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  • Currently in Boston — June 13, 2023: Somewhat muggy with a couple of showers.

Currently in Boston — June 13, 2023: Somewhat muggy with a couple of showers.

Plus, 16 kids are suing the government to save the climate.

The weather, currently.

Somewhat muggy with a couple of showers.

If you noticed haze in the air of this afternoon it was from those forest fires up in Canada. It will continue to be a bit hazy overnight and a few showers and maybe the rumble of thunder can occur. Temperatures will fall back to the '60s. Some of you may actually need the air conditioner if you have trouble sleeping in the humidity. On Tuesday it's back to clouds some sunny breaks and still the risk for a couple of showers or a thunderstorm. Temperatures will be in the 70s. Wednesday is more of the same although I think in the afternoon there's a better chance for some stronger storms in a few locations more on that tomorrow.

What you need to know, currently.

The first climate-related constitutional court case in US history to go to trial got underway on Monday in Helena, Montana.

Though Montana’s Republican-led government has repeatedly tried to block it, the case brought by 16 youth plaintiffs from the state alleges that approving fossil fuel projects violates their constitutional right to a safe environment.

The case isn’t an isolated one, it’s part of a concerted years-long effort led by Our Childrens Trust, a group of lawyers dedicated to supporting youth and their right to a safe environment around the world. A second constitutional court case, and the first in the world to take on systemic funding of fossil-intensive transportation network, goes to trial in Hawaii later this year.

For more on the Hawaii case, here’s climate reporter Dana Drugmand:

The stakes for climate trials like these are not just philosophical. Kaliko T., one of the younger plaintiffs in the lawsuit, already has felt firsthand the effects of a destabilizing climate. In 2018, Tropical Storm Olivia’s heavy rainfall caused flash flooding that destroyed her family’s home, an extreme weather occurrence expected to become increasingly common in Hawaii under climate change projections.

“I am glad that my story is helping to advance climate action in Hawaiʻi. I don’t want anyone else to suffer the way I and my family have,” she said in a statement.

Dana Drugmand

Montana and Hawaii are two states that enshrine the right to a safe environment in their constitutions. If these cases are successful, they could pave the way for a future federal constitutional claim to a right to a stable climate, under the Due Process clause of the Fifth Amendment.

-Eric Holthaus

What you can do, currently.

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—Eric Holthaus