Or not. Map looks similar to the June 18 release. Here is the reasoning that they gave:
An area of equal chances (EC) of above-, near-, and below-normal temperatures
stretches from the eastern Northern and Central Plains eastward across the
Upper Mississippi Valley/Upper Midwest, the northern Middle Mississippi Valley,
and the Upper and Lower Great Lakes into the northern Ohio Valley. The
transitory nature of the retrograding ridge and model differences in the ridge
placement later in the month drive some of this uncertainty. Additionally, the
potential emergence of an active MJO in phase 6/7, combined with El Nino
conditions, could favor cooler temperatures over this region. However, because
summer teleconnections are typically weaker and often overshadowed by long-term
trends, EC is favored over below-normal probabilities. The temperature forecast
for Alaska is complex due to an anticipated mid-month pattern shift. A weak
tilt toward below-normal temperatures is indicated for southwest Alaska based
on early-to-mid-July guidance and persistent below-normal SSTs, while
above-normal temperatures are favored in the northeast, primarily supported by
Week 3-4 model guidance and above-average temperature trends .
Thinking the last week of July, first of August will be the hottest in Spokane. As i've mentioned, I don't think we see triple digits and maybe only a handful of days that touch 95+. overall a mild to warm/mild summer as a whole.