NATIONAL AFFAIRS

Riders on the Storm

Inside the mentality of those who chose to remain in their homes during Hurricane Ike rather than evacuating.

 
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Not Again

Aid Crisis Brews Amid Deaths and Devastation in Wake of Hurricane Ike

 
 

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As Hurricane Ike roared toward the Texas coast last week, Dennis Covington decided to disregard mandatory evacuation orders and stay put in his house in Port Bolivar, just east of Galveston. He figured the building was structurally sound enough to withstand the storm, but he soon regretted his choice. As Ike made landfall, a wall of water tore free a boat and crashed it into a piling under his home. The piling fractured, the house split in two and one half collapsed into the water. Covington was lucky enough to be on the side that remained standing; his little terrier, Lizzie, however, was on the other. "I just had to watch her go," he recalled later, burying his head in his hands and weeping. Fearing for his life as the water rose, he grabbed a life preserver, jumped out of the window and climbed up a tree, to which he lashed himself with a rope. "I was in that tree from the time the eye came until the back of the storm—a couple of hours," he said. Afterward, he was disconsolate over his loss. "This is all I own now," he said, gesturing at his jeans, his tattered green T shirt and the soggy red towel draped around his neck.

Covington was one of many who chose to ride out the storm. On hard-hit Galveston Island, some 20,000 people out of a total population of 57,000 ignored or were unable to comply with evacuation orders. Across Texas and Louisiana as a whole, about 100,000 stayed behind in coastal areas, compared to more than 2 million who sought shelter inland. For those who remained, the aftermath has been dismal—block after block of destroyed houses; no power, water or food supplies; and rank refuse piled up everywhere. Which raises the question: Why do people stay when they're told to leave? Is it out of necessity, or ignorance, or foolhardiness? Numerous researchers have studied the issue over the years, and their findings help open a window onto the psychology of holdouts.

There are, of course, some obvious reasons why people stay behind. The elderly and infirm may be too fragile to withstand an evacuation. The poor, as the nation saw during Hurricane Katrina, may not have the means to escape—no car, no relatives to stay with or no money to pay for a hotel room. In addition, "[the poor] can't skip three days of work, especially if [the storm] isn't as bad as forecasted and they are missing their job," says Rebecca Morss, a scientist at the National Center for Atmospheric Research who studies the ways people use and interpret weather information. In other cases, people have legitimate concerns about the security of their homes and possessions, says Irwin Redlener, director of the National Center for Disaster Preparedness at Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health: "All of these are appropriate rationales at some level."

Beyond these reasons, though, people's motivations get murkier. George Everly Jr., a disaster psychologist at John Hopkins University, says that people often simply avoid reality. "A pending disaster challenges our daily routine, and people use denial, saying, 'I just want to live my life, and I don't want anything to disrupt that'," he says. "It is our natural inclination to resist and deny." Others may be thrill-seekers, according to Redlener: "There is a category of adventurers who revel in significant risk-taking, people for whom the adrenaline rush of facing such danger is worth the potential that one may pay the ultimate price." He adds another category: "independent-minded citizens who simply do not tolerate being ordered to do anything by government officials."

A community's culture also plays a role. People in areas that have endured repeated thrashings by natural disasters may develop a measure of stoicism and defiance as part of their identity. "Galveston has a similar subculture to Key West, [Fla.], that 'we can ride it out, we've seen everything' attitude," says Morss. You can hear hints of that in what Rev. Harold Block, who remained in Galveston during Ike, had to say about the experience afterward. "I was born and raised here," he said. "I came through storms and hurricanes as a child. I even rode through [Hurricanes] Carla and Alicia [in 1961 and 1983]."

The decisions people make are also often governed by their most recent memories and experiences. "Those people that watched Katrina, theoretically, are more prone to leaving," says Redlener. "And those who rode out [Hurricane] Gustav or evacuated and everything was fine are going to be more prone to stay." Everly concurs: If you stayed behind and "your damage was minimal, you are psychologically high-fiving yourself and telling yourself, 'Good choice! I played the game and I won.' On the other hand, if you almost drowned, almost died and your house was sucked away, you're saying, 'I'm not going to do that again.'" This time around, many of those NEWSWEEK spoke with who stayed behind cited as a reason their experiences during Hurricane Rita in 2005, when horrendous traffic jams made the evacuation potentially more hazardous than the storm.

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Member Comments

  • Posted By: TX_Cari @ 11/25/2008 12:44:02 PM

    Jeff, you are wrong. There were hundreds of people reported missing after Ike, and very few have been found. The ones that are still missing are either in the debris somewhere, under several feet of sand, or washed away to sea. There has not been extensive coverage of this storm as there has been with others (everyone knows which storm I am talking about!).

  • Posted By: mfenwick @ 09/21/2008 11:21:37 AM

    Because the dumb American voter keeps replacing Democrats and Republicans with more Democrats and Republicans and then stands around with his finger up his posterior wondering why his government is like it is.

  • Posted By: kitty-kat @ 09/21/2008 6:24:57 AM

    I find this truly shocking. I'm from The Netherlands and a few times people had to evacuate because of risk of flooding. In all cases the Dutch government went in and evacuated absolutely everybody from threatened areas using buses and housed them in schools, etc. until the emergency had passed. No traffic jams, no poor people left behind. Other countries such as China do the same. Why can't or won't the US government look after its own people like this?

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