I would not. If I had a 22-year-old daughter at this exact moment
(8:45 AM ET Saturday), I'd tell her to shelter in place. It's hard to
say without knowing what, exactly, her living conditions are in terms
of the structure she's in, etc., but assuming she's in someplace that
has at least two floors, she should be fine.
The two quick reports I've found from NY1 and WNBC indicate that the
biggest risk is below Canal, south of where your daughter is, so as
long as she's prepared to bunker down, she should be fine.
> 2. Will taxis be operating in Manhattan Sunday morning (even when the buses
> and subways are offline)?
If there's a fare to be had, the hacks will try to get it. That being
said, I think the bigger struggle would be to find an *open* cab.
> 3. Where off of Manhattan island would you recommend trying to find a
> moderately priced, safe hotel room? Should I be looking in New Jersey (it
> seems like there are few places there that are not kind of close to a river
> at least), or more update or western New York?
Given the map released at 8 AM, I'd lean towards Jersey if only
because, at this moment, it will probably be easier for her to get out
there today.
Best of luck.
http://www.nyc.gov/html/tlc/downloads/pdf/industry_notice_for_hurricane_irene_zone_fares.pdf
Group: http://groups.google.com/group/tvornottv/topics
- NO TV: Hurricane Info [2 Updates]
Topic: NO TV: Hurricane InfoPGage <pga...@gmail.com> Aug 26 09:52PM -0700 ^
1. Would you evacuate if you were in a Zone B/C area before the City
requires it? It seems like, even if the chances of serious flooding are
minimal, waiting until you know for sure might be too late, since there will
be no way to get out of there.
2. Will taxis be operating in Manhattan Sunday morning (even when the buses
and subways are offline)?
3. Where off of Manhattan island would you recommend trying to find a
moderately priced, safe hotel room? Should I be looking in New Jersey (it
seems like there are few places there that are not kind of close to a river
at least), or more update or western New York?
Of course her mother and I would like to put her on a plane back to
civilization in California for a few days visit - aside from the ouch of the
cost of a r/t ticket with no notice, she does have a really good internship
that she has just started, and would not like to miss on Monday (or Tuesday,
if weather requires it).
David Bruggeman <bru...@yahoo.com> Aug 27 12:38AM -0700 ^
I can only speak with much confidence to general trends with the storm, which has been curving through the eastern part of the projected path over the last 24 hours or so. Points west and north of the NYC area seem to be a safer bet (current track places the storm center amidst Long Island shortly after 8 am Sunday), though heavy rain and wind are likely for at least 125 miles on either side of the eye. I would try to get out of Westchester, and aim for west of the Hudson. Probably not easily done, though Metro North Rail does go much further north and west than Scarsdale.
If there's a bridge crossing involved in her route, the earlier the better, since they take the early brunt of wind.
My employer is headquartered in Manhattan (I work in D.C.) and they indicated they will try and have some kind of messaging in place by Sunday evening wrt who should come in (if anyone) on Monday. If she hasn't already checked in with her internship place, that should probably be part of her conversations this weekend.
Something worth figuring out is how long it will take to restore service to NYC mass transit once an all-clear is sounded. If it's taking time to get trains to safe locations, it will take time to get them into operation for Monday. Even if your daughter is expected in on Monday, transit delays seem likely.
Best to everyone,
David
________________________________
From: PGage <pga...@gmail.com>
To: tvor...@googlegroups.com
Sent: Saturday, August 27, 2011 12:52 AM
Subject: [TV orNotTV] NO TV: Hurricane Info
My daughter (age 22) is currently living in what I think is referred to as the lower east side of Manhattan (near east 2nd street, around one of the alphabet avenues, I think A, B or C). Looking at the Hurricane Map for Manhattan, it seems like she is right on the border between Zone B & Zone C (which is marked for evacuation in the case of a Level 2 or 3 Hurricane).
