Better yet. Have a second home somewhere up north that you can spend your summers during hurricane season.Quote:
Or your car is always plugged in with enough juice to get out of harms way and run the AC for two days.
Better yet. Have a second home somewhere up north that you can spend your summers during hurricane season.Quote:
Or your car is always plugged in with enough juice to get out of harms way and run the AC for two days.
Rapier108 said:
Can we keep the SLS bashing to the SpaceX fanboy thread?Is Ron DeSatan actually doing anything to help Florida prepare for the hurricane? pic.twitter.com/jpQDRPsJRr
— Florida Public Affairs Consultants (@FLPublicAffairs) September 23, 2022Late Breaking International News: Florida Governor Ron DeSantis has made no financial plans to assist families left unemployed, and homeless after the Pandemic during the upcoming category 3
— The American News Wire International: Wall Street! (@thenewswireone) September 23, 2022
or 4 hurricane due to his latest budget cuts for homeless families throughout Florida.Before Hurricane GOP: Spending drives up inflation.
— Woke Up (@PenaltyPhase45) September 23, 2022
After Hurricane GOP: Give Florida hundreds of billions to spend rebuilding.
Next Election GOP: Biden caused inflation@GovRonDeSantis slanders Biden, then asks for Biden's &Fed assistance. When this is over DeSantis will be back to his normal a**hole self.https://t.co/yTkimICjb0
— Marlene Stalter (@yborgirl50) September 23, 2022
The storm could potentially arrive in South Florida as a hurricane early next week, authorities said.I am sure @mattgaetz and @GovRonDeSantis will turn down all federal money if the #Hurricane hits #Florida. After all, taking tax money paid by New Yorkers to help #Floridians is nothing but redistribution #socialism. NO FEDERAL MONEY!!
— Susan (@SCOTUS_war) September 24, 2022So Florida under DeSantis is sending immigrants, in their words “Texas’ problem” to Democratic states! NOW, 24 Fla. counties have already declared a state of emergency for incoming hurricanes! Sorry Fla., no federal money for you,for you are not our “problem”! See how that works?
— FactCheckerInKS (@factcheckernks) September 24, 2022With the next hurricane projected to impact Florida next week...how fast do you think DeSantis will wait before asking Biden for govt. aid?
— Barbara - Lady With A Voice (@champa10) September 24, 2022Florida is projected to get hit by a major hurricane soon. Guess which Governor is about to stretch out his hands like Oliver Twist to Joe Biden and ask for the big bad Fed. Government’s assistance…
— Ryan Treviño 🇺🇸 (@RyanTrevinoUS) September 24, 2022
God Bless you.richardag said:I probably won't live long enough to see it(doubt I make it to 85 yr old in 2035), but my guess is that after the European and American Auto manufacturers discontinue ICE autos, the Chinese manufacturers will suddenly be the only choice. As the electric grid fails to supply all the EVs enough power to charge up the batteries, the demand for ICE vehicles will increase.HollywoodBQ said:Yeah, we've had about 115+ years to develop a network of petroleum / diesel stations to meet demand.Cromagnum said:HollywoodBQ said:The incentive for your work to provide a charger is if they want you to come in to work.Premium said:My biggest stock position is Tesla by a wide margin, love everything Elon. However, the fanboys thinking electric is viable in Texas, without Nuclear, are heads in the sand. Also, infrastructure will not be there for 30 years. That's best case scenario. I expect it to take 40-50 years to be universally possible. Filling up can't take more than 10 minutes and there need to be as many chargers per station as fuel pumps.Teslag said:Premium said:
Downed power lines = free electricity
/Teslag
what a stupid post
But even then, what is the incentive to build chargers when everyone "fills up" at home?
If they want you in the office, they better provide a place to charge your EV.
That probably goes for minimum wage fast food workers too.
Wal-Mart, Taco Bell, etc. will need to provide employee parking with a charger.
Anyway, a digression from the Hurricane discussion but... I think the EV conversation and natural disasters is a good point.
When my family members took 14 hours to get to College Station, they had stories about folks running out of gas and carrying jerry cans, etc.
Can you imagine a hurricane evacuation with EVs littering the side of the road where they ran out of charge? Some enterprising Diesel Bro could drive by offering charges at $10/mile or something like that. How much further to Waller? $100
They don't do that for employees with ICE vehicles. Screw the EV entitlement. You should be expected to come in because you are expected to come in.
Here in California, we're now being told that 13 years from now we're all going to magically cutover to a new method of powering your vehicle which significantly shortens the range of your vehicle.
So... yeah, probably a good idea for employers to get involved in the powering of their employees daily commuter vehicle - if they want them to do that. Otherwise, WFH until forever.
What I've seen at most companies since the Plandemic started is that only certain employees are being forced back into the office so that theoretical employer only needs to power EVs for maybe 15-20% of their employees.
Maybe Mexico will continue to manufacture ICE with all the American plants being shut down. Pinto knock offs for everyone.
I'm still plotting the trajectory on a Kroger bag hurricane tracking chart.AgLiving06 said:HollywoodBQ said:If you're from the Gulf Coast, you know that computer models 5 days in advance are wrong all the time because of other weather factors. If they're predicting Tampa 5 days in advance, there's a pretty good chance it's not going to hit Tampa.AgLiving06 said:
Question B is pretty disingenuous.
Tampa has been in the cross hairs of all of the models for a while. The Euro model has been bringing it through the bulk of Florida for at least week and those models are dang good.
