter than greener ones.  

“We’re basically an island of hot stuff,” Bianca Bowman, a climate justice manager with GreenRoots, a local Boston environmental group, said of Chelsea.

GreenRoots is experimenting with cooling solutions on a single block in Chelsea that GreenRoots calls the “cool block.”

“We looked at those spots and said, ‘OK, where can we throw as many solutions as possible to cool those areas down?’” Bowman said.

In what it calls an “urban laboratory,” GreenRoots has planted more than 100 trees on the block, resurfaced the street in lighter colors to reflect heat, and painted nearby rooftops white. GreenRoots is partnering with the city of Chelsea on the project, which is receiving a combination of funding from the state and philanthropic foundations. 

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“So when you paint a rooftop white, it’s actually reflecting heat instead of absorbing heat,” Bowman said.

Fixes like these could help save lives as climate change makes heat waves worse. Climate Central research has found that 88% of 247 major U.S. cities now have more extremely hot summer days than they did 55 years ago. Climate Central defines an extremely hot summer day as one that has a maximum temperature hotter than 95% of all summer days between 1970 and 2024.

On Tuesday, Boston recorded a high of 102 degrees, the hottest June day in the city since 1872, according to the National Weather Service.  

Boston University researchers are working with Chelsea residents this summer to study the problem even further. Some families are wearing small sensors to track heat exposure.  

Their research shows parks, trees and green space can reduce peak urban temperatures by two to nine degrees Fahrenheit. Of course, finding space in big, crowded cities is not always easy, so those that design such spaces have to make the most of what they have.

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A project is underway to replace pavement behind Ait-Chaib’s Chelsea home with a park that is being built by the city of Chelsea, but inspired by the “Cool Blocks” initiative. She says it feels like the neighborhood is improving.

Chris Reed, founder of the landscape architecture studio Stoss Landscape Urbanism, designed Boston’s groundbreaking Urban Forest Plan, first launched by the city in 2022. The plan established the city’s first urban forester position and urban forestry department. It also put in place procedures for preserving and extending the city’s tree canopy.

Under the plan, on one particular strip of land, about 400 trees were planted on just a single acre, Reed explains.

“So, you don’t need acres and acres and acres of land,” Reed told CBS News. “These kinds of places are in cities everywhere and can be transformed one by one.”


This story was produced in partnership with Climate Central.  

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Massachusetts

Massachusetts senators demand investigation into ICE detainee system

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Massachusetts senators demand investigation into ICE detainee system


BOSTON (WWLP) – A group of senators, including Massachusetts’ Elizabeth Warren, is leading 32 members of Congress in pressing DHS to investigate ICE.

U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Massachusetts) and U.S. Sen. Ben Ray Luján (D-New Mexico), along with U.S. Rep. Veronica Escobar (D-Texas) and U.S. Rep. Lauren Underwood (D-Illinois), led 32 other members of Congress in urging the Department of Homeland Security Inspector General to investigate failures in the Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s (ICE) detainee locator system. The lawmakers contend that without a functional system, the DHS is effectively causing “disappearances” on U.S. soil.

The group of lawmakers requested an evaluation of the Online Detainee Locator System (ODLS), citing reports of inaccuracies that hinder legal representation and increase the risk of deportations.

The DHS Online Detainee Locator System allows the public to determine if a person is in ICE custody and their location. ICE policy mandates updating the ODLS within 8 hours of a person’s arrival at a facility. However, reports indicate individuals are not being accurately added for days and sometimes weeks, with increasing inaccuracy noted since January 2025.

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The failure of the ODLS impacts detainees’ ability to obtain legal representation. Attorneys have reported difficulties filing habeas petitions due to unknown client locations, leading to an increased risk of detainees missing court hearings or case deadlines.

Families have also experienced distress, with some reporting that their loved ones were deported before their location was ever recorded in the system. Massachusetts resident Any Lopez Belloza was deported under such circumstances.

The current scale of detention exacerbates the ODLS issues. There are more than 70,000 people in ICE custody, an 80% increase since December 2024. The Trump administration is detaining people at an unprecedented scale, according to the lawmakers.

Frequent transfers of detainees make ODLS updates more challenging. Matters are further complicated by individuals being held in unconventional settings, including military bases, state-run facilities like “Alligator Alcatraz,” ICE field offices and, soon, warehouses built for storing packages.

Some experts expressed concerns that these issues could be intentional, used by ICE to remove people from jurisdictions with more protective laws or favorable judges. One ICE agent reportedly told a detainee being transferred from California to Indiana that it was “thanks to the laws in California.”

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In their letter, the lawmakers formally requested the DHS Inspector General to address several points to understand the scope of the problem. They specifically asked for information on why the ODLS system has reduced its timeliness, the types of information ICE does not add to the system and the practices ICE employs for updating location information.

The lawmakers concluded their letter by requesting that the DHS Office of Inspector General conduct an evaluation of the matter to understand the problem’s full scope, the reasons for reporting gaps and the impacts on detainees and their families.

All facts in this report were gathered by journalists employed by WWLP. Artificial intelligence tools were used to reformat information into a news article for our website. This report was edited and fact-checked by WWLP staff before being published.

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