They seem to be predicting that by the time it gets to NYC it will be Category 1 or even down to tropical storm, but the problem is, the national news seems to be saying that, regardless of the strength of the storm, it is moving slow enough, and it is large enough and targeted on NY Harbor, that there will be a hell of a lot of water in the storm surge, which will likely flood coastal areas of Manhattan. I am trying to do 2 things: 1 - persuade my potentially foolishly brave young adult daughter to be better safe than sorry and leave her apartment tomorrow before the buses and trains stop, and 2 - if successful with #1, figure out where a safe place is to move her to (trying to get a hotel room). I was able to get a reservation for sunday night at a national chain hotel around 35th street and 6th avenue, which looks to be a safe location under even the worst case scenarios, but was not able to find a vacancy for Saturday night at any medium priced (3
star or so) hotel in that "white" (safe) zone. The problem there is that the buses and trains are going to stop at Noon, so even though she probably does not need to leave her apartment tomorrow, if she leaves sunday morning she will have to walk 2 miles to the hotel (unless the taxis will still be operating?).
I could probably find a room for her for saturday and sunday out of Manhattan, but I can't with confidence figure out where to send her out of the line of fire. Much of New Jersey seems to be in danger, and, while she has friends in the Scarsdale area, it seems they might be in some danger too.
Here are my questions for anyone familiar with the area and conditions:
1. Would you evacuate if you were in a Zone B/C area before the City requires it? It seems like, even if the chances of serious flooding are minimal, waiting until you know for sure might be too late, since there will be no way to get out of there.
2. Will taxis be operating in Manhattan Sunday morning (even when the buses and subways are offline)?
3. Where off of Manhattan island would you recommend trying to find a moderately priced, safe hotel room? Should I be looking in New Jersey (it seems like there are few places there that are not kind of close to a river at least), or more update or western New York?
> 1. Would you evacuate if you were in a Zone B/C area before the CityI would not. If I had a 22-year-old daughter at this exact moment
> requires it? It seems like, even if the chances of serious flooding are
> minimal, waiting until you know for sure might be too late, since there will
> be no way to get out of there.
(8:45 AM ET Saturday), I'd tell her to shelter in place. It's hard to
say without knowing what, exactly, her living conditions are in terms
of the structure she's in, etc., but assuming she's in someplace that
has at least two floors, she should be fine.
The two quick reports I've found from NY1 and WNBC indicate that the
biggest risk is below Canal, south of where your daughter is, so as
long as she's prepared to bunker down, she should be fine. (SNIP)
Do you know what her neighbors are doing? There are two sets of issues
with a storm like this, danger during the storm, and dealing with loss
of services in the days after. As others have said, she should be in
minimal danger if she stays indoors and away from upwind windows. And
if there is a ridiculous amount of flooding she can go upstairs in her
building. After the storm the power will probably be out for hours if
not days and it's possible that water service will be shut down. If
the first floor of buildings are subjected to flooding that means
grocery stores, convenience stores, and restaurants will be shut down
for days. If the tunnels flood and there's damage to the bridges, it's
possible that food delivery to stores will be delayed. If the
neighbors are around, this is one time that people instinctively stick
together and help each other out.
-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Re: [TV orNotTV] NO TV: Hurricane Info
From: PGage <pga...@gmail.com>
Date: Sat, August 27, 2011 11:30 am
To: tvor...@googlegroups.com
On Sat, Aug 27, 2011 at 5:59 AM, Joe Hass <hassg...@gmail.com> wrote:> 1. Would you evacuate if you were in a Zone B/C area before the CityI would not. If I had a 22-year-old daughter at this exact moment
> requires it? It seems like, even if the chances of serious flooding are
> minimal, waiting until you know for sure might be too late, since there will
> be no way to get out of there.
(8:45 AM ET Saturday), I'd tell her to shelter in place. It's hard to
say without knowing what, exactly, her living conditions are in terms
of the structure she's in, etc., but assuming she's in someplace that
has at least two floors, she should be fine.
