Try GOLD - Free
THE boiling POINT
Time
|August 14, 2023
EXTREME HEAT IS ENDANGERING AMERICA'S WORKERS AND ITS ECONOMY

7 A.M.: COPELAND FARMS, ROCHELLE, GA.
Just after dawn on a recent July day in Rochelle, Ga., Silvia Moreno Ayala steps into a pair of sturdy work pants, slips on a long-sleeved shirt, and slathers her face and hands with sunscreen. She drapes a flowered scarf over her wide-brimmed hat to protect her neck and back from the punishing rays of the sun. There isn’t much she can do about the humidity, however. Morning is supposed to be the coolest part of the day, but sweat is already pooling in her rubber boots. She drinks deeply from a plastic water bottle, then squeezes out the air until it is flattened enough to tuck into her back pocket, so she can keep her hands free while working the fields. On some days, it might be hours before she makes it back to the drinks-filled cooler that Moreno, a 41-year-old farmworker who came to the U.S. from Mexico as a teen, has left at the field’s edge. And she’s heard the horror stories of farmworkers dying because they didn’t stay hydrated.
Moreno accepts headaches, nausea, muscle cramps, and dizzy spells—signs of severe heat stress—as an inevitable part of her summer workday, but by sipping a little tepid water as she goes, she hopes to stave off a worse outcome. “I know people who work watermelons and get so hot they end up in the hospital,” she says. Her doctor warns that she might too one day. He says her kidneys, already damaged by years of working in hot conditions, won’t be able to take much more.
This story is from the August 14, 2023 edition of Time.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Time

Time
Robert Redford
Actor, director, and activist extraordinaire
1 min
October 13, 2025

Time
What I learned from The Golden Girls
PICTURE IT: MICHIGAN, SEPT. 14, 1985. A YOUNG Vietnamese girl watches television with her grandmother on a Saturday night.
5 mins
October 13, 2025

Time
The Risk Report
IN DONALD TRUMP'S FIRST TERM and at the opening of his second, the U.S. President and India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi looked to have a special relationship.
2 mins
October 13, 2025

Time
THE PRESIDENT PLAYS DOCTOR
In a recent press conference, President Donald Trump repeatedly claimed without new or compelling evidence that acetaminophen use in pregnancy is driving the rise in autism—and then ad-libbed his own guidance on childhood vaccines.
3 mins
October 13, 2025

Time
Is the U.S. at war with Venezuela?
HOURS AFTER VENEZUELA'S PRESIDENT NICOLÁS MADURO said the U.S. was trying to provoke a “major war,” President Donald Trump ordered a strike on Sept. 15 targeting a second Venezuelan vessel in international waters, alleging that it carried drugs.
2 mins
October 13, 2025

Time
TIME 100 NEXT
The World's Most Influential Rising Stars
8 mins
October 13, 2025

Time
SILENCING THE CRITICS
After Charlie Kirk's killing, President Trump looks for ways to clamp down on dissent
3 mins
October 13, 2025

Time
Shifting Winds
HOW MAJOR BANKS LIKE JPMORGAN ARE RETHINKING THEIR CLIMATE STRATEGIES
8 mins
October 13, 2025
Time
The Brief
Since February 2021, the Perseverance rover has been exploring Mars' Jezero crater-a formation that was once Jezero Lakelooking for signs of ancient life.
1 min
October 13, 2025

Time
THE ART OF BEING THE BOSS
He makes no effort to hide—black T-shirt, blue jeans, Wayfarer sunglasses, honky-tonk cowboy boots—but for a few minutes, the most famous son of the Jersey Shore achieves a kind of anonymity, even in the one place his sudden appearance seems most plausible: the Asbury Park boardwalk.
16 mins
October 13, 2025
Translate
Change font size