Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Seven hurricanes predicted for Florida this season

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Seven hurricanes predicted for Florida this season

    Holy shizzam!!!

    -----------------

    Hurricanes now fill Floridians with fear

    Mitch Stacy
    Associated Press

    Saturday, May 14, 2005


    LAKE WALES, Fla. -- Before last summer, Corrie Pope hardly gave a thought to preparing her rural mobile home for a catastrophic storm.

    Being a good 60 miles inland from Florida’s west coast, she figured it would never be necessary. Then came hurricanes Charley, Frances and Jeanne, which crisscrossed in Pope’s tiny Alturas community south of Lake Wales in the space of six weeks in August and September, tearing up her family’s property, knocking out the power and splitting their doublewide at the center.

    With a blue plastic tarp still covering her roof and a bare plywood floor still awaiting new carpet, Pope says she won’t be caught unaware when this year’s Atlantic hurricane season opens June 1. The house will be stocked with supplies.

    “We’ve got tons and tons of candles and batteries,” says Pope, whose family finally received their insurance check last month to repair the damage. “I’ve got hurricane lamps. ... My dad is coming down to visit next month, and he’s bringing a generator and a chain saw.”

    The four hurricanes that smacked Florida during an unprecedented and unforgettable 2004 season - “The Big 4 of ’04” - rattled the nerves and disrupted the lives of thousands of people, many of whom had dropped their guard after years of hearing about major hurricanes but never seeing one.

    With forecasters expecting another active hurricane season - 13 named storms and seven hurricanes are predicted - emergency management officials are hoping people have learned the same lessons as Pope and her family: Hardly anyone is safe, and when the storms come, be prepared.

    “There should not be any more hurricane amnesia in Florida,” says Craig Fugate, the state’s director of emergency management. “One of the things we saw time and time again, businesses that were prepared did well and families that were prepared did well. Those that did not suffered.”

    First Charley slammed Punta Gorda Aug. 13 and barreled northeast across the peninsula. Then Frances came ashore on Florida’s east coast near Stuart Sept. 5 and raced across the state before Ivan pummeled the Florida Panhandle and Gulf Coast states Sept. 16, collapsing part of Interstate 10. Finally, Jeanne hit Sept. 25, roughly following Frances’ path.

    The storms were blamed for at least 130 deaths in the United States, mostly in Florida, and did an estimated $22 billion in insured wind damage. One in five Florida homes were damaged or destroyed. So far, insurers have paid more than 1.6 million claims from the storms.

    Although the Federal Emergency Management Agency has paid out nearly $5 billion in assistance, many people are still trying to reclaim their lives as the new storm season rolls around.

    Debris is still being removed in places and blue FEMA tarps still cover damaged roofs as many residents await insurance checks or for one of the overburdened contractors to come do the repair work. About 29,000 displaced hurricane victims still occupy more than 11,000 mobile homes and travel trailers in temporary FEMA trailer parks.

    “We’re better than we were, but we’re going to be another year, minimum,” says Lake Wales resident Joe Webb, who was overseeing repair work to the local Elks Lodge recently, delayed because of the shortage of licensed contractors.

    Many people are still hurting, Webb says, and they’re apprehensive about what this summer might bring.

    “When Charley came through, I said I don’t want to be here for another one,” Webb says. “And bam, here comes Frances and here comes Jeanne before I could even think straight. And the season’s coming, and I think you’ve got a lot of concerned people.”

    In Florida, the legacy of the storms will be the lessons learned by state emergency management officials. They worked this winter on new procedures to improve communication, get basic supplies into storm-damaged areas more quickly, and better define hurricane shelter plans and policies.

    While FEMA received high praise during and immediately after the hurricanes, the agency is now facing questions from Congress on several issues and complaints from counties that say they’re facing financial burdens while waiting for FEMA checks.

    Meanwhile, the agency is rethinking how and where it stores supplies before hurricanes and how it shelters people afterward. That includes expanding the use of clusters of temporary travel trailers to get hurricane refugees out of shelters sooner.

    “The folks at FEMA are pumped up and they’re ready to go,” agency Director Michael D. Brown says. “They know they established a very high bar for themselves during the 2004 hurricane season.”

    The storms prompted some other changes, too.

    In Louisiana, memories of fearful evacuees stuck on highways for hours as Hurricane Ivan bore down spurred a revamped plan to move residents more quickly out of harm’s way. In Alabama, Gov. Bob Riley formed a task force to study insurance issues following months of complaints related to Hurricane Ivan recovery.

