Because why would he randomly declare them disaster states today when these small storms happened months ago.. I just found it odd and wanted to share for opinions.
For the UT one, "straight-line winds from September 7 to September 8, 2020."
I didn't ever hear about anything like this. I think it did get windy around then? Definitely not something so out of the ordinary. Nor do most UT people care about that, it's the most bizarre thing to make a big deal out of. No one talks about "Damn the winds nearly got me this year" I mean that's my opinion. Definitely arbitrary reasoning for UT because I live here and literally no one really even had a second thought about it.
Oh shit, it was that? I was there the day after that. It wasn't all tooooo bad. Nothing I hadn't seen elsewhere before.
I drop my kids off in SLC every two weeks and I also see my brother up there. The day after I saw like a ton of down tree limbs spread everywhere. Few trees down that did some damage, but basically it was just a bad storm. I've lived on the East coast and that sorta stuff happens at least once-twice a year.
It was odd for the area, definitely notable, but it was catastrophic. Seems as though the reasonings for these emergencies are likely anything they can say is just above abnormal.
Because why would he randomly declare them disaster states today when these small storms happened months ago.. I just found it odd and wanted to share for opinions.
No problem! could obviously be nothing but just thought it should be pointed out.
For the UT one, "straight-line winds from September 7 to September 8, 2020."
I didn't ever hear about anything like this. I think it did get windy around then? Definitely not something so out of the ordinary. Nor do most UT people care about that, it's the most bizarre thing to make a big deal out of. No one talks about "Damn the winds nearly got me this year" I mean that's my opinion. Definitely arbitrary reasoning for UT because I live here and literally no one really even had a second thought about it.
Oh shit, it was that? I was there the day after that. It wasn't all tooooo bad. Nothing I hadn't seen elsewhere before.
I drop my kids off in SLC every two weeks and I also see my brother up there. The day after I saw like a ton of down tree limbs spread everywhere. Few trees down that did some damage, but basically it was just a bad storm. I've lived on the East coast and that sorta stuff happens at least once-twice a year.
It was odd for the area, definitely notable, but it was catastrophic. Seems as though the reasonings for these emergencies are likely anything they can say is just above abnormal.