The two quick reports I've found from NY1 and WNBC indicate that the
biggest risk is below Canal, south of where your daughter is, so as
long as she's prepared to bunker down, she should be fine. (SNIP)
Thanks to David, Joe and Ron for the info and advice. Looks like we are going with the hunker down approach (she is in a second floor apartment). I could not get her off the island by this morning anyway, and everything I have read, as reflected by the feedback here, is that unless she is directly flooded by the storm surge, the biggest danger would come from being out and hit by debris caught in the strong winds, so I am nixing any plan for her to walk or taxi to the hotel I found for her sunday morning. I did email her a map from her apartment to her closest evacuation site (a high school) just in case. I do keep hearing from people like sheriffs in North Carolina on TV that more people die in hurricanes from "inland flooding than coastal storm surge" (they repeat it just like that, as if it is a mantra in that part of the country) - but I am guessing that does not apply to a place like Manhattan (where rivers ring the edges, and do not thread through the mainland, and they have such an effective drainage system) - at least, I have not read any warnings about flooding in NYC from anything except storm surge or getting caught in the subways or tunnels.
Good luck to everyone from this list on the eastern seaboard - last week we were amused out here by the quake anxiety 300 miles from the epicenter of a 5.8; this week we are concerned about the destructive potential of a force that seems more powerful (and is more mysterious to those of us out west).
"last week we were amused out here by the quake anxiety 300 miles from the epicenter of a 5.8; this week we are concerned about the destructive potential of a force that seems more powerful (and is more mysterious to those of us out west). "Not to downplay your concerns...hurricanes are serious business...but speaking as a guy down here in hurricane alley, you've probably hit the nail on the head there. Most of your worry is likely caused by your lack of experience with them, just as everybody in Virginia was freaking out about "only a 5.8 quake." As already pointed out, the biggest dangers are getting trapped at ground-level or lower during a storm surge, or being outside playing in the wind and getting hit by a shingle or other debris that gets peeled off the roof of a building. If she's on the second floor, all she has to do is stay inside, away from the windows and she should be fine. Bad case scenario, she may get a little nervous if the water rises higher than expected, and she sees it slowly creeping toward her up the stairs if the first floor gets flooded. But that would take a pretty incredible storm surge for the water to rise to the 15+ feet you'd need to reach a second floor apartment. I've already heard reports that Irene's not expected to get any stronger than Category I as it moves north, and likely will be downgraded to tropical storm strength by the time it reaches NYC. If that happens, then it would be akin to what we refer to down here in Florida as "September". :)I'm sure she'll be fine, but I'll be pulling for you. We may need the favor returned later this season.
Irrelevant sidebar: Duane Reade, named for the site of the original
warehouse supplying the first three stores (on Broadway between Duane
and Reade), before the chain began its expansion that threatens to
sink our island.
Even more irrelevant sidebar: Until us Chicago folks finally get our
sweet revenge for you New York weasels taking away the Marshall
Field's brand by slapping a bunch of Walgreens on your street corners.
We have Walgreens stores here as well, just not very many -- under
that name. But your revenge is complete, if you consider who owns
Duane Reade....
I'm avoiding the coverage, only periodically checking the blurbs on
various websites. I hope everyone can endure the lastest round of man
vs nature, but whether they do or don't, journalists won't aid the
process.
> --
> TV or Not TV .... The Smartest (TV) People!
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--
Kevin M. (RPCV)
-----Original Message-----
From: tvor...@googlegroups.com [mailto:tvor...@googlegroups.com] On
Behalf Of Bill Partsch
Sent: Saturday, August 27, 2011 6:00 PM
To: tvor...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [TV orNotTV] NO TV: Hurricane Info
--
So, Macys is run from Cincinnati, just up the street from WKRP's fictitious
Flimm building and the Kroger HQ. (Macy's is at 7 W. 7th street, Flimm is
617 Vine, not too far away, Kroger is up the street on Vine.)
Ah, because New York never has bad weather or blackouts. No, wait...
