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December 08, 2006

Ernesto Strikes Out; Next Year On Deck

Charles

The Hurricane Season of 2006—in the U.S., that is—was a dud. That is, if you like hurricanes, evacuations, insurance claims ...

The latest Click here to learn about third-party website links from both government agency Click here to learn about third-party website links and academic research Click here to learn about third-party website links sources suggests that 2006 was a no-hurricane year thanks to El Niño. The change in oceans directly affects hurricanes, which are brewed in the air over the oceans. Naturally, next year promises to be a doozy.

The news report added: "No hurricanes hit the U.S. Atlantic coast in 2006—only the 11th time that has occurred since 1945."

Lull before the storm?

October 27, 2006

Adopt A Homeless Pet From New Orleans Today!

Charles

Kitty cats being distributedWednesday afternoon, Wells Fargo's 40-foot semi-trailer from the Cartwright Ranch in Benbrook, Texas, arrived at Monster Park Click here to learn about third-party website links in San Francisco. Normally, the truck arrives with the Wells Fargo stagecoach and horses on board, for an appearance at a community parade or other event. But this was a special trip: on board were 80 homeless cats and dogs from New Orleans and the area wrecked by hurricanes Katrina and Rita over a year ago.

Only a fraction of displaced people have returned to the New Orleans area, and there are thousands of animals living on the street Click here to learn about third-party website links.Monster Park stadiumThere are few local options for adoption and fostering. There is little for homeless animals to scavenge to eat, and demolition leaves strays further displaced. The only viable option is to transport them out of Louisiana.

Cody Riess of Three Wishes Foundation Click here to learn about third-party website links, a non-profit rescue resource in New Orleans, has organized a national adoption event for kittens, puppies, cats, and dogs rescued from the streets of the city post-Katrina. Animal care groups across the country are taking part.

"The disaster was at such a scale that we are overwhelmed here. By transporting a number of animals out of state, the goal is to save as many animals as possible from having to be returned to the disaster zone of New Orleans' streets," said Cody. "We have been working night and day to solve this problem."

Kitty catsThe Southern Animal Foundation Click here to learn about third-party website links has recently received a HSUS grant to spay and neuter the growing population of strays that are still living in New Orleans. Riess coordinates organizations to spay and neuter dozens of animals EACH DAY. All the animals have health certificates, rabies tags, vaccinations and micro chips, and they are spayed or neutered before leaving the city.

Several Northern California rescue groups received animals that will be offered for adoption at fairs and events scheduled this weekend, including:

Each animal is "sponsored" by a group whose adoption approval processes screen homes that meet their criteria.

October 09, 2006

Honoring Good Ideas

Charles

Imagine: Hovercoaches!Today we celebrate the strength of ideas Click here to learn about third-party website links and offer our own award nominations for Preparedness on a Personal Scale:

Any Preparedness inventions you’d like to nominate? Let us know!

October 06, 2006

The Salvation Army, Helping Communities Rebuild

Charles

In the hurricane that devastated Galveston, Texas, in 1900 Click here to learn about third-party website links, at least 6,000 people perished and most of the city's buildings were obliterated. Damage in GalvestonAmerica had become an industrial power in that era, and the technology of the time—telegraph, newspapers, telephone and telegraph—enabled news and recovery to travel to the farthest reaches. The disaster got a huge response from concerned Americans.

The Salvation Army, 20 years in the U.S. by that time, sent a big delegation to the stricken city to provide relief Click here to learn about third-party website links. "From these beginnings, The Salvation Army has developed local, regional and national disaster services programs," the Army's website states. Today, The Salvation Army has a substantial disaster response program in place Click here to learn about third-party website links to aid community recovery.

Check from Charles SutroIn 1893, Charles Sutro Click here to learn about third-party website links, of the vaunted San Francisco family, gave The Salvation Army a donation of $100. (The check was drawn on Wells Fargo Bank, the vaunted San Francisco institution.)

