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Declaring Disaster - Buffalo's Blizzard of '77 and the Creation of FEMA (Paperback)
Loot Price: R536
Discovery Miles 5 360
You Save: R91
(15%)
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Declaring Disaster - Buffalo's Blizzard of '77 and the Creation of FEMA (Paperback)
Series: New York State Series
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List price R627
Loot Price R536
Discovery Miles 5 360
You Save R91 (15%)
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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On Friday, January 28, 1977, it began to snow in Buffalo. The
second largest city in New York State, located directly in line
with the Great Lakes' snowbelt, was no stranger to this kind of
winter weather. With their city averaging ninety-four inches of
snow per year, the citizens of Buffalo knew how to survive a
snowstorm. But the blizzard that engulfed the city for the next
four days was about to make history. Between the subzero wind chill
and whiteout conditions, hundreds of people were trapped when the
snow began to fall. Twenty- to thirty-foot-high snow drifts
isolated residents in their offices and homes, and even in their
cars on the highway. With a dependency on rubber-tire vehicles,
which lost all traction in the heavily blanketed urban streets,
they were cut off from food, fuel, and even electricity. This one
unexpected snow disaster stranded tens of thousands of people,
froze public utilities and transportation, and cost Buffalo
hundreds of millions of dollars in economic losses and property
damages. The destruction wrought by this snowstorm, like the
destruction brought on by other natural disasters, was from a
combination of weather-related hazards and the public policies
meant to mitigate them. Buffalo's 1977 blizzard, the first
snowstorm to be declared a disaster in US history, came after a
century of automobility, suburbanization, and snow removal
guidelines like the bare-pavement policy. Kneeland offers a
compelling examination of whether the 1977 storm was an anomaly or
the inevitable outcome of years of city planning. From the local to
the state and federal levels, Kneeland discusses governmental
response and disaster relief, showing how this regional event had
national implications for environmental policy and how its effects
have resounded through the complexities of disaster politics long
after the snow fell.
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