As a former Boy Scout who grew up in tornado country, I've got more
flashlights than I care to count (including a bunch of LED models I
picked up for 99 cents each at Fry's) and always keep a few weeks
worth of food in the house. Any emergency lasting longer than that
probably ends with zombies or an invading army roaming the streets.
--
Ed Dravecky III
http://www.fencon.org/
Gives a whole new meaning to the phrase "saturation coverage."
jd
On Sun, Aug 28, 2011 at 2:45 AM, Terry Knab <te...@knab.org> wrote:
> Directv currently has WJLA up on one of its channels with non stop coverage.
>
>
>
Woke up at 7 and watched a half-hour of WCBS's "news." In quotes,
because for the entire 30 minutes, it was nothing but live location
shots, reporters saying the same thing over and over, and no actual
information about the storm's progress. (The meteorologist was taking
a nap?)
Gives a whole new meaning to the phrase "saturation coverage."
CNN's coverage got better when Candy Crowly (sp?) came on and did a real job anchoring the coverage, providing some cohesion and perspective, which Cooper was unable to do for whatever reason from his location (she seemed to be outside too, but also seemed to have access to a monitor and maybe a computer hooked to the internet, since she knew more stuff than the viewer, while Cooper most of the time seemed to know less stuff than the viewer).
Howie Kurtz, who I guess did not have a show this morning, dumps on the media hype of Irene
{http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2011/08/28/hurricane-irene-hype-how-the-media-went-overboard.html}
(SNIP) Channel surfing throughout the night and morning, I found that:
(1) CNN simply sucks, for all the reasons previously stated, plus I
realize that I can no longer stand Wolf Blitzer. (SNIP)
(2) MSNBC wasn't much better -- too bright and brittle; ok for me for
political coverage but for this. (SNIP)
(4) WABC: I agree -- they had the best shots, but the reporting was
mediocre.
(6) WNBC: to me, the best of the lot. (SNIP)
If that's the Anne Thompson from NBC, then I'm thrilled, having been a
huge fan of hers from her days in Detroit at WDIV. She was much
beloved for her reporting back then, and I'm glad she's still got the
proverbial chops.
On Sun, Aug 28, 2011 at 4:31 PM, David Lynch <djl...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
> Kurtz gets a huge benefit from the fact that, as a media critic, he pretty
> gets to wait until the storm is over and then tell people they did it wrong.
> I wouldn't say that New York dodged a bullet, but it turned out to be a much
> smaller caliber than it could have been. The prediction was for a category
> two storm on Friday morning, if not later. If the reverse had come to pass
> -- that Irene was forecast to weaken to a tropical storm just as it hit NYC
> but actually was a category 2 hurricane, I'm sure he'd be complaining that
> there wasn't enough attention being given to Irene before it came and caused
> billions in damage. And, honestly, when you look at the accuracy of the
> forecasts for Irene relative to the statistics, the National Hurricane
> Center (who absolutely everyone relies on heavily when it comes to
> forecasting hurricanes) did a hell of a job with this one.
>
> Irene got more coverage than it might have if not for hitting New York, but
> I think that the prediction of a category 2 storm hitting a major
> metropolitan area would have been big news, even if it had been somewhere
> like Miami or Houston that would shrug off a less-intense cyclone. By the
> time it became clear that Irene was going to be somewhat weaker than had
> been forecast, it was too late to ratchet down the hype machine. Anchors had
> been called in on a weekend, reporters sent out into the field, satellite
> trucks rented, etc. etc. so the show must go on and they had to make do with
> what they could find. I've also gotten the impression that flooding has been
> much worse in the suburbs than in the city itself, which, of course, means
> it's ignored.
