Overview
- Tamaulipas will halt classroom teaching when temperatures hit 40°C, shifting lessons to distance work based on state Civil Protection heat reports.
- The education secretary said 723 schools in the state lack air conditioning and have faulty electrical or water systems that limit safe learning.
- Officials said the Escuela Es Nuestra program will fund minisplit units, transformer and cable upgrades, restroom fixes, and more drinking‑water fixtures to keep campuses safe in high heat.
- In Baja California, a Mexicali primary restored cooling in every classroom after CFE and education crews installed units and repaired switches, and classes returned to a normal schedule for about 160 morning students.
- Governor Marina del Pilar Ávila said schools are in better shape after months of air‑conditioning work and said online classes or schedule changes could be used if extreme heat threatens student health.