evo
Been here much more than a while
- Location
- My Island, WA
Saw on the news this morning FEMA only has 1200 bodies to respond to Florida.
Is that enough? I don’t know…
Is that enough? I don’t know…
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Not very relevant.Open season for political posts in tree-related threads?
What bullshit! I keep getting these FEMA fact check links, sounds like they are putting most their energy into PR and not providing..Not very relevant.
I will say national guard grounded their copters first 4 days here. And no one, even our elected officials, are impressed with FEMA response. We have done so much recovery on our own and will continue to rely more on our own communities and expect less of our government.
The way its been for millennia...... We have done so much recovery on our own and will continue to rely more on our own communities and expect less of our government.
Seriously!Open season for political posts in tree-related threads?
Ain't that the truth. That east coast is about to get a reality check.I had already starting planning my move to California in late 2004, but it took me a year to make all the preparations, which had me living in Palm Beach County through til Christmas of 2005. That hurricane season had me wondering how much longer people would stay there before the population generally started to move away and stop rebuilding that abomination. The history of Florida is really fucked up, and most of where people live now used to be uninhabitable; basically all wetlands. The first peoples of Florida never bothered to built permanent structures because hurricanes would inevitably destroy them,
much like the early attempts at building in Californias central valley, where storms would come every 15-25 years and flood the valley under 10-20 feet of water.
Both places, and many others where millions of people live where effectively "created" by the federal bureau of reclamation. There are so many places that will suffer exponentially more than others because they were built in places where it was never safe to build. They try to dredge out canals and build dams, but they are all built as cheaply as possible by the lowest bidders.
I don't know what the point of saying all this is, but I worry about the millions upon millions of people who are all one major disaster away from having their entire life turned upside down.
It's everywhere. Most dams cause serious ecological damage, killing rivers and wetlands, which leads to desertification, which starts a deeper negative feedback loop with myriad consequences. Cutting canals, draining and dredging are more noticably and immediately destructive. Deforestation and mining, and destructive agricultural systems... We need to clean up our act or Pachamama will clean herself of us.Ain't that the truth. That east coast is about to get a reality check.
There's no going back. We have to figure out the best way to move forward.I really hope it downgrades for those folk that stay. However, a lot of my friends on about climate change and electric vehicles. All I can say is greed and bad decisions have let the proverbial horse out the stable. Will be very difficult going forward for future genetations. How do we get land back to it's natural state.
Six years since the Camp fire, and we are waiting on funding for the last 11,000 trees that need to be cut. Last of four stages. People are moving back up there too! Asheville was worth 10x as much or more, you guys'll probably get it done 3x faster.I am so sorry it shook out like that for you Steve. What a friggen bummer. I appreciate that you were here trying to make things better around here.
We are out of the chicken with heads cut off phase, where you’re wondering if you should help with search and rescue or clearing a road of a huge tree. Now it’s mostly trees on houses, and trees hung up or partially uprooted. Company I work for has been doing insurance jobs, turns out charging about half what the average folks charge, oops, and homeowners all taking it in stride and everyone I talk to who had a tree fall on their house says they’re lucky. Which they are. Work has been challenging but in a good way. Also connected with a group of volunteers who are doing pro bono work, that’s getting more organized and feels good to help out there.
The grassroots organizing around here has been unreal. So proud of the people who live here. Still, a long fucking road ahead.