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5 votes
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Quartz producing location Spruce Pine, North Carolina just got hit by hurricane Helene. The fallout on the tech industry could be huge.
21 votes -
FEMA can kind of suck
I own a small apartment house in Asheville. It doesn't make much money, I mainly do it to maintain my connection to the community and have a place to stay, all the rents are below market and I...
I own a small apartment house in Asheville. It doesn't make much money, I mainly do it to maintain my connection to the community and have a place to stay, all the rents are below market and I have a diverse group of folks there. I'm proud I'm able to participate in this way.
Lots of trees came down in the yard, thousands of dollars in damages, from Helene. I called FEMA. Their response was it's not your primary residence, no love. What about the other tenants? Common areas are not 'primary residences.' So I expressed some frustration, and the FEMA person really sucked at their response.
They said it was totally fair that I should be responsible, out of pocket for trees. I asked why that was? Their reponse was "this conversation is over," and they hung up. The answer from a decent person would be, I understand your frustration, but FEMA isn't set up to handle this circumstance. Please reach out to SBA.
Here's why this sucks. If I were a recent transplant to Asheville with my multimillion dollar single family residence right next door to my apartment house, thousands of dollars would flow to you from FEMA for your tree damage. I, and my low income tenants, get squat. That is a shameful misallocation of resources.
I've looked, and there is apparantly no assistance to folks in my situation (and nothing available to my tenants). Had the consequences been worse, I would be forced to sell my property, and five decent, hardworking folks would now be forced to find substandard housing. What a world we live in.
19 votes -
Cubans begin third day without power as hurricane nears
23 votes -
Our US disaster recovery system must evolve to respond more effectively to climate change
18 votes -
The "dirty side" of a hurricane, explained
10 votes -
A report, county-by-county North Carolina recovery from Hurricane Helene after two weeks
5 votes -
Hurricane Milton barrels toward Florida with 155 MPH winds
42 votes -
New study shows that hurricanes lead to excess mortality long after the storm has passed
20 votes -
Starlink is offering free internet access for thirty days for folks affected by Hurricane Helene
22 votes -
Devastated community in North Carolina revives the town meeting
23 votes -
US hospitals take steps to conserve IV fluid supply after hurricane Helene strikes critical factory in North Carolina
16 votes -
At least sixty-four dead and millions without power after hurricane Helene devastates south-eastern US states with landslides and flooding, washing away roads and bridges
61 votes -
Tropical storm Francine forms in the Gulf of Mexico; Expected to make landfall in Louisiana as a hurricane on Wednesday
11 votes -
Beryl on track to make a Texas landfall on Monday morning
23 votes -
Category 4 Hurricane Beryl will soon reach the Caribbean Sea
27 votes -
Hurricane Beryl setting alarming records
25 votes -
Category 6 hurricanes have arrived
30 votes -
Six Flags | Bankrupt
12 votes -
As Hurricane Idalia caused flooding, some electric vehicles exposed to saltwater caught fire
14 votes -
As Idalia hit Florida, all of NOAA’s hurricane-hunting planes were grounded
9 votes -
Hurricane Hilary could dump over a year’s worth of rain on parts of the Southwest US
37 votes -
How Tabasco fills up to 700,000 hot sauce bottles a day | Big Business
25 votes -
This 100% solar community endured Hurricane Ian with no loss of power and minimal damage
12 votes -
Photos: Hurricane Ian leaves path of destruction
16 votes -
Guy on doomed planet mostly concerned with skin color of people in movies
25 votes -
US civil engineers bent the rules to give New Orleans extra protection from hurricanes
9 votes -
Hurricanes and typhoons moving 30km closer to coasts every decade for the last forty years
6 votes -
Climate change will force a new American migration - Life is becoming increasingly untenable in the hardest-hit areas, which could cause millions of people to relocate
20 votes -
National Hurricane Center nailed track forecast for Laura within a mile and three days in advance
9 votes -
Preparing for the next hurricane: Storm trackers and other survival tools
5 votes -
Floodlines - An eight-part narrative podcast thoroughly reassessing Hurricane Katrina and its aftermath, fifteen years later
4 votes -
Bahamas: Hurricane hell
2 votes -
Bahamas death toll from Hurricane Dorian reaches thirty, with thousands still missing; 70,000 people in need of food, water or shelter; and estimated $7 billion in damage
7 votes -
Hurricane Dorian: Storm inches north west, leaving devastation in Bahamas
5 votes -
Worst weather experience?
