Except for the elderly and the ill and the VERY poor, I think it can be chalked up to denial and ignorance.
During the hurricanes in September 2004, we did not even get hurricane force winds within 50 miles of here (we had gusts up to 70, and sustained winds around 50 miles/hour). DH and I lost a total of about 20 trees on our little acre of woods. We were very lucky nothing came through our roof--many people had trees come crashing through. Our electricity was out for 3 days, and many people in our city were without electricity for a week or more.
People think it's "only" a Cat 1 or 2 and don't realize what this means in terms of destruction. I do wish the Weather Channel wouldn't interview and feature those dumb people who always drawl something like, "We-e-l-l-l, we've never left for any other hurricane and we've been just fine so I'm sure we'll be just fine for this one." It really sends the wrong message.
The Weather Channel also ostensibly shows wethercasters standing out in 110 MPH wind, saying dumb things like "It's so windy, I can hardly stand up!" and showing store signs blowing off, and other minor things. First of all, NOBODY would be standing up in hurricane force winds. That's absurd. I had to walk my dog during the non-hurricanes last year, and almost got knocked over by the non-hurricane force gusts.
At 110 MPH winds, you are NOT standing up and there are NOT just a few signs blowing around. Trees are crashing into houses and cars, boats are being thrown out of the water, roofs are peeling off. The Weather Channel doesn't show you that stuff because they can't be outside and shooting footage in that kind of storm. Instead, they stand in a shelter and make a big deal about a sign blowing around or some garbage blowing down the street, as if THAT is the sum of the destructive force of a hurricane. Yeah, it really burns me.
My mom, dad, sister, and husband lived in Miami when Andrew hit. They absolutely would NOT evacuate. My parents were lucky and were in an area that barely got hit. My sister and her husband were on the edge of where Andrew hit, and spent the entire storm in terror and were without electricity for literally weeks.
I knew from watching TV that Andrew was going to be a devastating storm--but they were all way, way into their denial: "You're such a nervous person! I'm sure everything will be just fine," etc., etc., to listen to me. I don't understand how people can refuse to face what is happening around them.
