#65155 - 05/04/06 07:30 PM
do you have disaster fatigue?
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Old Hand
Registered: 07/10/05
Posts: 763
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Do you have disaster fatigue? News report indicated that Florida keys residents are tired of evacuating from the key every summer. In addition, the insurance has gone up to the sky that many can't afford to live there anymore. Property tax have risen to extremely high level. Insurance is at $16,000 / month. That is alot. <img src="/images/graemlins/shocked.gif" alt="" /> <img src="/images/graemlins/shocked.gif" alt="" />
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#65156 - 05/04/06 08:55 PM
Re: do you have disaster fatigue?
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Addict
Registered: 06/08/05
Posts: 503
Loc: Quebec City, Canada
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What I think will happen is that the rich will stay there and secure/rebuild/upgrade their buildings to keep on enjoying these coastal areas. <img src="/images/graemlins/smirk.gif" alt="" />
The poorer will move to places where it is cheaper to live and keep on living. <img src="/images/graemlins/frown.gif" alt="" />
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#65157 - 05/05/06 12:16 AM
Re: do you have disaster fatigue?
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Old Hand
Registered: 11/10/03
Posts: 710
Loc: Augusta, GA
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Here, its the combination of the high property cost and high insurance. Taxes haven't caught up... yet...
Here during the approach of Hurricane Jeanne, people starting worrying. The roads were absolutely empty.
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#65158 - 05/05/06 04:31 PM
Re: do you have disaster fatigue?
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Ordinary Average Guy
Enthusiast
Registered: 04/26/06
Posts: 304
Loc: North Central Texas, USA
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It's an interesting question. I just finished reading "San Francisco is Burning", a retired firefighter's take on the 1906 earthquake and subsequent fire that destroyed the city. The author stated that in ancient times, humans would eventually learn to move out of harm's way to a safer location. Today it seems that we want to stay in place, rebuild and try to pay higher insurance.
If I lived in NO before Katrina, I doubt that I would move back today. It still seems that the pols are counting on duct tape and bailing wire to hold the levees together. However, at least with a hurricane there would be some 24 - 48 notice.
There is little chance that I would move to the California Bay area (even if I won the lottery and could afford it) because an earthquake in SF today would be hard to escape due to no warnings.
I guess that I'm trying to say that although I love disaster/emergency preparation and practicing, I do not want to intentionally put myself in the path of a disaster.
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Also known as BrianEagle. I just remembered my old password!
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#65159 - 05/05/06 09:26 PM
Re: do you have disaster fatigue?
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Old Hand
Registered: 01/07/04
Posts: 723
Loc: Pttsbg SWestern Pa USA N-Amer....
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Be disaster fatigue as it may. At a point, -it gets to being understandable enuff.
But just a further observation though. -Nature (or whatever else the cause may be) ain't gonna care about how fatigued we may be. So obviously, -we can't throw in the towel or drop the preparedness ball, -just over being X amount fatigued or tired!,.... [color:"black"] [/color] [email]picard120[/email]
_________________________
"No Substitute for Victory!"and"You Can't be a Beacon if your Light Don't Shine!"-Gen. Douglass MacArthur and Donna Fargo.
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#65163 - 05/07/06 01:54 PM
Re: do you have disaster fatigue?
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Sultan of Spiffy
Enthusiast
Registered: 05/12/01
Posts: 271
Loc: Louisiana
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As most of y'all know, I live in south Louisiana and both my parents and my in-laws lost their homes in Katrina. For three months after the storm, we had either our parents or friends staying with us. Nearly nine months later, we are still trying to figure out what to do with my parents home (thank you, FEMA), and we still have piles of things that need to be cleared out, cleaned or restored.
Do I have disaster fatigue? Darn right I do.
.....CLIFF
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#65164 - 05/07/06 04:13 PM
Re: do you have disaster fatigue?
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Registered: 09/04/05
Posts: 417
Loc: Illinois
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I'd rethink that if I were you... before you put any money on it. The MidWest is a quite a large area compared to SF, and a lot of those folks are still rural types... their pantries ARE disaster supplies. Many of them don't have the luxury of a 7-11 two blocks down the street, and stock their shelves appropriately. Quite a bit of the MidWest is still subject to the whims of Mother Nature on a regular basis, so they have back-up heat and warm clothes on hand as a matter of course... not even thinking of it as "disaster supplies". Remember, it's hard to beat a farmer when it comes to being able to handle anything you throw at him... while I'm considered a "townie", I'm surrounded by a sea of farm boys, and in a pinch, I'd rather have a handful of them at my back than all the desk jockeys in Chicago.
Troy
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