**BREAKING: Cities Declare "Heat Amnesty" as 10-Year Forecast Predicts Deadly "Unlivable Days"**

BREAKING: Cities Declare “Heat Amnesty” as 10-Year Forecast Predicts Deadly “Unlivable Days”

NEW YORK, NY – In an unprecedented move, a coalition of 50 major cities announced today they are implementing “Heat Amnesty” protocols, effectively suspending all outdoor work, public transit, and non-essential electricity use for a projected 47 days per year by 2035.

The shocking declaration comes after a newly published MIT-FEMA predictive model titled “The Unlivable Day Index” revealed that by 2034, the average heat advisory in the U.S. will no longer be a warning—it will become a permanent, seasonal state of emergency.

“The 10-year forecast is terrifyingly clear,” said Dr. Aris Thorne, lead climatologist on the project. “By 2030, a standard ‘heat advisory’ will require a new color: Black. We are transitioning from ‘days of caution’ to ‘biologically non-viable hours.’ This isn’t about comfort anymore; it’s about the sheer physics of human survival in an urban environment.”

The most shocking prediction? Chicago will become the “new Phoenix” — facing 120 consecutive days above 100°F by 2033, triggering a mass migration of nearly 1.5 million people, now called “Thermal Refugees.”

In response, the newly formed Office of National Thermoregulation has proposed a radical solution: the “Underground City” mandate, requiring all new construction in 15 states to be built below the frost line by 2032.

“We aren’t just changing our calendars. We are changing the definition of a habitable planet,” the report concludes. “The heat advisory of tomorrow isn’t a text alert—it’s your eviction notice from the surface.”