#96397 - 06/02/07 02:45 AM
Re: People aren't prepared for hurricanes
[Re: Eugene]
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Geezer
Registered: 09/30/01
Posts: 5695
Loc: Former AFB in CA, recouping fr...
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Back to the RV BOV idea...
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#96421 - 06/02/07 01:48 PM
Re: People aren't prepared for hurricanes
[Re: hercdoc]
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Geezer
Registered: 09/30/01
Posts: 5695
Loc: Former AFB in CA, recouping fr...
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"...crawdad cooker..."
Gotta love it!!!
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#96424 - 06/02/07 03:37 PM
Re: People aren't prepared for hurricanes
[Re: picard120]
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Addict
Registered: 04/13/07
Posts: 627
Loc: A Canadian Back in Canada
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nothing prepares you to see a ~40' shipping container flying through the air, by your window when your on the fourth floor of an office building.
Suddenly my 5/8" plywood seems flimsy. Yup. I saw a coconut go thru a roof (think winds were north of 200 mph at that point). Keep in mind, it was a old caymanian house with a tin roof, but still a sight nevertheless!. After Ivan (things on this island are refered to 'Before Ivan' and 'After Ivan'), all this new construction took place, hurricane shutters are almost standard on new construction, and proper windows, etc. If I had the money, i'd go for the steel shutters that roll up, and are controled electronically (like garage door) for every window and door. But the wife frowns upon things that are ugly on the house!!!! But that experience taught me about how I would build my home if I go back to north america... Have a concrete safe room at least 15' above ground, don't need a basement, and jack that house UP (flooding can happen any time from anything), the house will be concrete (canadian company does poured concrete walls for homes inbetween two forms that eventually become part of the house), etc. I can go on and on... and on... ;-) is it legal to build a concrete safe room? would city law enforcement object to building it? Not here in Cayman Islands, and i'm quite sure not in Canada - could be wrong(engineer in old life and something like that would of stuck out in my mind). But down here, you can get a construction crew to build a hurricane safe rooms (for a nice price point), where usually your third bedroom or office is concrete block on all walls, floor (not sure of ceiling, but assuming it is), then usually a quite strong door with solid locks.
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#96440 - 06/03/07 12:41 AM
Re: you can lead a ....
[Re: DBAGuy]
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Old Hand
Registered: 03/08/03
Posts: 1019
Loc: East Tennessee near Bristol
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That's because we keep rebuilding the place for them & never make them change the design to seriously stand a chance of surviving a direct hit. The next time we rebuild someplace like the Gulf Coast it should be to seriously reworked building codes.
Edit.
It needs to require built in shutters on the coast & east sides among other things. IIRC some codes in FL require built in generators in new construction.
Edited by UTAlumnus (06/03/07 12:45 AM)
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#96467 - 06/03/07 03:05 PM
Re: People aren't prepared for hurricanes
[Re: picard120]
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Old Hand
Registered: 11/10/03
Posts: 710
Loc: Augusta, GA
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I work at a pretty young company. Most of the people are 20's and 30's. I tried to convince some of the friends I had, they should have a minimum emergency kit. Extra food and water. Mostly for electrical interruptions, or problems that could delay supplies for a day or two.
They felt they didn't need it. "The store is nearby". Every time I go shopping, they always seem to only have about 6 24 packs of water in the store. The shelves could easily hold like 50. They'll depend on the store and water from the indoor pipes.
I also mentioned skills like First Aid and CPR (not real useful in a disaster) to one person in particular. He told me "you have to be interested in that kind of thing" and he wouldn't take it. I asked him would he help someone who was injured? He said "yes". I asked, wouldn't you want to know what is the right thing to do? He said he'd do his best.
Scares me. The Good Samaritan law might just protect him.
I moved out of Florida to Connecticut, and I can already see the difference. Things are soooo much different up here. My "kit" has gotten bigger for a longer time without stuff.
Hope a CAT 3 or 4 hurricane never hits Long Island.
