TheShrimper wrote:People equate a storms stregnth as max. winds associated with it, which needs to be changed. There are other facets, much more important and far reached. Seeing that these winds are rarely realized, it should be drilled into peoples heads that there is a storm surge aspect, a tornado aspect and a flooding aspect. I think the NHC should stress the latter two instead of making the max winds the focal point. The people would be much more informed (the big bend area of FL. during any Panhandle landfall} as to what to expect. As far as classifying a storms stregnth based solely on the Saffir Simpson scale, I think it is time The NHC factors in the other attributes above mentioned, and derives a new way of measuring a storms power.
I may have your view misinterpreted but basically you seem to be saying that people did not know or did not realise where the real effects would be and what these would manifest as. Are not these related facets which you have mentioned directly related to the central pressure, intensity of wind, extent of wind field, speed of movement, direction of movement and projected cat intensity over the next 12-24 hrs, plus time to landfall?
I can't see the distinctions you are making as almost all responsible media already use live 24 hr broadcasts, web streaming, regular official civil guidance and direction, live Doppler radar, surge animations. All these support and supplement the NHC warnings and forecasts, which in my view are generally more than adequate and very sensible. The Saffir-Simpson scale plus continual warnings and location and movement updates are the information you need. I'm on the other side of the planet and had no trouble understanding the warnings and forecasts, which were available in great detail. If that does not do the job for those potentially directly affected then I don't know what could.
The real difference here is that I paid
attention, and this attention is not something you can mandate or supply through an agency. Attention is a function of an interested, curious, concerned, or else afraid mind.
I would say the ‘problem’ has nothing to do with NHC’s present approach at all. Mayors, Governors, a President and all local media made major efforts to bring this pending event to the attention of potentially affected people, but people hear and see only what they want to hear and see, and direct their attention accordingly.
Some ‘unaware’ people then cast blame around after the fact, but the problem of direct effects catching people unaware is 95% one of their attention-span, filters and priorities. On top of this, many people who are familiar with what a strong storm can do, and are paying some level of attention, still decide to ignore dire warnings, physical measurements, evidence of their eyes and all directions and hints.
2 cents