Radharc na Sleibhte wrote: » Yes, by community and postcode too.
GreeBo wrote: » You have plenty of what? You still seem to think that a warning WAS only warranted IF the bad weather came. Thats not what a warning is.
Radharc na Sleibhte wrote: » You’re not from round these ere parts I take it. We have plenty of them! But seriously, that’s my point. What’s outside YOUR window. In other words, your red warning was obviously warranted. Closing down our town, surrounding villages and all that hullabaloo that came with it wasn’t, or anything close to it. I know they have to give advance notice, but I can only speak for my town and our experiences. Obviously yours and other people where they get the forecast spot on are going to be grateful for the advance warnings.
MJohnston wrote: » So you want the weather warnings to have a town-level specificity?
Radharc na Sleibhte wrote: » You’re not from round these ere parts I take it. We have plenty of them! But seriously, that’s my point. What’s outside YOUR window. In other words, your red warning was obviously warranted. Closing down our town, surrounding villages and all that hullabaloo that came with it wasn’t, or anything close to it.
GreeBo wrote: » The take the decision to close in advance so that people can plan. no good closing it at the last minute when people havent made other arrangements. I'm happy for old people to be scared stiff in the safety of their warm houses with plenty of supplies. Id certainly take that over them not being scared and getting caught out in whats outside my window right now. People who ignore warnings and have something bad happen frankly deserve it.
Mikewalsh wrote: » I saw another warning today for rain and wind no less Shouldn't met eireann hold off on the warnings for the more extreme events
Radharc na Sleibhte wrote: » I think they need maybe a 4th warning and tighten up the parameters. Amber say, and really save red for absolute definitive extreme danger direct risk to your life weather, such as what happened in Kildare and Offaly and in the worst affected areas for Ophelia. I also think we need a government directive on what business and schools and shops and banks etc MUST do on any given particular warning. Our local primary school ended up taking three days off now (inc Ophelia) for absolutely nothing. Now I know the finer points of a weather forecast is almost a guessing game at times and I’m not looking for a weather report for each community, if that were even possible, but I know in these three days the local principal felt there was no need in our area to close the school and he was proved right. The red warning criteria never materialised here for either event now. I’m not sure what the solution is, as people say, “oh just because you weren’t affected doesn’t mean we weren’t”. But the fact is we weren’t affected, and let’s be realistic, did the models ever warrant a red warning in the north west, yet schools were closed, I would have had to close my business (only they were days closed anyway!), shops and local business pulled down their shutters. Elderly people were scared stiff. I know, I know it could have swung either way if the god of winded farted in a particular direction, but it hasn’t, twice now. What will happen the third time now? Some hard man will say, ah don’t mind that warning, remember the last two times and out he will venture.
firemansam4 wrote: » I think something needs to be changed with the warning system. A nationwide red warning did not seem warrented to me. There should have been an orange warning in some counties where schools ect could make there own judgement calls on weather to shut or not. Here in Donegal anywhere south of letterkenny did not get hardly anything and most forecasts and models predicted that. Now if things did change for the worse then there would have always been the option to upgrade to red. Like other posters mentined NI did not have as severe alerts and they were forecast to get it worse in quite a few models.
facehugger99 wrote: » 65 million people and a few dozen got stuck? Big deal - they didn't shut the Country down and fair dues to them. Kept the public transport running, kept the schools open. We could take a leaf from their book and show a bit more backbone rather than the overbearing nannying from our Government.
nacho libre wrote: » 9 people are dead in England, despite all the warnings. What would have hapened here had there been no warnings? We saw the same nonsense with Ophelia. As you say you can't win with some people.
GreeBo wrote: » They think its the Weather News and not the Weather Forecast.
leahyl wrote: » I’m not being a troll but at the moment where I am anyway does not warrant a red alert...sigh. We didn’t get any major snow at all yesterday or during the night, even paschal sheehy was trying to make it sound worse than it is on the radio just now lol. It seems mainly the east coast got the bulk. I thought this was going to be epic. Oh well :-( Now I’m reading reports of rain, Aaaargh!
GreeBo wrote: » It turns out that it didnt apply...if it did apply and there was no warning then lives could have been put at risk. The downside of a warning are far less than the downsides of no warning in the event of either being proved incorrect after the fact They reallly cant win with some people.
MJohnston wrote: » Yes, hindsight is 20-20. Forecasters are not psychic, so we can only judge the weather warnings by the modelled potential at the time of warning, not the eventual outcome. So many people do not understand this, and I don't know why.
greenpilot wrote: » All for a laughable warning which did not apply to most of our region.
MJohnston wrote: » In case anyone was in any doubt, the above is not the way a country should be run in the 21st century.
MJohnston wrote: » Apologies, I misread your post as complaining that the warnings were nanny state stuff, in reality you were saying the opposite. But yeah, the 1982 era of no warnings, no government leadership on preparations, etc. deserves to be left in the past. We can debate about the necessity for the warning levels to become more granular or impact based, but I don't think there's any arguing that they've been very useful from a perspective of preparation and emergency response.
greenpilot wrote: » Jesus. Are things so bad in this country that, if anything outside the "norm" occurs in the weather arena, we need to be cuddled, cradled, schooled and spoken to as if all common sense has disappeared from our greater population. Back in 1982, we had a disastrous time but we just got on with it. Listening to the radio on various stations it was hilarious listening to the likes of Connor Faulkner and folks like him explaining to folks what not to do in bad weather. It was like listening to a 3rd class road safety lesson by the local garda. What happened to folks common sense. This rubbish of "Elderly afraid to leave their houses". Eh What? The reason we didn't leave our houses was because idiots we aint. Now, Regarding this total red warning, for us In the West, (Mayo and Roscommon), it was completely farcical. Not a flake on the roads, bone dry, no wind, yet every school, Bank, PO, supermarket and chemist closed. I hear people complaining about a Nanny state, well, I think little heed will be paid to overexaggerated warnings going forward. If people do not have the common sense, life experience, or wherewithal to keep safe in bad weather situations, well It's their problem. Off you go, But do not treat the rest of us like fupping eejits!
greenpilot wrote: » No. Of course not.
laugh wrote: » What counties would you have specifically left out?
Gremlin wrote: » Evelyn Cusack, specifically said on RTE news that the red alert for Donegal was initiated because of the temperatures and the wind chill.
And I'll repeat this is without considering already accumulated lying snow.
Casualsingby wrote: » Isloated parts of North donegal had snow from streamers all week, nothing of consequence was expected there from Emma. Here's the subsequent runs and they kept the red and your ss was worst case scenario from long ago red over errigal. Even Gaoth probably the most knowledgeable poster on boards said he couldn't understand the national Red was nonsense for the north west. I could post numerous other ss of models showing it not evening reaching the north west. They kept a red for no reason and yesterday Emma if she hit the north west wouldn't have happened until after midnight yet everywhere was closed all day with no snow on the ground and none forecast to fall that day. But lets not let facts get in the way of constant met eireann circle jerk. No one or no thing is above criticism, a red warning for 25 hours, wait until midnight to remove it, when they knew earlier in the day it wasn't needed, they even said it on the radio but still kept. Completely shambolic.
MJohnston wrote: » To those people trying to pretend that no weather models were indicating red levels of snow/ice in all parts of the country, you're either lying or bluffing, but either way you're wrong: The above map shows Red level snowfall for everywhere in Ireland (potentially Sligo would have been Orange, but marginal).