To Evacuate or Not to Evacuate, A Tough Question
Well, Houston. I take my hat off to you. You watched New Orleans do everything wrong. So you decided to get out of town instead of staying to face what was predicted to be a hurricane as bad as Katrina. Even though you weren't below sea level with levees holding back a lake of water, you remember lots of people drowning when Allison came through town. You listened to authorities......and you ended up in much the same situation as the people in the Super Dome. You were hot and without water for many, many hours. And the hurricane barely touched the town. I would be really mad. In fact, I AM really mad. One reason I'm mad is that while we should be saving gas, our "authorities" don't seem to have a clue that evacuating millions of people on just a few roads will be a disaster in itself. I am so sick of seeing traffic jams miles long for a one lane accident. Okay, so someone got hurt. We have to wait for the helicopter to land, get them on board, and get out of the road. I waited over an hour, maybe two hours when this happened once. Everything stops! I have respect for the situation, I really do! But stopping traffic has gotten ridiculous! Are officials jaded? Do they not care about other lives? Do they understand how horrible traffic jams are? Besides carbon monoxide poisoning, ruining your car from idling and possibly overheating, we are late to appointments, meetings, picking up kids that have no other way home. There is no message system. We can be a mile back in traffic, and no one even tells us why, how long, or what is going on. Their answer is " Leave for your destination earlier."
Evacuating early means losing time from work and school. It means spending more money on a hotel room. If you leave early, you are guessing whether a hurricane is really coming your way or will be strong enough to make you run for cover. If it happens once a year, then it can probably be worked into a budget or vacation time. But more than that is a real economic strain. On the pro side, if you plan and leave early, you can find a place that will let you bring your dog and you can take along your prized possessions and save your car from flood water. You can have some privacy, your own television set, and a real bed to sleep on. Hey, having shelters for people is a great idea. There will always be plenty of people to fill them. But with careful planning, you can have your nice hotel room.
So, I guess plan a possible vacation around a possible hurricane, hope there's only one per season, and be prepared to reserve a room at a few different places depending on the path of the possible hurricane. All kidding aside, you can make a 6 pm reservation. If you don't show up, the room is given to someone else. Plan, plan, plan. Thank goodness for the news, we're learning who to trust....let me not open that can of worms.
But by all means, don't rely on officials to make you comfortable.....or safe.