I thought I would chime in with a recent event in our community that showed my wife and I how unpreparred and (for lack of a more thoughtful term) completely brain dead the community at large is when a severe event occurs.
We live north and east of the Sacramento Area in a somewhat rural but moderately populated area at about 2200 ft elevation. Two weeks ago at about 4:00PM a large storm cell passed over our area immediately dumping several inches of snow very quickly right near the end of the work day.
My wife and I both believe that we are fairly well prepared people and would calmly manage most situations - which we did in this situation. A quick check of the National Weather Service (
www.noaa.gov )showed that this dumping of snow would pass over shortly. My wife called me just after 5PM to tell me that her three routes home were completely impacted by stopped traffic and that she was to stay with friends near her work until things loosened up. I work about 4 miles away, and looking out my store window could see that all major arteries in our community were at a complete standstill.
What a major portion of the general public decided to do (foolishly) was 'try to beat the storm home'. The end result was a mass of people who were not usually on the road at that time were added to the traffic count AND they were unprepared for the conditions they drove into. Fortunately, no one was hurt seriously, but there were countless spin-outs, fender benders, and people simply abandoning their two wheel drive (no chain carrying) vehicles barely off the side of the road. All traffic on all primary and secondary routes throughout the community were impassible for over 1 1/2 hours purely because of the vehicle load and not because to the snow.
This post is not meant as a rant because 'me and mine' were inconvenienced by this - it's not. We simply sat tight and arrived home safely only slightly later that we usually would have made it home. What I realized by this mess is that ALL primary emergency services (Police, Fire, EMT) were also at a complete standstill and could not respond should a serious crisis or accident occurred; ALL utility providers could not respond to downed power lines, gas leaks etc, because of this mess.
I guess what bothers me is that: the complete stupidity of so many people at once could have caused loss of life and did cause power not to be restored to several areas for hours longer than it could have been restored.
What is frightening to my wife and I is that this was a small incident that ditn't require much thinking on what one should do in a situation like this and our community failed misserably. What will happen should a more serious incident occur?
In a double-blind field poll (OK, so it was just about everyone who came into my store the next day) almost all persons stuck in traffic saw themselves as observers incovenienced by others and not part of the inconvenience.
I can only imagine what will happen when more a serious incident occurs; and look for better ways on having my family prepare to stay out of the thick of things.
Any thoughts or similar stories here? Are there steps you have taken to avoid the mass of panic-ridden public who will be a danger on the road?