Yes, it’s normal for prices to go up after a fifth of the county’s buildings are damaged, and a tenth totaled. Nothing like having your damaged home fall apart shortly after it’s “fixed.” And then there are all the rent-jackers. Then there are all the loads of “unlicensed contractors,” ie meth-smoking chimps with hammers. It seems there are people who swarm to disaster sites and claim to be residents to collect a check. FEMA came in promptly and starting handing out checks, but the process was retarded tremendously by the elaborate vetting they had to do.
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There are lots of heartwarming stories here about generosity and kindness there are also lots of stories about people making a bad situation worse by being jerkwads. Electricity is not as portable as gasoline.Īssholes ruin everything. Everyone seems to agree that electric chainsaws are inferior, you can’t replace gas generators with popup solar plants, and if all those hordes of heavy vehicles are being powered by electricity, one wonders how local infrastructure will handle recharging them every day.
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I wouldn’t be surprised to learn that climate change is increasing the frequency of storms, but since Michael, I do wonder how well a greener country would handle such disasters. coming from as far away as Ohio temporary power with portable gas generators even the chainsaws they use to clear dead trees are overwhelmingly gas-powered. Loads of supplies coming in, and debris getting hauled away lots of extra linemen, tree service guys, cops, contractors, etc. That means hurricane relief tends to involve burning a crapton of petroleum, one way or another. Fossil fuels are an excellent source of portable energy. Most effective disaster relief consists of moving a lot of stuff around, very quickly. I’d just like to share a few of the weirder lessons I’ve learned from living in a recovering disaster zone:Ĭarbon is king. People are living in sheds, wrecked and abandoned buildings can be found everywhere, and you still see piles of trash/rubble lying around. It still looks basically like a hurricane just hit it–there’s a limit to how quickly this area can repair.
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It was rated at Cat 4 on landing this was recently revised to Cat 5. Hurricane Michael hit Bay County, FL six months ago.