Posted on 09/16/2004 10:51:10 AM PDT by OXENinFLA
Surely you jest in all your questions you are asking? Come on, now.
I would think that they'd have to make sure the other span is sound and then turn into a single-lane two-way bridge (probably with temporary lane dividers to make it safer) until the other span is repaired. They did this after one span of the first Sunshine Skyway Bridge at the Tampa Bay entrance got knocked out by the barge, and it was like that for years (with no lane dividers). I drove over it like that once -- it was hairy and scary -- and fun!
I have some loved ones that left GA Tues to beat the hurricane to get to Texas for a cheerleading competion.
It took the team 23 hours to get there. I was wondering which side it is because they have to return Sat or Sun.
What routes arond that bridge are there? I will look it up on Street & Trips. Looks like they are going to have to go North and return by I-20.
Anyone know anything about how Lillian, Ala, stood up?
That one.
I wasn't the one thinking like a plaintiff's attorney. How could/would you close a roadway in the midst of a hurricane? Folks need to show some personal responsibility.
Scary, I was on this bridge two weeks ago, I have lots of friends in Pensacola.
Check the links I posted in 56 for Alabama and Mississippi. Some of the alternates are also blocked, as is I-10 at other points, and I-20 is getting pounded from Birmingham to Atlanta at this time. I wouldn't be suprised to see I-40 blocked by slides by the time the storm has passed.
Wow, I've been on that bridge. Hopefully the driver made it out okay, and at least it wasn't the Sunshine Skyway in Tampa.
Wow!
Either a really stupid one, or one who's involved in transporting emergency-related supplies. Either way, I hope he's okay. But if it's the former, he really needs to get his head checked.
4 miles in 12 hours? I'd a walked!
Or would that be 'swam'? Nah; not in that weather.
At least she's safe, and I guess the car kept her dry. Still, that seems indredible.
I thought traffic was bad years ago when I had to drop a buddy & his bags a mile or so from LAX, because it was much faster for him to walk the rest of the way.
"I wasn't the one thinking like a plaintiff's attorney. How could/would you close a roadway in the midst of a hurricane? Folks need to show some personal responsibility."
All the police know how to close a road, no matter what the weather is like. They do this all the time.
Better question, why didn't the idiot stop before he got into the area. Its not like we haven't had weeks of warning about Ivan. The driver was/is an idiot.
He was thinking he was a tough guy and wanted to brag that he did it....
Employees make their way into Sarah's, a formal dress shop in downtown Pensacola after it was heavily damaged by Hurricane Ivan on Thursday, Sept. 16, 2004.
A sign directing drivers to the on ramp for Highway 10 sits half submerged in flood waters from the Gulf of Mexico after Hurricane Ivan passed through early Thursday
A large air conditioner fan and vent unit came to rest on a car in the parking lot at the Pensacola Civic Center in Pensacola.
A gas station under water in Mobile, Ala.
Somehow this wouldn't surprise me. It's starting to drive me nutz down here!
don't know if this has been posted yet. Check out the Kerry sign.
Please share with us how to safely close a road in a hurricane. Sure, physically the road can be blocked with concrete barriers or dump trucks, but you can't put up any warning signs or devices.
Dump trucks are often equipped with a yellow rotating strobe on the roof of the cab.
There's the warning device.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.