U.S. Climate Disaster in Global Perspective

Center for Progressive Reform 2012-11-30

Summary:

For those who have not been following the news lately, a recent article reported the following: A large tropical storm attributed to "unseasonable rainfall" slammed into the coast and moved inland, leaving many dead or missing, tens of thousands of residents evacuated or homeless, and government disaster response agencies struggling to provide food, shelter, and other critical services. According to the article, "[d]isaster response teams helped to move people to higher ground in rubber boats and nearly 100 shelters were opened ... to accommodate people fleeing the flood zone." Trains and other transit systems were closed; some communities were completely cut off from help; and to make matters worse, more intense rain was expected later in the same week. News reports about Hurricane Sandy? Actually, no. This news came from an article by Agence France-Presse about Cyclone Nilam, which struck the Indian states of Andhra Pradesh and Tamil Nadu just a week after Sandy unleashed similar catastrophe on the eastern United States. Nor was this an isolated incident in India. In September, the Agence France-Presse article continued, "two million people were forced to flee their homes in the north-eastern state of Assam after floods triggered by heavy monsoon rains." The point, of course, is not to minimize the horrible loss of lives, damage to homes and other property, and suffering that the residents of the northeastern U.S. have endured due to Hurricane Sandy. Relief efforts should continue if not expand. Public disaster relief funding should be expedited. Private parties should donate to the Red Cross and other independent sources of relief.

Link:

http://www.progressivereform.org/CPRBlog.cfm?idBlog=0997A6E7-E4A3-09EA-FC4008D5D889063D

From feeds:

Berkeley Law Library -- Reference & Research Services ยป Center for Progressive Reform

Tags:

Authors:

Robert Adler

Date tagged:

11/30/2012, 20:40

Date published:

11/16/2012, 09:20