I completely and totally disagree. This is a common excuse: "We've
sent a reporter, so we might as well use the video, even if it there's
nothing there." Now let me introduce you to someone called an
"editor", who, in theory, should be able to make what are called
"editorial decisions" in what you use and what you don't. You'd
ideally like a grownup in that chair. Now, I'm aware that this is not
what usually happens in real life, but you know what? I think it's
okay to hold people to a little higher standard.
I have a Facebook friend who posted a link to a huge climate change
denier who proceed to say that it really wasn't a hurricane because he
found four random data points that showed onshore winds at less than
50 MPH, so therefore the media *and* the government were lying. I said
(in a much larger form), "You're really going to argue that NOAA is
lying?" At which point she said "Well, I mean the media's lying. And I
don't trust a government official." This is what the behavior leads
to: people just start believing that everything's a lie. There's, of
course, no right answer.
http://www.nbcwashington.com/on-air/as-seen-on/Brian_Williams_on_Pat_Collins
_Washington_DC-128560243.html
BTW fortunately I didn't lose power, but Comcast service has been
intermittent all day.
-----Original Message-----
From: tvor...@googlegroups.com [mailto:tvor...@googlegroups.com] On
He also made a cameo appearance on the NBC affiliate here where he made fun
of reporter Pat Collins' hat:
http://www.nbcwashington.com/on-air/as-seen-on/Brian_Williams_on_Pat_Collins
_Washington_DC-128560243.html
BTW fortunately I didn't lose power, but Comcast service has been
intermittent all day.
On Sun, Aug 28, 2011 at 2:31 PM, David Lynch <djl...@gmail.com> wrote:Kurtz gets a huge benefit from the fact that, as a media critic, he pretty gets to wait until the storm is over and then tell people they did it wrong. I wouldn't say that New York dodged a bullet, but it turned out to be a much smaller caliber than it could have been. The prediction was for a category two storm on Friday morning, if not later. If the reverse had come to pass -- that Irene was forecast to weaken to a tropical storm just as it hit NYC but actually was a category 2 hurricane, I'm sure he'd be complaining that there wasn't enough attention being given to Irene before it came and caused billions in damage. And, honestly, when you look at the accuracy of the forecasts for Irene relative to the statistics, the National Hurricane Center (who absolutely everyone relies on heavily when it comes to forecasting hurricanes) did a hell of a job with this one.On Sun, Aug 28, 2011 at 14:27, PGage <pga...@gmail.com> wrote:Howie Kurtz, who I guess did not have a show this morning, dumps on the media hype of Irene
{http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2011/08/28/hurricane-irene-hype-how-the-media-went-overboard.html}
Irene got more coverage than it might have if not for hitting New York, but I think that the prediction of a category 2 storm hitting a major metropolitan area would have been big news, even if it had been somewhere like Miami or Houston that would shrug off a less-intense cyclone. By the time it became clear that Irene was going to be somewhat weaker than had been forecast, it was too late to ratchet down the hype machine. Anchors had been called in on a weekend, reporters sent out into the field, satellite trucks rented, etc. etc. so the show must go on and they had to make do with what they could find. I've also gotten the impression that flooding has been much worse in the suburbs than in the city itself, which, of course, means it's ignored.
I think I dispute some of this David. While the storm was predicted to be Category 2 when it hit North Carolina (and I believe that is what happened), as early as Friday morning lots of experts were saying that it would likely be Category 1 by the time it got to NYC - and some were saying it might even be Tropical Storm by then, which it was (caveat here, my Friday morning is 3 hours earlier than NY Friday morning, so that might be part of the discrepancy). This is what I mean by the cablers regularly confusing worst case scenarios (it might be Category 2) with most likely scenarios (which by Friday morning I believe was Category 1).
Additionally, the point of critics like Howie (and myself) is not that this was a non-story, or not deserving of high-volume coverage (it was an important story, and justified a lot of investment of resources and time in coverage). The point is that the nature of the coverage was focused on fanning anxiety in order to create viewer interest and decrease viewer turn-over during commercials. Instead of providing sober reportage that viewers could consume on as needed basis, they are motivated to create viewer dependency on their coverage by over-emphasizing the most dramatic and frightening aspects of the story.
