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Was Irene Over-hyped by the NY Politicians and Media?

Reblogger Pam Hills
Home Stager with Innovative Artistry

I have to re-blog this as Phil sent me the nicest email this morning!  We always enjoy reading his blogs & so this was such a "challenging" subject to respond to this time. 

In my mind, it was especially challenging.  Just for the record.  The comment is true that he wishes he could go back & change the title...

Such a nice guy to send me an email personally!  Truly it was appreciated & it was difficult to post my comment, but he was very kind & responsive.

Thank you Phil, I think that others realize as well, it was to spark the comments to be learned from for the future so others do not get complacent. 

He told me that was his fear for his area because they were spared they would be in the future....  I hope not & thank you Phil!  You did stir the pot on this controversy (lol), but a great forum to learn & hear the other experiences!  (sharing experiences is how we learn)  I had to post this for his sake & to make public his kindness.

Original content by J. Philip Faranda License # 49FA1074963

Note: This was written from a very New York Point of view, with local sentiment on how Mike Bloomberg  and our local media handled the run up to the arrival of the storm. Please read this comment on the NY Times and this one from my fellow New Yorkers to get some perspective. I would never, ever, downplay or minimize the loss of others, and Ann and I send thoughts and prayers out to those who lost loved ones, property, and power. Bread panic

If you are in Westchester County reading this, then you survived Hurricane Tropical Storm Irene. We are not in a post apocolyptic disaster. We aren't subsisting on water we saved in the bathtub. And the 20 extra D batteries we bought a few days ago are still in their wrappers. I share concern and sympathy for the folks elsewhere who sustained destruction, lost property, and in some cases, loved ones. That is a tragedy that can't be measured.

Our area was fortunate to just have the isolated flooding and a handful of fallen trees that I've seen today. But those things are not terribly unusual for a heavy rain storm, and one wonders if the warnings and fear running up to Irene's arrival weren't just a tad hyperbolic, to our future detriment. 

I have never seen supermarket shelves emptied. I have never seen a run on bottled water and batteries. And I have never heard the use of the word "hunker" with such regularity as the past 72 hours. When I went to the Chilmark A & P Friday, I half expected to see Charlton Heston pushing 2 carts loaded with Soilent Green out the exit the way people were behaving. Elderly folks were loading up on rations. Complete strangers talking in line about how to tape windows and cook with Sterno. Bread, eggs and milk were cleaned out (is it customary to eat french toast during a natural disaster?). It was eerie, and the foreboding was palpable. 

And the media...news people somber, and weather people were excited to the point of being salacious. Why do weather guys get so excited about severe weather? This guy felt that reportage required that he expose himself to seafoam that probably contained raw sewage.

We went to bed concerned about blackouts, a tree falling through our ceiling or car, and our basement flooding. We woke up to a lot of rain, which is not the end of mankind, and that was it. No hurricane. No eye of the storm. CVS in Arcadian shopping center flooded but was just soggy when I went there today. And why did I go there? To get Benedryl for my wife, who got a nasty case of poison ivy preparing our yard for a hurricane that never happened. The worst thing about Irene for my family, literally, is the itching. We are very, very lucky, in light of the news elsewhere, which is destruction and tragedy. 

I am all for erring on the side of caution, but to my way of thinking, the most dangerous thing about this storm for our New York area this far inland is that many people won't take warnings so seriously next time. We didn't need to retreat to the fallout shelter. All those extra batteries will be good for Christmas, but that's it. We're lucky this time, but many people may not be as careful next storm- and that is not a good thing. 

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Peter Pfann @ eXp Realty Pfanntastic Properties in Victoria, Since 1986.
eXp Realty, Victoria BC www.pfanntastic.com - Victoria, BC
Talk To or Text Peter 250-213-9490

From a western Canadian perspective, where we never had any bad weather during it all, it sure seemed like the world had come to an end (or was about to)

Aug 30, 2011 06:18 AM
Pam Hills
Innovative Artistry - Kendall, FL
ASP/IAHSP- Stager Miami, FL, Creative Minds Innovatively At Work

Dear Mr. & Mrs. Pfann~Yes, it did...while it could have been worse, it was the pretty tragic for many.

Aug 30, 2011 01:05 PM
J. Philip Faranda
Howard Hanna Rand Realty - Yorktown Heights, NY
Associate Broker / Office Manager

Pam, thanks very much for your kind words. Had I known this would get the exposure it did I would have emphasized my concern for future warnings more and less on the mild local damage. 

Aug 30, 2011 01:25 PM