jeff wrote:We have lived many years along the coast with minor hurricane impact. NWS, NHC, and local emergency official have treid to convey to all those moving to the coast the dangers a hurricane presents. People have refused to listen and then came the hurricane season of 2004 and yet still people will not listen. Now we have been hit by Dennis, Katrina, and Rita and there still does not seem to be an understanding.
How can people still not understand that if they build on the coast, one day they will lose everything. At some point YOU must take the responsibility upon youself to educate you on hurricane impacts to your region. If you choose to live in a bowl like New Orleans with category 3 protection, then you should not be surprised when a cat 4 hits and floods your city.
If you live in a surge prone area and there is a massive 500 mile diameter hurricane 300 miles to your south (Rita) you should expect some impact.
If you live in a city of 4.0 million people and 2.0 million decide they are going to leave all at once...there is nothing anybody can do to relieve the traffic problems. There was a plan in place for the phased evacuation, but everybody left Galveston and Houston all at once Wednesday and early Thursday....what the hell do you think is going to happen. It is not the govt. fault that you do differently than told. If you do not want to sit in traffic next time, by all means stay and drown in the storm surge.
In the end, the choice is yours, mets, emergency officials, and local law enforcement convey the information to those at risk and make recommendations. So the finger pointing needs to only look at the hand it is attached to.
Well said my friend....well said!
What we've all been horrified by this season in New Orleans, Gulfport, and Cameron.....what we cringed at in Punta Gorda, Fort Pierce, and Pensacola last season.....it will happen to every single community and county along the Gulf and Atlantic beachfronts at some time in the future.
What happened to New Orleans will someday happen again to Miami and Fort Lauderdale.....to Tampa/ St Pete.....to Houston....to Jacksonville, Sarasota, Palm Beach, Savannah, and Key West. We were very lucky Hugo's worst passed inland northeast of Charleston.....lucky Andrew was very small and just far enough south to spare downtown Miami and Miami Beach......lucky again this past week when Rita didn't begin bombing until past vunerable and IMO poorly evacuated Key West. If the bombing had begun 24 hr earlier and track slightly farther north, IMO we would have witnessed more bodies floating in the water; another hurricane catastrophe in 2005..
Hurricane season is NOT over....so instead of finger pointing and playing the "blame game", my advice to coastal residents? Keep your eyes toward the Caribbean and remain alert.....be prepared....and hope for the best.
Perry W.