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#96473 - 06/03/07 05:01 PM
Re: People aren't prepared for hurricanes
[Re: ki4buc]
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Anonymous
Unregistered
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Hope a CAT 3 or 4 hurricane never hits Long Island Maybe you should point out to your work colleagues the Long Island Express From the Website New Yorkers give little thought to hurricanes since Long Island is so far from the warm, tropical oceans that feed hurricanes. However, according to the 1984 Hurricane Damage Mitigation Plan by the Long Island Regional Planning Board, several hurricanes and 15 tropical storms have made landfall in this area since 1886. According to historical record, there have been five "epic hurricanes" (Category 3 or higher on the Saffir Simpson Scale) in the years 1938, 1893, 1821, 1815, and 1635 (Hughes).
An empirical study of 20 past hurricanes that have impacted the New York City and Long Island coast regions by Scheffner and Butler (1996) found that the return period of a category 3 or greater hurricane is approximately 80 years. A strong category 3 or minimal category 4 hurricane has a return frequency of approximately 200 years. (Click graph to the right for larger image.) Therefore, it is not unlikely that another "epic" hurricane will strike the Long Island coastal region in the coming decades. The results of a cat 3-4 storm if it struck New York would be even more catastrophic. http://www.giss.nasa.gov/research/news/20061024/ Edit - *** How Bizarre!! The main graphic showing the inundation of the New York Area has become just a cross since being first posted ***
Edited by bentirran (06/03/07 06:32 PM)
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#96498 - 06/04/07 12:05 AM
Re: People aren't prepared for hurricanes
[Re: ki4buc]
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Old Hand
Registered: 07/10/05
Posts: 763
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I work at a pretty young company. Most of the people are 20's and 30's. I tried to convince some of the friends I had, they should have a minimum emergency kit. Extra food and water. Mostly for electrical interruptions, or problems that could delay supplies for a day or two.
They felt they didn't need it. "The store is nearby". Every time I go shopping, they always seem to only have about 6 24 packs of water in the store. The shelves could easily hold like 50. They'll depend on the store and water from the indoor pipes.
I also mentioned skills like First Aid and CPR (not real useful in a disaster) to one person in particular. He told me "you have to be interested in that kind of thing" and he wouldn't take it. I asked him would he help someone who was injured? He said "yes". I asked, wouldn't you want to know what is the right thing to do? He said he'd do his best.
Scares me. The Good Samaritan law might just protect him.
I moved out of Florida to Connecticut, and I can already see the difference. Things are soooo much different up here. My "kit" has gotten bigger for a longer time without stuff.
Hope a CAT 3 or 4 hurricane never hits Long Island. yeah. That is the common attitude for most people. They just don't care if they get kill in hurricane. They think hurricane will just pass by in 1hr and why bother to prepare for it.
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#96626 - 06/05/07 03:11 AM
Re: People aren't prepared for hurricanes
[Re: ]
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Old Hand
Registered: 11/10/03
Posts: 710
Loc: Augusta, GA
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I had been asking for that I even asked DEMHS for Connecticut for something like it. They didn't have one. The do have SLOSH projections. I did tell some of them that tens of thousands of people would die in the NYC if a CAT 3 or higher hurricane hit. They seemed surprised. Uh, with the density of the area, and already "normal" rush hour traffic. No one is going anywhere. I would think that evacuation times must be on the order magnitude of minimum 7 days or something. I mean, it takes people like 2 hours to get 50 miles during rush hour. *shrugs* I'll do what I can to preach, but it's just like religion, if they don't want to be saved, they won't listen until it's too late.
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#96677 - 06/05/07 06:34 PM
Re: People aren't prepared for hurricanes
[Re: ki4buc]
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Anonymous
Unregistered
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Hi ki4buc, If a Cat 4 hurricane struck New York, it would be one of the most catastrophic events in US history. 9-11 and New Orleans would pale into insignificance in terms of the death toll and property damage. The worrying thing is that the chances of this event happening even this year are better than not successfully playing Russian Roulette with a well oiled pistol. Edit **I have found a new location for the New York Inundation Graphic SLOSH projection.**
Edited by bentirran (06/05/07 10:07 PM)
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