Too dry, too wet, too hot: The nation is divided by its weather woes

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NEW YORK - Forget revenue sharing. What America needs this summer is weather sharing.

While fires devour Western forests at a record pace, and the South endures devastating drought and deadly heat waves, the Northeast muddles through one of the coolest, soggiest summers in memory.

Fourteen inches of rain fell on a New Jersey township in a half-day last weekend. In the parched West, more than 80 major wildfires rage across 13 states; the summer-long inferno has killed eight firefighters and burned more than 4.5 million acres of forest and rangeland.

New York City had its coolest July since 1914, while triple-digit heat has killed scores of people in Texas and the Deep South. Large sections of the Southeast are beset by a prolonged drought, projected to be the costliest ever for Georgia farmers.

''We do live in an interesting place,'' said Jim Laver, deputy director of the National Weather Service's Climate Prediction Center. ''The U.S. covers enough longitude, enough time zones, it has some of the most unusual and severe weather types of anywhere in the world.''

Some of the extremes were anticipated, to a degree. Meteorologists had predicted another in a series of dry summers in the South as a spinoff from La Nina, the pool of unusually cool water that has dominated the Pacific Ocean for more than two years.

But Laver said the Northeast's sustained, cool dreariness - one year after severe drought afflicted the region - is more puzzling.

''We talk about it every day, asking why this is happening,'' he said. ''We'll figure it out eventually.''

Some Northeasterners don't mind. Big-city commuters can jostle their way through August rush hours without breaking a sweat. Tanning-salon owners have savored the cloud cover.

''Eight straight days with no sun will do it,'' said James Young, general manager of Sun Capsule salon in South Windsor, Conn. ''People need their sun.''

But tourism throughout New England has suffered. Business is down at water parks, at kayak-rental shops and on the beaches of Cape Cod, New Hampshire and Maine.

New York City's average monthly temperature in July was 72.3 degrees, the fourth-coolest on record. Both Boston and New York went through July without the temperature reaching 90.

Mike Jackson, a National Weather Service meteorologist in Taunton, Mass., said the cool, wet weather is likely to persist.

''Thank God it isn't winter because an awful lot of people would probably be under a foot of snow,'' he said.

What a contrast with Georgia, suffering its third straight summer of severe drought, with rainfall since May 1998 at least 20 inches below normal. Homeowners have been ordered to curtail lawn watering. The loss to farmers, including higher irrigation costs and ravaged crops, is projected at $740 million.

Most summers, thousands of Atlantans escape to Lake Lanier on weekends. This year, the lake is down nine feet and many beaches and coves have been closed.

Parts of Alabama are equally parched - Henry County's rainfall deficit for this year is 24 inches. In Tuscaloosa County, welfare officials blame a lingering heat wave for an upsurge in abuse and neglect cases, and used-car salesman Pat Thompson said customers are reluctant to venture onto his lot's steamy pavement.

Mark Svoboda of the National Drought Mitigation Center in Lincoln, Neb., said the Southeast is experiencing ''a real doozy of a drought'' that might be broken only by a spate of tropical storms.

''Drought is really the forgotten disaster,'' he said. ''You don't see houses washed away. But when you add it up in the end, it can have more economic loss than any natural disaster.''

In Texas, more than 40 people have died since May from heat-related causes, and a state of disaster was declared for 195 drought-stricken counties. Last week, seeking to ensure that Texans don't lose their air conditioning, the Public Service Commission ordered utility companies to keep residential customers' power on all summer even if their payments are overdue.

In Dallas, baked by triple-digit heat for 25 straight days, landscaper Carlos Lopez hasn't cut back his outdoor labors.

''Sometimes you get dizzy and don't feel well,'' he said. ''But we drink a lot of water and sometimes we take breaks. ... I need the money.''

Colorado, Nebraska, Kansas and Montana also have suffered summer drought, but much of the West is normally dry this season. The widespread wildfires, Laver suggested, are due to a combination of factors, including growth patterns in some of the forests and instances of ''dry lightning'' - when an electrical storm triggers a fire without any accompanying rain.

''In an average year, 1.5 million acres of forest are burned, and we're well over 4 million now,'' Laver said. ''That's the puzzlement - why is so much more burning this year?''

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On the Net:

National Weather Service: http://www.nws.noaa.gov

Drought Mitigation Center: http://enso.unl.edu/ndmc