I salute The Salvation Arny, on scene still in New Orleans, and with a recovery team in Nickel Mines, Pennsylvania Click here to learn about third-party website links, to assist those folks how ever they can.

September 01, 2006

High Profile Hurricanes Spur Preparedness Communities

Charles

Hurricane experts have lowered expectations Click here to learn about third-party website links for the remainder of this year's season in the Atlantic. Hurricane John Click here to learn about third-party website links, on the other hand, has been upgraded to Category 3 and looms over western Mexico. The upshot is it's hurricane season—some are rougher than others. One year Carolina, another year Baja ...

Are there lessons here? This week has seen a glut Click here to learn about third-party website links of "Lessons of Katrina" media. The biggest issue is still the slow pace of rebuilding, and anger at government Click here to learn about third-party website links as a result. But as I've written, there is another movement of people rebuilding their communities through communication as well as hammers and nails. The blogosphere from the Gulf coast Click here to learn about third-party website links is thriving and doing great things bringing people toward a common goal Click here to learn about third-party website links.

Today I discovered HurricaneMind Click here to learn about third-party website links, whose aim is to collect people's thoughts as hurricanes threaten—and in real time, too. The blog is trying to build a wiki resource and real-time action and news. As people reckon their actions, they go to the blog and see what other people are thinking and how their choices are taking shape. It's instant communication with neighbors in the region. Movement to hardware stores, to evacuation routes and to shelters are spontaneously coordinated as a community of informed, prepared people forms.

It's "buzz." Not buzz about soft drinks or celebrity fashion, either. It's buzz about getting the kids to a safe place, about getting plywood or a hotel room. It's buzz about keeping the community whole, even as a Cat 5 comes howling in.

It could redefine the community and go macro, couldn't it? After a world community begins to emerge, we all band together with professor E.O. Wilson Click here to learn about third-party website links, whose new book Click here to learn about third-party website links calls for a world community of science believers and non-believers alike to organize preparedness against man-made environmental tragedies Click here to learn about third-party website links. Wilson's call is this side of Utopia—salvation of endangered species means salvation for all life. And salvation is important to most every belief.

Think of it: a new paradigm for life on earth based on disaster preparedness. It's way too simple, isn't it?

Guided By History will take a break over the long Labor Day weekend. We'll be back Tuesday, September 5th.

August 31, 2006

CIMSS = Awe2

Charles

Ernesto The National Hurricane Center Click here to learn about third-party website links has declared a "Hurricane Watch" Click here to learn about third-party website links (scroll down page) for the Carolinas as Ernesto gains momentum.

Then, about 6,500 nautical miles west, Hurricane John Click here to learn about third-party website links continues its assault on Mexico's Pacific coast.

The Cooperative Institute for Meteorological Satellite Studies Click here to learn about third-party website links operates at the University of Wisconsin-Madison Space Science and Engineering Center. CIMSS develops techniques to improve forecasting tornadoes and hurricanes. The scientists there play "a major role in the transfer of new technology into operational practice," according to their Mission Statement.

Jen O'Leary adds, "SSEC is helping out as one of the US geostationary weather satellites moves to Latin America...the satellite is in such a position that we can see Ernesto dissipating along the seaboard with one minute imagery. Usually we get imagery every three hours. It's really amazing." Click here to learn about third-party website links

JohnThe work they do is daily, ongoing and dedicated to making all the complicated gear tell us something. As scientists, they also get the opportunity to do groundbreaking stuff—satisfying to them and valuable to us. In sum, they do cool stuff that makes property more secure and helps saves lives, darn it.

But enough formality—let's look at cool science! (CIMSS helps you enable JAVA for their rippin' movies here Click here to learn about third-party website links.) Here's Ernesto (image Click here to learn about third-party website links and movie Click here to learn about third-party website links) and here's John (image Click here to learn about third-party website links and movie Click here to learn about third-party website links).

And meet Kristy (image Click here to learn about third-party website links and movie Click here to learn about third-party website links). She's on her way...

