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feralfantastic t1_j5qxbtl wrote

Because everyone loves a snow day, and mixing a lot of crazy in with a proportional response makes it more likely that everyone will treat it as a snow day.

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MappingClouds t1_j5qynfk wrote

I didn’t live here at the time but from what some have told me the 2007 ice storm really broke a lot of people and so they make sure they have everything.

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Cthepo t1_j5qz9p4 wrote

What do you mean, you people?

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EcoAffinity t1_j5qzvzn wrote

It's something exciting to break the mundanity of every other day. The possibility it could be just as bad or worse than predicted (like the ice storm), the preparation to stay home and/or have kids be home. People are people just living life. Whatever.

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Basementdork t1_j5r2jew wrote

He said snow! SNOW!!!!!!! Gotta get the bread and milk….

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blu3dice t1_j5r4nkj wrote

Your complaint is that people want to be prepared for a possible weather emergency?

Some folks got kids or sick parents to take care. People have disabilities that already limit their daily activities. Others who don't have transportation that may walk or take the city bus then have to urgently figure out what to do before bad weather arrives. So yeah the traffic is worse. Toughen up buttercup and worry about yourself.

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Horror-Log1100 t1_j5r8z6o wrote

We are notoriously a tricky spot to predict, being on a plateau. Sometimes we get nothing and sometimes it sits over us for 24 hours. Sometimes they say snow then people are like “oh it’s nothing” to wake up the next day with an 1/2in ice. KY3 also serves an enormous area, so they report everywhere which makes it feel “bigger”. I think it’s fine, to each their own.

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user10085 t1_j5raxkf wrote

Rick’s? Here’s looking at you kid.

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Cloud_Disconnected t1_j5rd07g wrote

Most of us already lost our minds. From boredom. Snow in the forecast is free entertainment.

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Spastic_pinkie t1_j5rdwtf wrote

If it makes you feel better, it's the same way in the Northeast. Shelves get cleared of bread and milk. I guess it's the same for anywhere it gets snow, even Alaska.

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Jwh956 t1_j5rinmf wrote

If you are originally from up north it is very different to see. It is wildly strange how it is all hands on deck to shut down everything in the area.

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RunWild3840 t1_j5rit7y wrote

I’m originally from Maryland, and people there do the same thing. Forget finding bread, milk, toilet paper or eggs if there’s snow in the forecast. They salt the roads 2 days before the forecasted snow and school gets called when the first flake falls.

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WaywardDeadite t1_j5rmxu6 wrote

  1. The ice storm of 2007
  2. More than half of Springfield residents live at or below the poverty level. That means living paycheck to paycheck. You can't plan ahead to have extra food or supplies, you have to get stuff at the last second. Whatever you can afford.
  3. Because most Springfieldians are quite poor, they have less access to jobs with flexible schedules and are typically expected to show up regardless of the weather. They're prepping the best they can for the trek ahead - with vehicles that aren't as safe on the roads as they would prefer, but they are choosing between two bad options. Go to work in a car w/bald tires and no heat vs no job, no rent money, homeless, get arrested and have your kids taken.
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MaintenancePresent37 t1_j5rt0c5 wrote

A storm came out of nowhere in December 2002 and it was brutal. Four hours to exit the mall parking lot onto Battlefield. Not to mention the ice storms over the years. They are a different breed in Springfield.

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notnotpegbundy t1_j5rvbxs wrote

Tell me you didn’t experience the ice storm of ‘07 without telling me you didn’t experience the ice storm of ‘07.

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daysknight t1_j5s0148 wrote

My parents worked at a nursing home, so we spent about a week sleeping in my mom's office because we had no power, and they could not leave. At least they had generators though so there was minimal heat.

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snacksv1 t1_j5s2v8t wrote

Better safe than sorry cold wet and hungry.

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antares127 t1_j5s401e wrote

I was 12 when that happened. Old enough to remember it well but not old to feel the weight of it that my parents did. People joke about how we bring it up a lot when talking about winter but damn was that shit crazy. Two weeks without power. We put our refrigerated items outside in the snow and ice to keep it cold. You couldn’t go anywhere without everything being encased in two inches of ice. Shit was wack

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Advanced_Car1599 t1_j5tcimj wrote

Blaming it on that last ice storm is for the newbs. I’ve lived in Spfd most of my life (30+ years) and this has always been the behavior.

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EngryEngineer t1_j5toxg1 wrote

Around the time you were posting this the schools were putting out closure notices, so maybe they were calling off because they knew they were going to have their kids? It does seem like we jump the gun a bit, like it isn't particularly cold and even my road that doesn't ever get plowed/salted is clear, but that being true doesn't open the schools again.

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MaxYuckers t1_j5tqywd wrote

This guy loves the Rick restaurant, I guess I should check it out...

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Embarrassed_Feed_145 t1_j5ua6h8 wrote

and every time it snows we have posts like this lmao. i dont blame anyone for staying in. wish i could too

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Ryanqzqz t1_j5vjwe7 wrote

Oddly enough I was a Missouri native transplanted to southern OK at the time and I felt like Superman.

We got hammered and it was a month before we had power at our place, and we were stuck out of work and with little to no town infrastructure up and running for at least two weeks.

I pushed people out of flat sections of road (because in OK you apparently can get stuck just trying to move forward at a stoplight) with my Ford Taurus on mud tires and we kept the house warm with fish fryers in the living room and blankets stapled to the living room doorways.

We drank ice cold beer we kept on the porch and I literally cooked a few squirrels, because “well we’re supposed to be in survival mode, right?” My wife was less than enthused… and ate spaghetti and meatballs she cooked on the fish fryer…

Now I know why everyone looks at me weird when I love days like today…

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