They settled on this unmistakable message: “GET OUT OR DIE.”
Tyler County Judge Jacques Blanchette told CNN on Thursday that he posted that blunt message on the county’s emergency management Facebook page on Wednesday afternoon to get the attention of residents accustomed to flooding along the Neches River north of Beaumont.
“These are friends; these are neighbors; these are people who live along the the Neches River,” Blanchette said. “They are accustomed to flooding of the Neches.”
He feared that those long-time residents would cavalierly regard this flood as no worse than previous ones.
But the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, which manages B.A. Steinhagen Lake along the Neches, had warned Tyler County officials that catastrophic flooding below the lake’s dam was imminent.
“The information we had access to …. was dire,” Blanchette recalled. “We agonized over just what we needed to say so that they got the message.”
As a result of the evacuation warning, Blanchette said, no lives were lost in the devastating flooding.
“Was it the right thing to say the right thing to do? I’m responsible for those lives,” Blanchette said.
“It was extremely effective.”
His words were reminiscent of the advice that officials in Rockport gave residents of that Texas coastal town as Hurricane Harvey blew in. “All the advice we can give is get out. Get out now,” Mayor Pro Tem Patrick Rios told South Texas TV station KIII-TV before Harvey made landfall. “Those that are going to stay, it’s unfortunate but they should make some type of preparations. Mark their arm with a Sharpie pen. Put their Social Security number on it and their name.”
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