August 28, 2006

And Now, Another Katrina Anniversary Story

Charles

One year after Katrina Click here to learn about third-party website links overtook the Gulf coast region and submerged New Orleans, media are rabid to do Anniversary pieces. (Guided By History was first with the story last week. Ahem.) As everyone seeks the high road, the upshot of all this reporting is the courage of the people and their rebuilding efforts Click here to learn about third-party website links, and the singular importance of preparedness Click here to learn about third-party website links.

New Orleans and the other Gulf areas slammed by Katrina a year ago get two anniversary visits this week Click here to learn about third-party website links Click here to learn about third-party website links as the cameras roll. While the president appears there, Ernesto is expected to arrive in Florida by Wednesday Click here to learn about third-party website links.

Maybe all the attention is our best gift to Katrina survivors. It reminds us to keep an eye out for our neighbors as a major part of our preparedness kit. We simply can't let this happen to each other. It also reminds us that our situation is precarious, wherever we live—on the fault line, in tornado alley, at the base of a volcano. We all could be the next New Orleans with little warning.

August 24, 2006

The Hero That Is New Orleans

Charles

Tropical Storm Debby Click here to learn about third-party website links is gaining strength out there in the Atlantic. News and weather agencies are watching it, as they tend to do. nola.com Click here to learn about third-party website links is on it as well, with links to evacuation and preparedness right there with storm tracking. New Orleans is justifiably antsy—no other North American place is a better study in the hows and whys of being ready.

SealI can't get over New Orleans. After a year of being knocked about by storms from the ocean and from various capitals, the city is doing everything it can to put itself back in place, step by step Click here to learn about third-party website links. It's a real study in the resiliency of people, too. Lots of people from outside the Big Easy are coming in, as we've posted. And a lot of evacuees from last year are staying away for whatever reason—a chance to start fresh Click here to learn about third-party website links, or maybe no other option Click here to learn about third-party website links. New Orleans, nevertheless, rolls on Click here to learn about third-party website links.

The city was so completely savaged by Katrina Click here to learn about third-party website links and the aftermath Click here to learn about third-party website links. And while it will take time, rebuilding is going on daily: People live in New Orleans and are working to get their home in order. Let's just keep our fingers crossed that the next "Big One" Click here to learn about third-party website links is a long way off.

And when it comes, we'll all be prepared and ready for it.

August 21, 2006

"Go South, Young Man!"

Charles

Is New Orleans becoming a frontier?

Reuters has a story today Click here to learn about third-party website links about regular folks moving to New Orleans to help the city rebuild. But it's not just Good Samaritans. They are entrepreneurs, people with a sense of adventure, and value hunters. These people are moving there to carve out a little piece of the future for themselves.

I, Monster!"The largest contingent of new Reuters piece continues, "are Latino workers who are ... doing much of the city's renovation work." And if these new residents generally conform to statistics Click here to learn about third-party website links, they are young men with families, ready to work hard and get a piece of the "American Dream."

Ernie the Attorney Click here to learn about third-party website links writes about this also—bloggers (and other important New Orleanians) are gathering this week for the Rising Tide Conference Click here to learn about third-party website links. The conference is an event for organizing people, to help them connect via the blogosphere and within neighborhoods. The people of New Orleans—native AND new—are putting the city back together in two important ways: structurally (natch) and through the creation of an organic, self-generated voice. The voice will try to take back the story of New Orleans' tragedy and heroism, and have it be the first resource.

August 16, 2006

Late Breaking News: Katrina Water, Not Wind

Charles

Nationwide Insurance won a federal court case yesterday Click here to learn about third-party website links that frees the industry from paying certain claims against damage by Hurricane Katrina last year.

The gist of the ruling(PDF) is that the damages were from flooding, and the plaintiffs did not have flood insurance. The plaintiffs argued that their policy covered wind damage, and the flooding resulted from a wind storm—a hurricane. The judge decided a flood's a flood, no matter how it gets to you.

