Audio By Carbonatix
A total of 18 people have died as a result of a period of extreme cold weather in New York City, its mayor has said.
Since late January, the city has endured a cold snap, including 13 days of temperatures of 0 °C (32F) or below – one of the longest stretches of sub-zero weather New York has seen in six decades.
Over the weekend, another person "lost their life on the streets of our city," Zohran Mamdani said on Monday, adding that "each life lost is a tragedy, and we will continue to hold their families in our thoughts".
While temperatures are set to rise this week, they remain below average, with Mamdani telling residents to "stay safe, stay indoors... [and] keep looking out for one another".
The mayor added that since 19 January, when a Code Blue emergency was announced - which relaxed intake policies for homeless shelters - about 1,400 placements had been made into shelters.
An additional 64 hotel rooms had been added to the city's shelter capacity, with at least another 150 outreach workers on the streets, said Mamdani.
On 27 January, Mamdani said at least 10 of the people who had died were found outdoors. The circumstances of the other deaths are not known.
"We have been working hard to keep New Yorkers safe, and we will continue to do so. Because it is not forecast to be above 32 degrees [Fahrenheit] until tomorrow, and 35 degrees is hardly balmy weather," he said.

The US National Weather Service (NWS) said temperatures would increase to about 0 °C for the most part of the week, following persistent freezing temperatures on Monday. It added that highs were normally around 4 °C at this time of year.
An Arctic airmass brought hazardous sub-zero "wind chills" - the temperature it feels like rather than the temperature it is - to the region over the weekend, bringing a risk of hypothermia and frostbite, the forecaster said.
A 13-day streak of temperatures being at 0 °C or below -one of the longest streaks for New York City since 1963 - ended on Friday after temperatures briefly tipped above 0 °C.
NYC's Emergency Management agency said that the following days of extreme cold and snow pose serious safety risks across the city.
It warned that melting snow and ice could fall from buildings without warning and that streets and pavements could refreeze overnight.
Latest Stories
-
PAC orders Anlo-Afiadanyigba SHS to pay GH₵10k arrears to casual workers
15 minutes -
Rockefeller Foundation awards over US$350m, reaching 731 million people amid global aid decline
16 minutes -
Women bear the heaviest burden after climate disasters – GreenFaith Africa
32 minutes -
APN calls for urgent mobile money interoperability across Africa
39 minutes -
Portugal’s Ronaldo set for record sixth World Cup
42 minutes -
Cedi depreciates by 8.4% against dollar in interbank market
49 minutes -
Arsenal are 2025/26 EPL champions after Man City draw at Bournemouth
60 minutes -
CSOs will bring new dimensions to OSP constitutionality case – Justice Abdulai
1 hour -
Ghana’s pubic debt hits GH¢674.1bn as of February 2026
1 hour -
Mamprugu king accuses security agencies of abuse, demands justice over death of Mamprusi youth
1 hour -
Ghana has not exited IMF, PCI is a new three-year deal – Oppong Nkrumah
1 hour -
Health Ministry issues Ebola alert after WHO declares global public health emergency
2 hours -
Asiedu Nketia enskinned as Kashentengwura in Bole
2 hours -
Ghana secures $40m diaspora investment fund as entry point for Africa growth push in Atlanta Dialogue
2 hours -
Abronye DC case: Detention doesn’t take away right to healthcare – Martin Kpebu
2 hours