Well, we tried to give it another go, making use of what appeared to an easy HOV entrance into the contra flow, even managed to scrounge more fuel for a two car exit...then saw some coverage that showed another Houston parking lot of I-45. So we unloaded the vehicles and gave up on the effort.
I've been watching all those folks trapped, without gas, abandoning their cars. This was a botched evacuation. The main problem was the failure to control and meter access to keep the vehicles MOVING. This led to a chain of events: much higher fuel consumption, much lower traffic movement than theoretical 1800 cars/hr per lane maximum, overheating, shear exhaustion. Many, many folks simply turned around and went home before they ran out of fuel.
There has been another problem. No gasoline in Texas... The hell you say? That's right, the State authorities were responsible for staging gasoline availability along the route as part of the evacuation plan. Apparently, several individuals all thought another was taking care of it. (Somebody made sure Rick Perry's hair looked good throughout though.) Result? No gas, until it was too late. I and/or my family could have gotten out despite the long wait, IF I/we knew fuel was coming or available *somewhere.* With traffic as bad as it was effective range of a vehicle was less than 100 miles. So this comes down to a case of "better the devil you know" (a prepared house) vs. a vehicle stranded on a freeway.
The refills were critical considering the congestion. The lack of refills then made the congestion worse. Don't misunderstand, the refills should not have been so critical, it was the congestion that made them so. When people are moving 1 to 4 mph (far slower than Rita) then fuel is a problem. Proper control of the evacuation routes would have fixed this problem.
Contra flow didn't work to even a quarter of its potential. Why? Apparently TexDOT had not really tested it, and lacked sufficient detail in their plans. They wasted quite a few hours trying to work out the details on the fly. It simply took too long. This is not the sort of thing that you can just make up as you go along. They seem to have been reluctant to remove traffic barriers to open up the system fully. Throughout there were too many bottlenecks in the early stages.
Two days without sleep, time for some shut eye. I won't be getting any sleep tomorrow night.
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