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re: what are some possible locations for the LSU/USC game?
Posted on 10/5/15 at 11:53 am to GeauxPack81
Posted on 10/5/15 at 11:53 am to GeauxPack81
What exactly have the SC posters said to counter it? Have you seen pictures of the stadium? Are you aware that the team had to evacuate during a film session yesterday? What about the infrastructure in general? Do you know definitively that first responders have the ability to handle an SEC football game? What about hotels in the area? Should we have traveling fans entering the area?
Posted on 10/5/15 at 11:56 am to Lou Pai
quote:
should we have traveling fans entering the area?
No. We don't need to be dealing with an influx of barely functioning retards right now.
Posted on 10/5/15 at 12:03 pm to Lou Pai
I doubt it will need to be moved. I'm sitting in my office in downtown Columbia a mile from the campus. The city is pretty much shut down. I can hear constant sirens and helicopters.
This is not a Katrina situation. This was heavy, steady rain causing flooding, but there is no widespread wind damage, loss of housing, or power lines down. It was not a hurricane -- the wind hit maybe 10-15 mph. The vast majority of the photographs out there are from a handful of low lying subdivisions and intersections -- especially ones with lakes and creeks where small earthen dams washed away. Plus a few roadways washed away.
Don't get me wrong -- it's a serious emergency and I have friends who have lost cars and houses. It is not an emergency of biblical proportions.
We don't have trees down and we don't have a major loss of power.
The biggest problem is the water treatment plant is located next to the Congaree River -- so it is facing some flooding, although is functioning because it is on high ground.
We have running water -- we just have to boil it for the next 2-3 days. That's a problem at the university -- but again, it's a short-term issue.
The middle and end of the week are sunny. Everything will dry out and be back to normal -- except for the people whose homes were flooded. It will be a hard emotional week for them.
This is not a Katrina situation. This was heavy, steady rain causing flooding, but there is no widespread wind damage, loss of housing, or power lines down. It was not a hurricane -- the wind hit maybe 10-15 mph. The vast majority of the photographs out there are from a handful of low lying subdivisions and intersections -- especially ones with lakes and creeks where small earthen dams washed away. Plus a few roadways washed away.
Don't get me wrong -- it's a serious emergency and I have friends who have lost cars and houses. It is not an emergency of biblical proportions.
We don't have trees down and we don't have a major loss of power.
The biggest problem is the water treatment plant is located next to the Congaree River -- so it is facing some flooding, although is functioning because it is on high ground.
We have running water -- we just have to boil it for the next 2-3 days. That's a problem at the university -- but again, it's a short-term issue.
The middle and end of the week are sunny. Everything will dry out and be back to normal -- except for the people whose homes were flooded. It will be a hard emotional week for them.
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