AlaskanAg99 said:
ccaggie05 said:
AlaskanAg99 said:
Ag13 said:
Don't worry guys - I know it's hot but assessments will be done by tonight. Progress?
They didn't plan for a Cat 1 storm? How is that even possible when the scale goes to 5? I could understand if they hadn't planned for Cat 4-5 as those are hellacious storms. But this was not a major hurricane.
I remember seeing a chart (from Centerpoint I believe) posted in the media before Beryl hit stating that a Category 5 would lead to outages of weeks to months. I'm also sure they said Cat 1 would be up to a few days, and we can see we are looking at weeks for some people more likely.
I can't even imagine the outages from a Category 5. Months might be generous.
People would have to relocate not only due to lack of power, but to homes being damaged so badly they're not habitable. County or City would red tag them and I can't imaging if the majority of 5-6M people in the greater Houston area had to leave. They would be dispersed all over the US.
To openly state they were taken back by the widespread damage from a Cat 1 clearly shows they have no idea how to model for events like this. I've said this before, but I'll take flooding over wind every single time.
This got me curious so I looked it up the Hurricane Katrina Diaspora
New Orleans had a pre Katrina population of 484K. Post Katrina it dropped to about 254K. As late as 2020 it was around 383K but not all of those were evacuees that returned home.
When you look at the entire area affected (Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama) about 1.5 million people were displaced with about 60% of those eventually returning. That's probably one of the largest migrations in the United States aside from the post Civil War Great Migration.
There's what 7 million people in the Houston metro area? You wouldn't need a Cat 4 or 5 to dwarf Katrina.