Showing posts with label Weather. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Weather. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

California Wildfires Cont'd

I've been hearing a lot about how much better the federal response to the wildfires has been compared to Hurricane Katrina. Yes, it would appear FEMA and the administration got it right for once, but perhaps we shouldn't be patting the President and his men on his back just yet.

There are big differences between Louisiana and California locally that must be looked at.

First, if any state in the union is prepared for a natural disaster, it's California. The Golden State lives everyday with the risk of earthquakes, mudslides, flash floods, wildfires, tidal waves, volcano eruptions and on and on. California also has their wealth behind them. They can afford to implement a major disaster plan, and they have to be prepared because they are constantly at the mercy of mother nature.

Second, the people of San Diego have certain luxuries, for lack of better word, in this disaster. For one thing, the city is still intact. New Orleans essentially ceased to exist. The entire city was underwater and left devestated. The city's buearcracy, already notably unreliable, was left stagnated. The fire department and police department could not function. The Governor could not get the people out of the Superdome. The people in New Orleans were left stranded and the local governments were left in shambles and unable to lead. This is where the federal government SHOULD have stepped in, but did not, leaving anarchy.

The people of Southern California also have means to get out. Many, specifically in New Orleans, had no car or means of transportation to get out. San Diegans, for the most part, have cars and trucks, as life without a car in California is pretty impossible. The evacuees in Qualcomm Stadium have electricity, food, and running water, all of which was missing from the Superdome in New Orleans. It doesn't take a brain surgeon to figure out how to get supplies to the stadium. Unlike New Orleans, the roads are passable and the airport is open.

Third, and while this is theory, I believe it has teeth, San Diego may have learned a lesson we all learned after Katrina; help yourself because we don't know when the Feds are coming. It was the people of San Diego, those unaffected by the fires, who appeared at Qualcomm Stadium first to volunteer and help. It was the locals who decided not to wait for a government that has proven to lack leadership when it comes to responding to disaster. Andy Konradt writes this on The Huffington Post;

It's nice to see that even if FEMA had decided to sit on its thumbs for three days before stepping foot over here, the residents of San Diego decided to take care of themselves.

Thankfully FEMA didn't sit on it's thumbs for three days, but San Diego and California learned the lesson from Louisiana...the Feds tend to be incompetent with this stuff, so let's take care of ourselves and if they respond competently, then excellent. Louisiana and Mississippi did not have the luxury of having a certain group of locals left unaffected. Hurricane Katrina effected everyone on the coast, these fires directly effected some people and not others. Governor Schwarzeneggar, Mayor Sanders and the local government and authorities are the ones who responded effectively. Thankfully FEMA and the Federal Government didn't have to prove to be competent, Californians already beat them to it.

California Wildfires Open Thread


AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes

California Lieutenant Governor John Garamendi told Chris Matthews yesterday the state's national guard needs to be redeployed from Iraq to assist in the wildfires.

Harry Reid blamed the fires on global warming.

Numerous e-mails have come to me stating the government's better response to the fires has a lot to do with the wealth of those being affected

All are valid points that may be correct and will need to be discussed in the aftermath of this, but right now there are one million people running from their homes and a massive firestorm unseen since perhaps the Allied bombing of Tokyo during World War II. Thousands of people are going to end up homeless from this. The concern right now may need to be on whether or not the city of San Diego will still be standing when the fires burn out and what kind of ways can the rest of this country help those who will return to their homes to find them scorched.

Wednesday, August 8, 2007

Tornado In New York




Those of you who doubt climate change is really happening should have lived through what we here in New York just experienced.


A tornado in Brooklyn just seemed a little too "The Day After Tomorrow" to me.

Friday, June 1, 2007

Tropical Storm Barry

When did this happen?

Well, Florida needs rain anyway.

Oh, btw, hurricane season starts TODAY, and we're on letter B

Saturday, May 12, 2007

The Heat Is On...Soon

I'm glad I have a pool.

Unlike the generations before us, we won't have to retire to Florida.

Wednesday, May 9, 2007

It Begins With Andrea

Oh please don't let this be an omen.

Monday, May 7, 2007

Another Casualty Of Iraq: A Small Kansas Town

Governor Kathleen Sebelius (D-Kansas) admitted today the cleanup after the devastating tornado that wiped Greensburg off the face of the earth is slowed because the Kansas National Guard is short in personnel and equipment because of the war in Iraq.

Kansas should have 70%-80% of the equipment needed to send the National Guard to respond to events such as this one, but currently Kansas only had about 40% according to the Governor.

It's sad that we here in the United States cannot attend to our own people and help out our own when they face disaster, because all of our energy and equipment is getting blown up in Iraq.

Where are the priorities?

Sunday, April 15, 2007

The Storm Of The NEW Century

We here in New York are preparing for the biggest storm we've seen in 15 years. Hopefully I'll still have power after tomorrow and I can blog, but if I disappear for a while, you know why.

Pray for us here in the Northeast US.

Sunday, March 18, 2007

The Snows Of JFK

I live a mere three miles from the runways of Kennedy Airport in New York. From my bedroom window, looking south, I can see planes landing. When fog and rain come in off the ocean, these landing planes are rerouted about 750 feet over my house.

Twice this winter I have live through snow/sleet storms that have only caused minor disruptions in my life, but only 20,000 feet away, have caused mass chaos.

I've never had the opportunity of flying out of New York in the winter, more or less in a snowstorm. I have only traveled by air between April and October. Even so, I am shocked that at an airport we thought had perfected a snow emergency, (I have lived through more snowstorms that I'd like to remember while being so close to JFK) people could be stuck on planes on the runway for 9 hours TWICE in one winter.

It seems the problems have to do with lack of open gates at the terminals. Has anyone thought of figuring out a way to deplane passengers in another part of the airport when this occurs? Perhaps there should be a hangar or some sort of emergency disembarkation point for passengers stuck on planes to get off so they don't sit on planes for 9 or 10 hours?

Or maybe the amount of air traffic is overwhelming JFK already...why is the TWA terminal still closed then?

Thursday, March 1, 2007

Alabama Tornadoes Thread


Photo: Associated Press

When we all got up this morning, there was a beautiful piece of Americana here...a normal high school in a small American town, Enterprise, Alabama. A high school full of teenagers whose biggest worries were crushes, proms, papers and tests. In a flash, Mother Nature changed that.


Life is fragile and it only takes a moment for it to change forever.