    In North Carolina, Gov. Mike Easley recently signed into law a $247.5 million package that will assist homeowners, businesses and local governments still recovering from the effects of Ivan and Frances.

    One thing that won’t change is the “skinny black line” used by the National Weather Service to project the paths of hurricanes and tropical storms. Some forecasters had misgivings that too much attention is paid to the skinny line and not enough to the wide margin of error.

    Last summer’s hurricanes proved storms can go off the narrow tracking lines featured in television, print and computer graphics. They can also can be much wider than the lines indicate, spinning off death and destruction many miles from their center points.

    Hurricane Charley, for example, slammed into Punta Gorda although its tracking line pointed toward the Tampa Bay area about 90 miles north. Charley suddenly intensified and took a right turn, but by then it was too late to get out.

    But the weather service decided to stick with the skinny line after seeking opinions from the public, media and emergency service workers, receiving nearly 1,000 e-mailed responses.

    Emergency managers and storm forecasters hope people learned their lesson last year and will keep an eye on the “cone of uncertainty” around the black line instead. And, as always, they are urging preparation, early evacuation when it’s ordered and caution after the storms pass.

    Many deaths blamed on last year’s storms came afterward when people were trying to clean up and patch up their homes.

    With forecasters saying there’s a 73 percent chance that at least one major hurricane will make landfall in the United States this season, no one should be caught napping.

    “We have to prepare for the worst and hope for the best,” Fugate says.

    ---

    On the Net:

    Federal Emergency Management Agency http://www.fema.org

    Florida Division of Emergency Management http://www.floridadisaster.org

    © Associated Press 2005

  • #2
    Re: Seven hurricanes predicted for Florida this season

    It's supposed to be another active year, but your thread title is a bit misleading. The prediction calls for 13 named storms & 7 huricanes for the entire western Atlantic season, not for 7 to make landfall in Florida. Some will hit elsewhere, and there are always some that don't hit land at all. Last year was the worst yet for Florida (I think) with 4 hitting there.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Seven hurricanes predicted for Florida this season

      The title stands. I don't blame them for being scared. When those major Hurricanes are dancing in the middle of Florida, it will not be pleasant.
      The real estate bubble will pop & deflate. Florida is a very large land mass of sand bars formed by past storms.

      Become prepared as much as possible, and expect very extreme weather. "Hurricane Alley". It's nature's way's of telling you..

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Seven hurricanes predicted for Florida this season

        Yeah, but it's never boring here......

        I had to haul all my guitars up to the 3rd floor 4 freaking times last year, as I fear flood during a storm. ( I live about 200 feet from the water). That sucked big time, trust me. The wife is like " did you pack enough clothes?" , and I am like "fuck the clothes, I have to move these guitars".


        Shawn
        Spin the black circle.


        [email protected]

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Seven hurricanes predicted for Florida this season

          [ QUOTE ]
          Yeah, but it's never boring here......

          I had to haul all my guitars up to the 3rd floor 4 freaking times last year, as I fear flood during a storm. ( I live about 200 feet from the water). That sucked big time, trust me. The wife is like " did you pack enough clothes?" , and I am like "fuck the clothes, I have to move these guitars".


          Shawn

          [/ QUOTE ]
          LOL, spoken like a true collector [img]/images/graemlins/toast.gif[/img]

          Clothes can be cheaply replaced, rare guitars are another story [img]/images/graemlins/wink.gif[/img]

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Seven hurricanes predicted for Florida this season

            [ QUOTE ]
            The title stands. I don't blame them for being scared. When those major Hurricanes are dancing in the middle of Florida, it will not be pleasant. The real estate bubble will pop & deflate. Florida is a very large land mass of sand bars formed by past storms.Become prepared as much as possible, and expect very extreme weather. "Hurricane Alley". It's nature's way's of telling you..

            [/ QUOTE ]Well, anything can happen, in Florida or elsewhere. More likely, though, it'll be our turn here on the MississippiGulf Coast, or coastal Alabama, Louisiana or Texas. The southern and Mid-Atlantic East Coast states are also at risk. When they say 7 of 13 will make landfall in the CONUS, the chances of them ALL hitting Florida are small,especially after the 4 hit last year. As I said though, anything can happen...
            Ron is the MAN!!!!

            Comment

            Working...
            X