Read Me!(PDF)Opinions Click here to learn about third-party website links will certainly run the gamut Click here to learn about third-party website links. For now, both sides claim victory: Nationwide for saving money and the plaintiffs because the judgment concluded that provisions for denying coverage are ambiguous. Judge Senter Click here to learn about third-party website links, who ruled in the case, is presiding over a huge number of suits brought against insurers by Katrina's victims.

(One of the more interesting pieces of Leonard v. Nationwide is the Leonards' complaint that the insurance agent told them they didn't need flood insurance. Good advice or bad, the guy is on the hook for keeping their premiums down.)

Whatever the outcomes that follow, it is imperative that you get knowledge about insurance in general, as much as getting knowledge about the insurance you need for your situation. Insurance Consumers Click here to learn about third-party website links has a very helpful website to help you look deeper and ask the right questions. It reminds us that it's not just about cheaper rates.

And governments might actually help you Click here to learn about third-party website links. The National Association of Insurance Commissioners (yes, really) has this contact map Click here to learn about third-party website links to help you find the people whose job it is to look out for your interests.

August 07, 2006

Why Prepare?

Charles

The National Weather Service has a pretty benign set of warnings Click here to learn about third-party website links today. Watch out for fires in the Northwest and in the Plains, it’s hot in central regions, and there are thunderstorms expected in many areas. All in all, just another day across our continent Click here to learn about third-party website links.

National Weather Service(this link will open a new window)

So why prepare?

The obvious is, well, obvious. You can save your own life by having the right implements and the right knowledge. The right tools and supplies Click here to learn about third-party website links will get you through the days without access to food, water and shelter. First Aid Click here to learn about third-party website links is critical if trauma happens and access to care is impeded because of disaster conditions. You prepare to get through The Big One.

Keep in mind, though, that preparation lasts longer than the event and its aftermath. Preparedness is an important feature in community response to crisis. When you are prepared, and prepared as a group, your community gets through it better and recovers faster.

New Orleans might never get back on track, or take a long time getting there, but it will be only because of physical changes to the place. Many people have returned after a long year away and those who have not returned are still part of that city. "Voices of Katrina" from the New Orleans Times-Picayune Click here to learn about third-party website links displays letters of support and affection between neighbors far and wide. The spectrum runs from bittersweetness Click here to learn about third-party website links to dogged persistence Click here to learn about third-party website links, but it’s all the same thing. A city getting its life back.

August 02, 2006

Hurricanes And Flu—Degrees Of Separation

Charles

Tropical Storm Chris Click here to learn about third-party website links is starting to get legs in the Caribbean as it nears the Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico. As Chris approaches the Gulf Click here to learn about third-party website links, the warm waters there may fuel the storm to hurricane power. This hurricane season has had no catastrophe so far; there was a lot of concern at the outset due to last year's overwhelming damage.

Meanwhile, back at the National Hurricane Center in West Miami-Dade, Chris Landsea will publish an article in Science Click here to learn about third-party website links this week that challenges the connection Click here to learn about third-party website links between climate change and hurricanes. Basically, Landsea claims, the changes in hurricane strength reflect changes in measuring hurricanes. In short, maybe the planet isn't so crazy as all that, and some years are just worse than others.

Good, bad or in-between, storms affect the environment where they hit. Last year's 'canes affected birds to be sure, which has an effect on those microbial environments that ride aboard migrating and displaced birds. Spread of the dreaded West Nile virus is affected in turn Click here to learn about third-party website links, and the recent heat might make this a bad year for it Click here to learn about third-party website links. But the good news is that bird flu, which had newscasters in a tizzy last winter, might not be so bad after all Click here to learn about third-party website links. Turns out a little bug spray is a strong personal act in disaster response.

Ah, balance Click here to learn about third-party website links. ...

I myself am more concerned with reactions to events by human organisms. Heat, displacement, and too much TV takes its toll after a while. Or maybe we are just the strangest creatures in the habitat! Click here to learn about third-party website links




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