nzherald.co.nz

Anne Penketh: Mother Nature surprises with political storm ahead of election

By Anne Penketh
9:30 AM Tuesday Oct 30, 2012
A road sign warns drivers of weather conditions in downtown Washington ahead of Hurricane Sandy's landfall. Photo / AFP

A road sign warns drivers of weather conditions in downtown Washington ahead of Hurricane Sandy's landfall. Photo / AFP

In the past two years in Washington, I have survived all the extreme weather that Nature has invented.

I have experienced an earthquake, 'Snowmageddon', Hurricane Irene and a derecho. Now I am braced for 'Frankenstorm'.

I had been anxiously watching the clock since yesterday, as I had been staying with friends in Baltimore and needed to drive the 56km south to Washington knowing that Hurricane Sandy was barrelling towards us leaving 65 people dead in Haiti.

At lunchtime local time, my teacher friend received the news from an automated call that her school would be closed today. Although barely a tree was stirring, I decided it would be wise to head back down the freeway.

By the time I reached Washington National Airport to return my hire car, the country was in panic mode even though nothing had happened.

With a presidential campaign underway, neither the President nor other elected officials wanted to appear unprepared as the vast swirling storm threatened to engulf the mid Atlantic region with surging tides and torrential rain.

Not only were schools ordered shut along the East coast - even before the hurricane had made landfall - but hundreds of thousands of people were being evacuated and public transport halted.

At the Washington airport, the flights to New York were being cancelled one by one.

A Chinese tourist was trying to figure out how she was going to get home following the cancellation of her American Airlines flight to Chicago where she was to connect with a flight to Shanghai.

As I walked across the Potomac River in a steady drizzle, a flashing sign warned "beware of standing water, severe weather expected".

In the local supermarket, dry goods had been swept from the shelves in a wave of panic buying. The main fear for the residents of Washington is to suffer yet another inconvenient power outage and more fallen trees. Halloween, of course, will be a washout. But as of yesterday, the city remained eerily calm.

This being Washington, there was one subject of conversation over dinner: the political storm. What will Hurricane Sandy mean for President Obama and his Republican challenger Mitt Romney, who both cancelled visits to Virginia?

There has been much talk of an "October surprise" ahead of the November 7 election. But nobody would have predicted that it would come from Mother Nature.

By Anne Penketh
Satisfiction (Northland) | 10:50AM Tuesday, 30 Oct 2012
Nothing wrong with people taking precautions. It's better to do that, than be caught out and have a death toll.
Foreign Observer (New Zealand) | 03:17PM Tuesday, 30 Oct 2012
You are right: as a kiwi from NZ where there are infrequent but severe natural disasters, the fact that there is a yearly hurricane season in which the same regions of the east coast and carribean get battered by at least 3 hurricanes (don't foget the tornados that spin off, storm surge, and water damage from rain), multiple lesser tropical storms, lightening, snow, ice, straight line wind damage from thunder storms, etc., living in the US can appear daunting. Apart from that (which shows you are new to east coast US) any other connections to voting, presidential races, world politics, currency rates, phases of the moon, are moot and insipid.

In the US, one has that annoying character most foreigners hate: exuberant optimism and desire to soldier on-not wait to see which coronial or royal commission of inquiry will blame who/what then offer a road for compensation some 10 years later (after 30 more hurricanes regardless of whether FOX-australian by the way, calls it (blank)mageddon)!
Surdo Oppedere (Auckland Region) | 03:18PM Tuesday, 30 Oct 2012
Perhaps the weather forecasters are concerned about being charged with manslaughter if someone dies in the storm.
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