JimMIA
There's more to life than mice...
- Joined
- Feb 16, 2005
- Messages
- 21,168
Tell me about it. When Hurricane Wilma hit South Florida in 2005, our power company (Florida Power & Light) had 5 MILLION customers without electricity. That's customers, NOT people -- some of those customers were businesses and apartment/condo complexes affecting thousands of people each. Some of them were dark for 3-4 weeks.Even if you don't flood, it is not much fun staying home without electricity (esp, a/c). It happens, especially with the above ground electrical lines.
My favorite memory during that period was one power pole along US 41 west of Miami. The wires were still intact. But the pole was so old, so poorly maintained, so rotten, that the only part of the pole remaining was about 10-15 feet off the ground, being held in place by the wires! The pole wasn't holding the wires up -- it was gone. The wires were holding up about a six-foot section of the pole, ten feet off the ground!
The operative concept in those scenarios is this: people die during evacuations who would not have died had they stayed home. There are situations where you have no alternative but to try to evacuate, but it's a long way from a perfect option.I wonder if Houston is going to evacuate again like they did for Rita. The traffic getting out of town was worse there than the evacuation from New Orleans for Katrina.