Since it's the peak of tropical storm season again, this thread is open for all to share stories and thoughts about weather experiences. Not necessarily concerns about climate change, but the...
Since it's the peak of tropical storm season again, this thread is open for all to share stories and thoughts about weather experiences. Not necessarily concerns about climate change, but the incidents you've had personally, and whatever you've learned about preparation, resilience, and recovery.
I'm no longer a Florida resident, but my contacts are blowing up with concern over Hurricane Dorian.
I've been watching the storm on this nifty site, which has great tools and visualisations to satisfy the most avid weather geeks.
Dorian is likely to be another devastating, small-region, high-intensity buzzsaw, like last year's Hurricane Michael, which practically erased towns in the Florida panhandle, or the 1935 Labor Day hurricane. [I'm not really a good person - I'm having more than a little schadenfreude that Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago resort is near the center of the storm's predicted path. But I'm not the only person who thought of that.]
According to the Insurance Information Institute, Florida has nearly $600 billion dollars of single family housing at risk from a Category 5 hurricane, leaving aside loss of life and injury.
My stories, compressed for those who've read this before
Some of my friends and colleagues have families still recovering from the impacts of 2017's Hurricanes Irma, Harvey, and Maria.
While I had to deal with these storms' impacts to infrastructure professionally, the hurricanes didn't have enormous personal impact. I was mainly supporting friends or covering for colleagues struggling to help family in Texas, Puerto Rico, and the Caribbean Islands. Our house was eight miles from the coast, so we only dealt with a downed tree and other cleanup, a few hours without power, and some blocked roads.
Because I have dumb hobbies, the most extreme weather dangers I ever encountered were while kayaking and canoeing. Five years ago, I was on a guided ocean kayaking trip that ran into an unpredicted storm squall. Perfect blue skies and calm one minute; near darkness, huge waves, practically solid rain, and 40-knot winds the next. The party got scattered all over half a dozen of the 10,000 Islands. I struggled to get off the windward side of a long isle, so the wind banged my kayak into mangroves for an hour, then I was paddling furiously to avoid being swept into the Gulf of Mexico. But we all survived without major harm, the guide managed to reconnect us without calling for rescue, and we arrived at our destination with good stories. I can only imagine what it's like to be exposed to worse conditions in a hurricane.
Up to that time, the most dangerous weather I'd run into was snow and ice storms. When I was a kid, the Blizzard of 1978 left my family stranded, without phones, power or heat, for five days. We had a fireplace, plenty of hardwood, and an ample store of dried and canned provisions, so it felt more like a rustic adventure than the dire situation it could have been. My brother and I thought 10-foot snowdrifts were the greatest fun ever - we spent more time outside than in, "helping" to dig out by making snow forts and tunnels with the neighbors' kids. Of course, it was followed with a spring of chores like putting up half a kilometer of snow fences, learning to drive a 40-hp farm tractor, and setting up a ham radio antenna and generator, as my city-raised parents had come to grasp what rural life really entailed.
14 votes -
Preparing for Hurricane Dorian: Storm trackers and other survival tools
5 votes -
After Katrina, a priceless musical archive was thought lost. It showed up in Torrance
6 votes -
Hurricane forecasts may be running headlong into the butterfly effect
8 votes -
The town fighting the climate crisis to stay afloat, one hurricane at at time
6 votes -
Tropical Storm Barry expected to landfall as hurricane; Mississippi River rising faster than expected
7 votes -
It takes years to fully recover from big storms like Sandy
6 votes -
Nearly eight months after Hurricane Michael, Florida Panhandle feels left behind
6 votes -
Young Puerto Ricans are leaving the island to escape the territory's debt
7 votes -
Hurricane Center reclassifies Michael to category 5, the first such storm to make landfall since 1992
7 votes -
How Hurricane Michael could affect Florida’s high-stakes midterms
7 votes -
Hurricane Florence, worries grow over half dozen nuclear power plants in storm's path
23 votes -
Frying Pan Ocean Cam: Hurricane Florence
7 votes -
Hurricane Florence isn't alone: Four powerful storms seen from space in one day
9 votes -
South Carolina officials won’t evacuate prison ahead of Hurricane Florence
13 votes