Hopefully when they rebuild, it will be out of the flood plain.
In particular, where the station had no signal or a very poor signal in the area affected.The big question is why would radio stations in a major metro interrupt programming for an event 80 miles away and how frequently to you disrupt your lisener base about something not affecting them.
Unless you have lived or traveled in some of those "wide open spaces" it is hard to imagine how few people and how much land there is.Earlier in a post someone indicated the police and/or fire department should have driven the roads with loudspeaker on to warn people. First, this is a large county. The rural areas had few patrol cars and fire engines.
Their insurance company will hopefully require that their new build is out of the flood plain.Hopefully when they rebuild, it will be out of the flood plain.
That's why the under $25 battery powered water warning devices are "no brainer". It doesn't matter how far from civilization or how far off the grid you are, when the water rises at your tent, camper, cabin, campsite or house, it goes off just like a smoke detector does, giving you time to escape.Even the comments about installing flashers or loudpeakers or sirens have to take into consider how big and widely unpopulated some areas are.
From what I have read they chirp like your smoke detector does . I have ordered one to put beside my hot water tank in a finish basement. I bought the ten year smoke detectors to not have to deal with batteries. Hopefully I will get to replace them a couple of times.The county already applied for $1,000,000 from the Feds. Two years later the Feds had not said yes or no and a bunch of people have died.
The high water detector is a great idea except for all those batteries...maybe converted to solar?