inotherwords wrote:Persepone, very interesting about the Cape Cod situation. I guess my only positive contribution to your comments would be that you usually have a lot of notice beforehand, so that should help get most people off early. Also, in most cases, you probably get Cat 1 or 2 storms, which are bad enough but at least survivable in most cases. I am not sure what kind of storm surges you could expect there and what your elevation is. I'd be interested to learn more. I bet the situation is probably even more dire for a place like Martha's Vineyard where there's just a ferry to take people on and off the island.
Hurricanes are less scary (because there is a lot of notice beforehand) than other types of disasters: problems at the Nuclear Power Plant, Terrorism, etc. And yes, you are right, they tend to be Cat 1 or Cat 2 at most. On the other hand, there is not as much warning as you might think. Hurricanes tend to accelerate as they come up the coast. Most people do NOT watch Storm2K (or even NHC/NOAA forecasts, etc.) and don't expect them to come up the coast and make another landfall once they have hit Florida, North Carolina, etc.
The ferries take people off Nantucket and Martha's Vineyard and bring them to Cape Cod! Now they have to get off Cape Cod as well...
We personally have a house that is well situated, is on some of the highest ground on Cape Cod, is about as far away from the beaches as you can get, etc. So it is less of a "personal" worry than one for others... I do feel that the tourists, etc. here would be sitting ducks, especially the foreign tourists. And somehow that seems morally wrong. We should have marked evacuation routes, etc. Many nursing homes, etc. are very close to the water and just a few feet above sea level (10 feet? 15 feet? less?). Much of the rental property for tourists, etc. is, as you might expect, right on or near the beaches. People who move here from other places have absolutely no sense of what it might look like during/after a storm. (I did have an idea because although I only moved here a few years ago, my grandmother had property out here--in 195os it washed out to sea and is now out off the coast of Wellfleet somewhere... Also, I've been near coastal waters much of my life.) But I meet people who moved here from places like Indiana and they have no clue!
Some university (the link is somewhere here on Storm2K but I don't know where it is) did a study of potential storm surge for most of the coasts and the one for Cape Cod, the Cape Cod Canal and Buzzard's Bay suggests that with the right "hit" even a weak storm (e.g., Cat 1) would have a 30 foot storm surge--and that would probably make me "waterfront property."
But the computer simulation for what could potentially be under water from storm surge is really sobering and I don't see any evidence that the people who put together the emergency plan took storm surge into account at all.
But forgetting storm surge, really strong winds, etc. the plain vanilla emergency plans don't make any sense because they assume that people's cars can travel through 4+ feet of standing water and other such stupidity. If a given road is under too much water to drive through whenever we have a "normal" rainstorm, why would it suddenly be high and dry during a hurricane? And what are the chances that it is raining when the terrorism attack occurs? It's too much to hope for dry roads...
There actually is one other hazard that is sort of scary around here and that is the threat of brush fire. Even a relatively small one could very effectively block off the "exit routes." I understand this has happened in the past...
I do not think you can eliminate the hazards, nor can you really effectively plan for all types of disasters, etc. But I do think that it is almost better to have "no plan" than a plan that won't work out of the starting gate! I think that part of the problem in NOLA is that they had a plan that could not work/did not work and everyone wanted to "stick to the plan" well beyond the point where they should have done so. And when you combine a plan that does not work with "it's not MY job" mentality you have the secondary disaster that we saw in New Orleans. So yeah, much of my rant is that there is this nice glossy printed document that lulls people into thinking that there is a workable plan and that they can look to local/state/federal officials when in fact they'd better not count on it.
This is the logic being used to prosecute the owners of the nursing home that had an evacuation plan and did not evacuate their patients! If there is a plan that is not used, or a plan that for one reason or another cannot be used, then it is worse than "no plan." If you had had a relative in a nursing home and you knew it would not be evacuated, perhaps you would have swung by and loaded that relative into your car on your way out of town rather than counting on them being evacuated "by someone."