Economy adds risk to hurricane season
Monday is the big day. It’s the start of hurricane season. For weeks emergency officials have been urging all of us to get prepared. Some are doing it, some are procrastinating a bit, and some are dealing with a new element altogether when it comes to that vacant home next door and the potential storms lurking around the corner. In Palmetto, on Sunday, area veterinarians were getting some practice in a mock drill. “It’s to prepare us for all different kinds of scenarios,” offers Dr. Jan Hasse with The Sarasota Animal Hospital. They’re checking out dogs as if they had been exposed to flood waters and the potential disease and illness that goes along with that exposure. Hasse says they’ve learned from hurricanes past. Now, thanks to state mandate, a team of veterinarians will be on standby after a storm blows through. “We found out when Charley came through in ‘04 those vet hospitals and people that had a basic plan weathered the storm a whole lot better than those who did not,” added Hasse. Bay Area residents are also preparing for themselves. Although, according to a recent Mason Dixon poll more than half of Floridians living in hurricane prone areas have nothing with which to cover their doors or windows. “People procrastinate. They wait until the last minute and we can provide some product at the last minute, but we can’t provide all of the fancy products at the last
Here is the original:
Economy adds risk to hurricane season
No comments yet.