Ellis Wyatt said:
SoulSlaveAG2005 said:
Due to influx of visitors and expected traffic problems, we are proactively working with medical centers to increase blood supplies over the weekend and through the event. Just to help ensure we dont have delays on delivery in the event of needs.
Count me as a skeptic, personally, but this lines up with what I have been hearing.
I spoke with a nurse supervisor at Scott & White in Temple. She told me they are planning to be fully staffed with many people staying at the hospital in anticipation of an influx.
A guy in planning on Fort Hood told me they were briefed to expect 2.6-3.2 million people in the I-14 corridor, basically Temple to Lampasas. Again, I am quite skeptical, but that is what they were told. I even had someone tell me she was buying a month of groceries for her family.
Buying a months with our groceries is extreme. Someone getting two weeks wouldn't be. That would be a weeks work off groceries then anticipating stores taking a week to get all of the little odds and ends sorted back out.
Regarding the numbers, respectfully I Believe your scepticism is misplaced. These communities and everyone are obviously preparing for worst case numbers, but they have data to back it up. They know what the hotels are seeing, they know what the campsites are seeing, they know what the RV places are seeing. Folks are selling no services RV slots on their ranches. It will not surprise me to see cars and trucks just pulled off the roads.
And throughout the hill country and will all of rural Texas you're looking at just two lane roads for miles and miles.
Edit to add... Regarding cell phones. I know ATT has what they call COWs, Cell On Wheels. They're trailer mounted portable cell towers they take to appointment ultra high cell demand/density events and to disaster areas when infrastructure is damaged.
In the early days off the Eagle For shale, with all of the rigs and crews, you'd have 4 bars and be unable to make it receive a call. There simply was no capacity on the network