So while I understand it was a tough decision, don't blame the models. They have been nailing this thing into Florida for a while.
This one is interesting because the only real change I've seen in the past 4 days (since we had to decide whether to send somebody) was that the advancement rate of the storm has slowed and the landfall has shifted slightly further north.
Look. I get it...you feel guilty about your decision. But Florida and Tampa specifically has been in the crosshairs from the start, especially with the Euro, which as someone from the gulf coast, we know is the gold standard.
This is from the 22nd.
This is from the 21st:
Even DeSantis issues a State of Emergency on the 23rd based on the models:
State of Emergency
So there was ample reason to be concerned and/or have contingencies in place.
During the scamdemic in California, we learned that there's a lot of variability in what is a "critical job".redcrayon said:
Unless your job is critical, don't go into a potential disaster area where local authorities will be doing all they can to take care of the people who actually live there. You're adding to the mass of people who need to evacuate. You're taking a hotel room from a family who might need it if their home is uninhabitable. It's not about you.
Serious question - what does that do to battery life?Manhattan said:Or your car is always plugged in with enough juice to get out of harms way and run the AC for two days.David Wallace said:I believe EVs make no sense in a natural disaster/evacuation scenario. The lines at gas stations would be long. But can you imagine the line for EV charging stations along the evacuation routes?Teslag said:
It's stupid because I've consistently said that EV's don't make sense for most car buyers and quite possibly never will.
Plus. think about power outages. Many folks use their gasoline powered vehicles to charge their phones or plug in an extension cord to run an appliance Of even to just run the car AC (or heater like during the freeze in 2021) to get some cool air for a bit. Its easy to stock pile gallons of gas in a container to keep the car going. Cant do that with EVs.
Oooof.Rapier108 said:
Cat 3 or Cat 4 at landfall is now expected with the area being very prone to flooding and a storm surge of up to 15ft currently predicted.
Red track is the latest 12z UKMET. Yeah, that's a shift south, folks. pic.twitter.com/FIlNDVehZB
— Anthony Masiello (@antmasiello) September 27, 2022
Have they weathered a direct one before, and do they trust the power and access?Wheatables02 said:
We have family friends who live in Sarasota who are staying. One has to because of his job but I'm not sure why the rest don't leave..
bmks270 said:
Tampa will be under a few feet of water.
Some areas of Tampa flood frequently during thunderstorms. The rainfall is going to turn it into Atlantis.
Grownups back in charge, everybody!Rapier108 said:
Biden is refusing to speak with DeSantis about the hurricane. Instead he's calling mayors and county officials in Florida.
There is nothing stopping Hurricane Ian from intensifying for next 12-hours.
— Ryan Maue (@RyanMaue) September 27, 2022
If the trend continues with warming eye and colder cloud tops surrounding it, then you can talk about the category after 4. #HurricaneIan #TropicalUpdate
Can't wait for the next season of "Selling Tampa"FL_Ag1998 said:Don't exaggerate or anything, lol. There will be flooding simply because of the heavy rain. But highly unlikely the whole city will be under a few feet of water. We're not New Orleans.bmks270 said:
Tampa will be under a few feet of water.
Some areas of Tampa flood frequently during thunderstorms. The rainfall is going to turn it into Atlantis.
Or maybe they end up on the next season of Selling Tampa.OnlyForNow said:
If it is in that vicinity, yes. That's exactly what they are for. This may help kill a lot of those pythons.
I don't think Sarasota has ever taken a direct or near direct hit in our lifetime. It definitely hasn't since they moved there around 2007. Husband is in public safety so he cannot leave. School was all cancelled starting yesterday.titan said:Have they weathered a direct one before, and do they trust the power and access?Wheatables02 said:
We have family friends who live in Sarasota who are staying. One has to because of his job but I'm not sure why the rest don't leave..
Maybe they are making a judgement call.
They've predicted a bad hurricane season every single year, every year of my life.fightingfarmer09 said:
Will the media explain how this is one of the least active seasons in history and how the projections for hurricane season were completely wrong?
Nothing, that is stopping it from doing so or otherwise losing strength when need than the Will of God.The Collective said:
Ryan is not a fear-caster.There is nothing stopping Hurricane Ian from intensifying for next 12-hours.
— Ryan Maue (@RyanMaue) September 27, 2022
If the trend continues with warming eye and colder cloud tops surrounding it, then you can talk about the category after 4. #HurricaneIan #TropicalUpdate
Sarasota checking in here. I am told the last direct hit on Sarasota was in 1921. Just spent all day putting storm covers over everyone's windows in our neighborhood. We did all windows on 10 2-story townhomes and it took two guys with 30 ft ladders and the rest of us working on the first floors 8 hours to finish. We are all staying put for the storm. It looks like it may hit right where we are, but we are 6 miles inland so storm surge won't be an issue but I don't know what we may encounter with flooding. It's been raining here almost every day since late June and some days we get 4-6 inches of rain on top of the previous days inch or two. No flooding around us ever, but nearby roads get flooded quickly when it rains hard. So we'll see.Wheatables02 said:I don't think Sarasota has ever taken a direct or near direct hit in our lifetime. It definitely hasn't since they moved there around 2007. Husband is in public safety so he cannot leave. School was all cancelled starting yesterday.titan said:Have they weathered a direct one before, and do they trust the power and access?Wheatables02 said:
We have family friends who live in Sarasota who are staying. One has to because of his job but I'm not sure why the rest don't leave..
Maybe they are making a judgement call.