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Before you ask why victims didn’t evacuate despite warnings of an approaching storm, please consider that many folks don’t have cars, have no family or friends to stay with, can’t afford gasoline or hotels, don’t dare risk losing their jobs if they can’t return in time, can’t safely evacuate their elderly loved ones, won’t leave without their pets, or have legitimate health concerns about staying in shelters. Poor shaming them during and after a catastrophe is not a good look.

Yes, I have evacuated from before in 2018 with our two dogs. We drove north and stayed with family in . It would be 10 days before we could return home, the last hundred miles a nightmare of detours due to roads covered with fallen trees. We were fortunate to have the resources to evacuate, to have a place to ride out the storm in comfort, and to be able to watch our home with our network of security cameras. Even with all that, it was a very stressful experience.

Please spare a care for the thousands of folks facing the prospect of WITHOUT the resources that we had. In addition to posing financial and logistical challenges that may seem insurmountable, evacuation takes a huge emotional toll. We’re “wired” to protect our home and hearth, to stand our ground, and to show rugged individuality and resilience. Being told to ditch all that and leave for an unknown future is NOT EASY.

@cassandra17lina

Just plain unkind.

Help them prepare. Biggest issue in Asheville is toilet flushing. Suggest they fill up bathtubs, buckets, plastic tubs to use for flushing.

@cassandra17lina
The HuzBob and I were talking about this last night. Our parents are dead. One set lived in FL anyway. My sister lives in FL and doesn't even have a pot to piss in. Don't think the rest of them would want us because we're the outsiders, we smoke, we have a dog and a cat. Weird sleep habits, too.

We'd just drive till we found a motel that would take our pets. But we would be able to buy more gasoline and pay for a motel, eat out. At least for a little while.

@cassandra17lina Having worked floods for the red cross it is also hard to see someone in their living room trying to ignore they are waist deep in water and dont want to go to a shelter they say" I am fine" been there seen that

@cassandra17lina Knowing you’ll have to replace everything and you can’t count in your state government to do anything to help you doesn’t make it any easier. I’m no longer in a position to replace all that I have and my renters insurance won’t do it for me. The deductible that I have to have in order to afford it makes it cost prohibitive.

I’m fortunate to have family that would help, not everyone has that.

@cassandra17lina

For those who have evacuated and plan (and are allowed) to return soon after the storm, before returning load up with supplies and don't forget to top off your gas tank along the way.

On our return home after Ida gas/food became spotty well before we got home.

@ellesu while we were in we loaded up on lawn debris bags, gardening gloves, and mosquito “dunks” for our use and for our neighbors knowing that everything would be depleted back home in .

@cassandra17lina

I was watching a CNN video, from hurricane Ian I think, just yesterday: rich bastard on the line begging for authorities to come rescue some 80-year-old widow down the street who had a one-storey house, when flooding was already at 8+ feet in his mansion according to all the videos he sent in …

Where was he with offering help before the storm? 🙄 So many different stories.

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