Tuesday, October 09, 2007

Weather Warnings a Hoax?

Were the weather warnings a hoax? Actually, they weren't. To start off they were based on cogent but amorphous information. I received emails from staff at Net Care 911 (I can name names), but these were not official warnings. The weather bureau were also concerned, because some of the atmospheric conditions were, they thought, conducive to extreme weather.

And in fact we've had some incredible storms over the last few days in Lenasia (where someone died), and at a large school - I forget where - which had its roof torn off. The latter story made SABC news, since the school was concerned they might not have a place to right exams. This same school made the news when children were caught in rising flood waters, clutching school furniture.

So I think the internal staff at NetCare for example contacted their pals and issued an 'under-the-radar' warning, and from there, it got exaggerated into tornadoes and what not.

Two things emerged out of this though: on the positive side, there was an extraordinary awareness of WHAT IS GOING ON OUTSIDE THE OFFICE. On the other hand, the people who panicked and went home only to be caught in traffic snarls are going to laugh it off next time, and call it Crying Wolf. This blase attitude is opar for the course in places like the Florida panhandle, where oldies claim to have survived countless storms and false alarms and they aren't about to 'run' now. In reality, we're going to see this sort of thing - potent and destructive forces of nature - happening more and more in our lifetimes.

My own feeling was how the climate change-global warming zeitgeist actually came to the surface. It semed to me a lot of people were repressing the veracity of this, and then to receive emails about having your belongings confiscated by the weather, that just struck very close to home, and brought it to the surface. People verbalised their concerns, and then acted on them. At last.

No comments: