Another sign of the economic times

Given my most recent entry about the difficult decisions that ROC boards are facing due to the struggling state of our economy, I hope you'll find this article about the Red Hat Society that I read in  today's Sarasota Herald-Tribune interesting.   It seems all of my visits to the communities we represent coincide with some Red Hat Society event and I have a feeling that many readers of my blog may already know about the debate over whether dues should be charged to every "Red Hatter".  

Hurricane Charley--August 13, 2004

Today's edition of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune has a  very interesting article on how Charlotte County has recovered from Hurricane Charley, which made landfall in the Punta Gorda area as a small but very powerful category 4 hurricane five years ago today, on August 13, 2004. 

There are several manufactured housing communities mentioned in the story and, with one tropical depression and a very strong tropical wave churning off the coast of Africa, I thought this would be a good time to remind ROC residents that a slower than usual start to our annual hurricane season should not give rise to a false sense of security.    The traditional peak of the season is still one month away and as we all know, hurricanes that occur in "slow" seasons (such as Hurricane Andrew, which devastated portions of southeast Florida in late August of 1992) can be just as destructive as those that occur in "active" seasons.  

As always, ROC managers and board members should be aware of the need to prepare for an unwelcome visit from one of these tropical systems.