The
list of risks from major storms
expands.
As
Hurricane Florence continues its wet, windy rampage, here's my attempt to
gather some of the stray baggage that hurricanes leave us.
Bolstered
projections—and populations
In
October 1954, Hurricane Hazel tore through the Caribbean and the Bahamas,
killing as many as 1,000, mostly in Haiti. Hazel hit the Carolina coast,
flattening beachfront structures from Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, north to
the Outer Banks. The storm turned inland, with flooding rains contributing to
95 more deaths in the U.S. Remnants of the storm killed 81 more in the Toronto
area, making Hazel a billion-dollar storm in Canada alone (in
2018 dollars.)
Two
important differences separate a 1954 killer storm from a killer storm today:
First, weather prediction and risk communication were still relatively
primitive back then. Today the lifesaving role of both government and TV
meteorologists has been key in keeping death tolls low.
But
with climate change increasing the frequency and intensity of storms, even
those lower death tolls are a hollow victory.
Also, sleepy coastal towns like Myrtle Beach are sleepy no more. The city has grown tenfold since 1950, when there were 3,000 year-round residents. Many hurricane-vulnerable beach towns along the Atlantic and Gulf coasts can tell the same story – real estate booms creating far more potentially destroyable property.
All
those extra people packed into hurricane targets like Myrtle Beach, or the
state of Florida (2.8 million in 1950, 21 million today) turn evacuations into
logistical nightmares and political timebombs.
In
2005, with America still stunned by the horrific drama of Hurricane Katrina,
Houston staged one of the largest and most ill-fated evacuations in history. An
estimated 2.5 million people clogged the roads out of town from metro Houston
to escape a likely direct hit from Hurricane Rita.
There
were road rage fistfights, heat stroke, and families marooned in gridlock for
24 hours. Fire consumed a bus full of senior
citizens stuck on the interstate, killing 24.
Rita
only grazed Houston, and the storm's direct death toll was less than half that
of the flaming bus. The press and public tore into public safety officials and
city leaders for the tragically counterproductive decision.
Twelve
years later, Houston area leaders opted not to evacuate from Hurricane Harvey,
and took grief for their decision once again.
Florence
fear
The
earliest, most dire reports of Florence's potential damage prompted Maryland's
governor to join his counterparts farther south in proclaiming a state of
emergency.
The prophylactic emergency declarations are equal parts butt-covering and pragmatic politics. They offer some insulation against charges that leaders were unprepared, but more reasonably, they grease the skids for federal disaster aid if it's needed.
The prophylactic emergency declarations are equal parts butt-covering and pragmatic politics. They offer some insulation against charges that leaders were unprepared, but more reasonably, they grease the skids for federal disaster aid if it's needed.
But
even if Maryland dodges major damage, severe storms have a special impact in
Chesapeake Bay, where doomed islands and their centuries-old cultures are
yielding to a combination of land subsidence, erosion, and sea level rise.
Hurricanes
like Isabel in 2003 brought storm surge roaring up the Bay, accelerating the
eventual disappearance of Smith Island and
Virginia's Tangier Island.
Hurricanes
cause erosion along coastlines from Cape Cod to Texas.
On
Thursday, Duke Energy executive David Fountain told CNN that the major utility
in the Carolinas expected to see 75 percent of its customer base lose power
from Florence. 2017's Hurricane Irma knocked
out electricity for two-thirds of Florida's 10 million households.
Duke
and other utilities own and maintain (or not) roughly six dozen coal ash
impoundments in the vast area that is forecast to see days of
deluge from Florence.
Nuclear
plants, like Duke's Brunswick station near
Wilmington, have shut down. EPA says it's monitoring nine Superfund sites in
the storm's path. Forecasts of rainfall measured not in inches but in feet
could also overwhelm sewage treatment plants.
Hogs
are one of North Carolina's leading cash cows and the forecast for extended
rainfall is causing panic among farmers and their neighbors. In the 1990's, two
events helped bring attention to the growing risks of hog waste pollution in
North Carolina.
First,
the Raleigh News & Observer won a Pulitzer Prize for its series "Boss
Hog" on porcine power and pollution in the state. In 1999, Hurricane
Floyd's relentless rainfall prompted spills from dozens of hog waste lagoons.
Since then, the industry, and even the hogs themselves, have grown
considerably.
And
Florence may bring the pigs home to roost.