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Bill Alstrom (MA/Maine/MA)'s avatar

Thanks for this info and perspective. I was one who was horrified that we would shift money from the true mission of FEMA to concentration camps. And also freaked out that we have cut back staffing at NOAA. Could full staffing at those weather centers have helped warn sooner and more thoroughly? Can we learn how to do better?

Not sure. No clear evidence yet. I really appreciate the education from your post today.

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cindee68's avatar

As a Californian who lived in the Austin area for 6 years, I remember laughing at the giant deep culverts beside every rural main road. Until it rained. And it rains HARD in the south like nothing I have ever seen elsewhere! Once I was celebrating an event in Austin, weather predictions expected a storm that would drop over 20" of rain an hour. Note that the weather forecast in Austin was amazingly accurate compared to where I lived in California and I often talked about it. My house, 26 miles north and where my kids were, got 29" of rain in an hour while I got not even a downpour. Massive destruction along the rivers that had been barely a trickle in June. But those areas were warned and campgrounds and trailer parks were evacuated and lives saved. I read that there was not even a warning. That is the problem. Probably those at the camp would have ignored it because of past experience, but some lives would have been saved. We need the services we rely on to be as accurate as possible. Which means that we need qualified people running and staffing them. This is a bad experiment.

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