Posted on 09/22/2005 8:40:03 PM PDT by dvan
I'm staying put in Houston... If you're in an evacuation zone you should leave, but allot of people in Houston who were not in one chose to leave. I think that is just an overreaction. Ridiculous to be stuck in traffic for 10 to 12 hours...
I got a call from my Mother and Step-Father this evening. They evacuated from the Houston Area - left there at 3AM, Arrived in Pine Bluff, Arkansas after 9:30 PM - some 18+ hours after thier departure from the Houston area. This drive normally takes them approx. 8 hours. Most of the time was spent crawling down the highway between Houston and Marshall, Tx.
They too reported many stranded autos (out of gas) and stations on the highway being closed. They called it a real nightmare.
My uncle stayed in Bay City during Hurricane Carla (name retired.) He had built his own house and wanted to see how it held up (it did.) He said that this was the dumbest thing he ever did in his life.
Thanks for the report.
My prayers go out to all those who are staying. I wish you wouldn't but then, it is your choice!
These hurricanes are a wakeup call that we need wider interstates in and out of these large cities for evacuation purposes. Not just along the coast but all over. We almost need another Eisenhour style effort to deal with these mass evacuations. It would cost a lot of bucks but that's a primary purpose of government - to build roads.
Most metropolitan areas don't have a highway system extensive enough to readily handle everyday traffic, let alone an emergency evacuation. Imagine trying to get out of NYC or Chicago or D.C. Houston has to be better than those bottlenecks, even though it's a mess now.
My son is in Katy (West Houston) - I suggested he stay until the path of the hurricane was known and then, if needed, go to were it isn't.
He's sitting at home getting calls from friends and neighbors that panicked and took the media's panic-mode-run-like-hell-advice and now they're stuck here and there.
The only areas that should have been evacuated first were the Galveston and all the way up through to the Port of Houston and the entire bay. Include Texas City, Kemah, etc.
That would have taken the first 24 hours (most made it out of those areas without much delay). I have a sister, nieces, nephews in the Kemah, NASA area who calmly packed up and with some neighbors did NOT go north out of Houston as the media and govt directed ... They drove south west - They're down in the valley (far south Texas).
At least people are getting out of there!
In New Orleans, people were left to die by incompetenet dimocrats, Naggin Nagin and Blanko Blanco.
we are in the woodlands area (just north of houston) and are staying put. people are "camping" along I-45. one store is open and it is out of everything. there is no water to be found (here we go again).
I just received an email from relatives in Houston. They're staying put, too, because they say it's impossible to leave now.
My personal opinion is, if you are not in the surge wall area, and you are not near a levy that can break, you may be just as well off as long as you are well protected from flying debris and caving ceilings.
Remember, New Orleans got worse after the hurricane because it flooded after the levy broke. The MS gulf coast took a direct hit from the surge wall from the gulf.
Never heard a person who rode out a major hurricane say they where glad they stayed. And according to some reports, this one might stall, and you could be stuck listening to a freight train roaring in your ears for a couple of days. Get out now!!! Traffic jam is a picnic in comparision.
The blogger has left the building...
(at least the link isn't working)
The link just worked for me.
Just linked for me, also. Before it had an error & said I couldn't have access.
Where I live, in Florida, they make it very clear (via local EOC and Jeb Bush's office) that if you are not in an evac zone, you shouldn't leave.
They spell it out and say the roads can't handle everybody leaving...and then when they do call for evacuations, they stagger them. Barrier islands first, so the bridges don't clog. When that clears, then inland residents go.
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