AlabamaDave wrote:I think a full scale evacuation of the East Coast from Florida to Mass. should begin immediately. There won't be enough time to get everyone out of the way.
That sounds like a plan to me!
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Brent wrote:MIA_canetrakker wrote:rainstorm wrote:any specific track is rare. look at charley, it took a donna like track, and the last time that happened was 1960. isabel last year took a track that hadnt happened since 1933
Sorry Charley did not take a Donna type track.
The only similarities between Donna and Charley are the hit on SW Florida. If anything, Frances could do more of a Donna-type track(passing north of the islands and then turning back W to WNW).
rainstorm wrote:any specific track is rare. look at charley, it took a donna like track, and the last time that happened was 1960. isabel last year took a track that hadnt happened since 1933
Hyperstorm wrote:Actually, I think it's fairly unlikely that millions will lose their homes if it strikes south Florida Even less likely the hundreds of billions of dollars in damage. Building codes have been revised since Andrew in 1992, so it's unlikely we'll see as many "regular" homes destroyed. Yes, mobile homes will disappear, but those homes are not extremely high valued anyway. Of course, we can't forget losses that are not houses. However, I still think that's a little exaggerated.
I think there was a place that estimated how much a Cat. 5 hurricane will cost to south Florida and I believe they said something like $50-75 billion. Definitely catastrophic, but not to the point that you're expressing.
A greater disaster, I think, would be that same scenario you're describing for New Orleans...
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