I don't blame CNN for making me stay up all night watching a glorified weather report 3000 miles away from home - my own neurotic anxiety about a (newly) grown child is the source of that, and I take responsibility for it. I do blame them for giving me a distorted understanding of what was going on 3000 miles away, and significantly complicating the planning and decision-making process for the event. By Friday night we (my wife and I) were pretty clear the Hurricane would not be Category 2 by the time it got to NYC, and were just trying to figure out how extensive the fall out from a Category 1 would be. It turns out CNN knew pretty accurately what the Category 1 fall out would be, and new it would likely be Category 1 or higher, but spent the vast majority of its on air time talking about what the Category 2 consequences - without even doing us the service of clearly labeling what they were doing. I repeatedly found myself Friday afternoon and evening trying to resolve what seemed like an unacknowledged contradiction between what almost all of the experts interviewed on CNN were saying (this will be a Cat 1 or Trop Storm by the time it gets to NYC) and the near hysterical commentary/advice from CNN reporters and anchors that people should be getting out of lower Manhattan (with little or nor attention to the subtleties of which Zone people were in). Relatively few people in Manhattan, and even in lower Manhattan, live in the Zone A areas, so this seemed that CNN was saying that even if you are not in Zone A, the smart thing to do was to evacuate. It took me a while, but I eventually figured out that this was not accurate, and that unless you were in Zone A, the smart thing to do was stay home.
And before that, Federated decided that it would be more efficient to
rename the established local stores that they had bought up. So all of
the sudden, Pittsburghers who had been shopping at Horne's for decades
got to shop at Lazarus, which was a meaningless name outside its roots
in Ohio. At least Federated only had to design one ad for all the
markets involved, even if the information on Indianapolis store hours
wasn't useful for most of the potential customers in other cities who
saw it.
After the acquisition of May, they went with the Macy's and
Bloomingdale's names, which at least had some cachet nationally.
On Sun, Aug 28, 2011 at 16:54, PGage <pga...@gmail.com> wrote:I think I dispute some of this David. While the storm was predicted to be Category 2 when it hit North Carolina (and I believe that is what happened), as early as Friday morning lots of experts were saying that it would likely be Category 1 by the time it got to NYC - and some were saying it might even be Tropical Storm by then, which it was (caveat here, my Friday morning is 3 hours earlier than NY Friday morning, so that might be part of the discrepancy). This is what I mean by the cablers regularly confusing worst case scenarios (it might be Category 2) with most likely scenarios (which by Friday morning I believe was Category 1).
I just looked through the NHC archive and it's less clear about the strength than I remember seeing, so it could be that my memory or some forecaster I saw/heard/read confused "could be category 2" and "will be category 2". The 5 AM EDT advisory from Friday -- which the east coast woke up to -- predicted a strong category 2 over Albemarle Sound, NC on the wee hours of Sunday and a tropical storm over western Maine on the wee hours of Monday, with no intermediate predictions. (This was when Irene was still supposed to hit NC as a major hurricane.) By 11 AM Eastern (8 AM Pacific), they had a forecast point just offshore from Atlantic City, or 70 miles due south of the southern tip of Staten Island, with an intensity right near the cat 1/cat 2 line. I wouldn't rule out a category 2 storm over/near NYC from either of these forecasts, but it's not explicit.
Additionally, the point of critics like Howie (and myself) is not that this was a non-story, or not deserving of high-volume coverage (it was an important story, and justified a lot of investment of resources and time in coverage). The point is that the nature of the coverage was focused on fanning anxiety in order to create viewer interest and decrease viewer turn-over during commercials. Instead of providing sober reportage that viewers could consume on as needed basis, they are motivated to create viewer dependency on their coverage by over-emphasizing the most dramatic and frightening aspects of the story.
