For people who live in South Florida. Is now the time to exit?

One of the most interesting things about the climate change in South Florida is that the areas that they pushed all the black folks to in Miami-Dade back in the day, actually sits higher above sea level and does not get the same impact of flooding as other areas.

I hope they bought those properties up. I'm 10 miles inland and my property is still only 3 feet above sea level. :eek: :smh:
 
The crazy thing about Florida especially the southern parts is that brothers and sisters are institutionlized. Since the state is a peninsula, they only know Florida shit. It's kind of like growing up in Hawaii and never know what it's like on the mainland.

Sadly that's true if most people, especially poor people.

It bugs me out to see the people I grew up with still just hanging in the projects where we were raised and never really doing shit else.
 
Have you seen any trends indicating the best and worse places to reside with all of these natural disasters and there increasing frequency?

It’s all subjective. Florida is great most of the year every year until a hurricane comes. Residents are realizing yearly battles with hurricanes is becoming old as hell. @EPDC

IMO, weather-wise, NC, Va, MD, and eastern PA has less extreme weather than most places.

All east coastal cities will feel the effects of climate change, and a hurricane will accelerate those effects if they are directly hit.

NC and SC is due for a major hit. Houston is probably the most prepared to deal with climate change.

Tornadoes are increasing in just about every place in the US, so there is no escaping those.
 
It’s all subjective. Florida is great most of the year every year until a hurricane comes. Residents are realizing yearly battles with hurricanes is becoming old as hell. @EPDC

IMO, weather-wise, NC, Va, MD, and eastern PA has less extreme weather than most places.

All east coastal cities will feel the effects of climate change, and a hurricane will accelerate those effects if they are directly hit.

NC and SC is due for a major hit. Houston is probably the most prepared to deal with climate change.

Tornadoes are increasing in just about every place in the US, so there is no escaping those.
I don’t know about that Harvey really did a number to Houston.
 
It’s all subjective. Florida is great most of the year every year until a hurricane comes. Residents are realizing yearly battles with hurricanes is becoming old as hell. @EPDC

IMO, weather-wise, NC, Va, MD, and eastern PA has less extreme weather than most places.

All east coastal cities will feel the effects of climate change, and a hurricane will accelerate those effects if they are directly hit.

NC and SC is due for a major hit. Houston is probably the most prepared to deal with climate change.

Tornadoes are increasing in just about every place in the US, so there is no escaping those.

david-cross-we-are-fucked.gif
 
One of the most interesting things about the climate change in South Florida is that the areas that they pushed all the black folks to in Miami-Dade back in the day, actually sits higher above sea level and does not get the same impact of flooding as other areas.

:yes:

NPR had a great piece on this exact thing a few years back:

Over the past few years, Miami native Trenise Bryant has seen her neighborhood, the African-American enclave of Liberty City, start to change. Bryant grew up in one of the area's oldest public housing projects, Liberty Square. Lately, rents have gone up, and Bryant has seen people priced out and forced to move away.

One factor driving this, Bryant says, is climate change.

Miami is projected to face anywhere from 1 to 3 feet of sea level rise by 2060, and as sea levels rise, higher ground inland has started to look more and more desirable. Much of that higher ground is in the city's poorest neighborhoods, like Liberty City and Little Haiti. As Bryant puts it, it has turned land in these communities into "caviar."

 
It’s all subjective. Florida is great most of the year every year until a hurricane comes. Residents are realizing yearly battles with hurricanes is becoming old as hell. @EPDC

IMO, weather-wise, NC, Va, MD, and eastern PA has less extreme weather than most places.

All east coastal cities will feel the effects of climate change, and a hurricane will accelerate those effects if they are directly hit.

NC and SC is due for a major hit. Houston is probably the most prepared to deal with climate change.

Tornadoes are increasing in just about every place in the US, so there is no escaping those.
Loved my time in FL but happy to be back in my home state of NY. I'd take a blizzard every time over a hurricane. The insurance (roof/storm related) rates and politics of the sunshine state were the main factors of us getting the fuck out.
 
Man that's a lifestyle but Catastrophic Claims adjusters are getting it at my company.

You gotta be ready to roll at the drop of a dime like the military though. Not good if you're a student.

But people are bankrolling off that per diem and overtime.

I'm literally studying the course for my property adjuster license right now.
definitely want to do CAT claims like you said
 
Damn, I hope all who are on this board and their families who reside in and around that area remain safe and dry.
 
Damn, I hope all who are on this board and their families who reside in and around that area remain safe and dry.
I called my mom and sister and they are fine but it’s a lotta fucking water down there and it’s not going anywhere anytime soon. South Florida drainage depends on the low ocean tide and the ocean tide is running extremely high.
 
No, this is mother nature, because the same type of crap is happening all over the world. The weather pattern is out of whack. The human race do not have anything that powerful yet to affect global weather patterns.
 
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