I did not get to read David's comments, in detail. BigA, you are right on this. I think we all get that. If you have spent any time in the Gatlinburg area, you know that if you are a especially a tourist, you would have no idea on how to react or get out of the place given the hills and roads. If there was no emergency messages on your cell phone, then once you are in a car, you had one other option. Scan the radio dial and pray and hope for some comfort and some news. I have not had a chance to read KayJayJay's posted article, either, so forgive me for redundancy, etc.
I think the real interesting issue will be why (or whether) the area had police on the streets trying to help get cars in the right direction. That does not take much time to mobilize. Again, when you have sudden 85 mph wind gusts, you literally cannot predict much. But, you have to act quickly no matter what and send out the warnings, even if they are not precise or able to be up to date as this spread insanely fast. I have heard one of the top people in charge say they were warned to be on alert as early as 3 pm for the storm to blow the winds like this and what it could produce. The winds were bad in Nashville, Cookeville and all points to the east, so it seems like the prudent thing to have done would be to warn of the potential for flair ups with the wind, by seeing this coming in. I saw one YouTube video where a person made a comment that they had "no idea which damn way to go to out of this inferno and you could hear the radio scanning."
I think the real interesting issue will be why (or whether) the area had police on the streets trying to help get cars in the right direction. That does not take much time to mobilize. Again, when you have sudden 85 mph wind gusts, you literally cannot predict much. But, you have to act quickly no matter what and send out the warnings, even if they are not precise or able to be up to date as this spread insanely fast. I have heard one of the top people in charge say they were warned to be on alert as early as 3 pm for the storm to blow the winds like this and what it could produce. The winds were bad in Nashville, Cookeville and all points to the east, so it seems like the prudent thing to have done would be to warn of the potential for flair ups with the wind, by seeing this coming in. I saw one YouTube video where a person made a comment that they had "no idea which damn way to go to out of this inferno and you could hear the radio scanning."
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