I disagree with your interpretation of his piece here. When he makes comments like "Every producer knew that to abandon the coverage even briefly—say, to cover the continued fighting in Libya—was to risk driving viewers elsewhere", that's not about the tone of the coverage, it's about the quantity of coverage. He does take them to task for their tone as well, but that wasn't the only thing he criticized.
Having flipped around for much of Saturday night trying to find
coverage I could settle into, I found MSNBC actually had the best
organized anchor desk and the least hyperbolic coverage of the cable
networks. From the wee hours of Sunday morning until noon Eastern,
Alex Witt did a pretty amazing job of keeping coverage moving, didn't
dwell on the hype, and asked reasonable questions of guests and
reporters. MSNBC was also skeptical of NHC efforts to keep Irene a
hurricane when their own TWC meteorologist was saying it's a tropical
storm with a lot of storm surge.
Bonus: MSNBC wasn't using a lightning-flash background for their
coverage then way CNN was. It was darn near epilepsy inducing and
designed to catch the eye or ratchet up tension, not inform or provide
context.
donz5 <do...@aol.com> wrote:
> (2) MSNBC wasn't much better -- too bright and brittle; ok for me forHaving flipped around for much of Saturday night trying to find
> political coverage but for this.
coverage I could settle into, I found MSNBC actually had the best
organized anchor desk and the least hyperbolic coverage of the cable
networks. From the wee hours of Sunday morning until noon Eastern,
Alex Witt did a pretty amazing job of keeping coverage moving, didn't
dwell on the hype, and asked reasonable questions of guests and
reporters. MSNBC was also skeptical of NHC efforts to keep Irene a
hurricane when their own TWC meteorologist was saying it's a tropical
storm with a lot of storm surge.
Bonus: MSNBC wasn't using a lightning-flash background for their
coverage then way CNN was. It was darn near epilepsy inducing and
designed to catch the eye or ratchet up tension, not inform or provide
context.
1. Would you evacuate if you were in a Zone B/C area before the City requires it? It seems like, even if the chances of serious flooding are minimal, waiting until you know for sure might be too late, since there will be no way to get out of there.
2. Will taxis be operating in Manhattan Sunday morning (even when the buses and subways are offline)?
3. Where off of Manhattan island would you recommend trying to find a moderately priced, safe hotel room? Should I be looking in New Jersey (it seems like there are few places there that are not kind of close to a river at least), or more update or western New York?
http://talkingpointsmemo.com/archives/2011/08/keep_your_wits_about_you.php
The main points are:
State and local governments don't rely on TV coverage when they make
disaster plans so TV hysteria doesn't cause them to overreact.
The storm passed over a number of major TV markets, notably DC and
NYC, and that's a reason for so much coverage.
The National Hurricane Center has become much better in tracking the
path of hurricanes in the last couple of years, and in the case of
Irene, it was a fairly uncomplicated storm and all of the tracking
models were consistent and accurate. The science of tracking the
intensity is nowhere near as good as tracking the path so long term
projections of intensity are worthless.
On Mon, Aug 29, 2011 at 1:41 PM, PGage <pga...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> Is this a response to the Ron Pauls's of the world? I have not read much
> criticism of the NHC, or suggestions they were overreacting to TV News
> hysteria. I have read criticism of public officials, but I reject that.
> Shutting down the subways, evacuating the shorelines, these were all
> responsible and prudent decisions. I thought the President, governors and
> mayors all handled this situation very well. Closing down the subway system
> because of a real (even if less than 50%) threat to public safety is smart;
> putting a dozen cameras and reporters on a low-lying, narrow sea wall to get
> dramatic images that distort what is actually happening in the region, or
> hyping 48 hours in advance unlikely worst case scenarios as likely, to the
> exclusion of focus on more likely precautions, and using on screen text and
> graphics that exaggerate the impact of actual events - these are not the
> fault of the NHS, but market driven (as opposed to public service driven)
> cable news.
>