Author Topic: IVAN heads toward Jamaica (Tranquility Bay?)  (Read 6803 times)

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Offline Anonymous

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IVAN heads toward Jamaica (Tranquility Bay?)
« on: September 09, 2004, 11:02:00 AM »
A category 5 hurricane is racing toward Jamaica.

It makes ya wonder what the owners of that hell-hole on earth camp are doing to protect the physical well being of those kids. Americans have been urged to evacuate that island, meanwhile these 'hereyoufixmykid' "parents" probably aren't even worried. I mean why would they be?

I hope those kids are okay. I know when they eventually leave that island (emotionally scarred) I wonder years down the road when it is their turn to take care of their "parents", how all that is going to work out?
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Offline Anonymous

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IVAN heads toward Jamaica (Tranquility Bay?)
« Reply #1 on: September 09, 2004, 11:27:00 AM »
I wonder years down the road when it is their turn to take care of their "parents", how all that is going to work out?


Cheap shot.
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Offline Anonymous

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IVAN heads toward Jamaica (Tranquility Bay?)
« Reply #2 on: September 09, 2004, 11:30:00 AM »
Quote
On 2004-09-09 08:27:00, Anonymous wrote:

Cheap shot.   "


I don't think so, I wouldn't want to be an 80 year old YOU in a nursing depending on a kid I once put in TB.
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Offline Anonymous

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IVAN heads toward Jamaica (Tranquility Bay?)
« Reply #3 on: September 09, 2004, 12:17:00 PM »
Its not a cheep shot. Its something to take seriously.

But the issue here is:
What is WWASP doing to protect the kids from this storm?

So WWASP - clue us in.

How do you batten down the hatches at TB in a catagory 5 storm?
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Offline Anonymous

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IVAN heads toward Jamaica (Tranquility Bay?)
« Reply #4 on: September 09, 2004, 12:19:00 PM »
Quote
On 2004-09-09 09:17:00, Anonymous wrote:

"Its not a cheep shot. Its something to take seriously.



But the issue here is:

What is WWASP doing to protect the kids from this storm?



So WWASP - clue us in.



How do you batten down the hatches at TB in a catagory 5 storm?







"
::rocker::  ::rocker:: THANK YOU THANK YOU

I couldn't of put it better...WELL said!!!
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Offline turbinekat

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IVAN heads toward Jamaica (Tranquility Bay?)
« Reply #5 on: September 09, 2004, 12:26:00 PM »
Regardless of who cares for whom & how old they are is not the point at this particular moment!  Just MY POV!!!

The safety of the children is in question...I really do wonder if the U.S. Embassy is doing anything right now to protect those children currently at TB.

Maybe someone should be contacting them pertaining to the weather issues at hand?  The Embassy has been contacted before pertaining to the children's safety alone, prior to any of these current weather conditions; but to no avail.  According to the WWASP contract, the school is not responsible in any situation like this.

So the children are basically on their own!!!

I'll bet this makes a bunch of parents proud of their decision to send a child to a foreign country?

This alone should deter people from sending children abroad?  Not to mention all of the allegations these bogus "behavioral modification schools" have currently levied against them by numerous former inmates.

PARENTS FOR THE SAFETY OF YOUR CHILDREN...PLEASE CONSIDER RETURNING THEM TO THEIR HOMES FOR THEIR OWN SAFETY & YOUR PIECE OF MIND... :cry:
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Offline Kiwi

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IVAN heads toward Jamaica (Tranquility Bay?)
« Reply #6 on: September 09, 2004, 12:36:00 PM »
On the positive side, it might provide the opportunity for a mass escape.
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Offline Anonymous

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IVAN heads toward Jamaica (Tranquility Bay?)
« Reply #7 on: September 09, 2004, 08:08:00 PM »
Hurricane forces juvenile jail to close; teens released...


http://www.palmbeachpost.com/storm/cont ... teens.html
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Offline Anonymous

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IVAN heads toward Jamaica (Tranquility Bay?)
« Reply #8 on: September 09, 2004, 08:11:00 PM »
That was my post above...forgot to sign in.  Was reading the news paper online & noticed this title & link.  for some reason or another I can't get it to open???

However, it does sound interesting...

Regards,

turbinekat
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Offline Anonymous

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IVAN heads toward Jamaica (Tranquility Bay?)
« Reply #9 on: September 09, 2004, 08:28:00 PM »
Heard on CNN that Ivan blew away a prison in Guam and the prisoners got away.

Here is the above story:

Juvenile jail closing forces release of teens
Palm Beach Post Staff Report

Thursday, September 09, 2004

Some teens arrested in the aftermath of Hurricane Frances caught a break this week, as the local jail for juveniles was closed down and court officials released them to their parents instead of finding beds for them.

The Juvenile Assessment Center, the teenage equivalent of the Palm Beach County Jail, was closed down until Thursday. Before it reopened, teens charged with serious crimes were shipped to similar facilities in Broward and Miami-Dade counties.

But to ease the overcrowding affecting many South Florida facilities, court officials decided to let some kids who would usually be held in the JAC go home with their parents.




Emergency Info



Message Board

Share stories about the storm, report damage in your neighborhood.
? Storm 2004 forum


Hurricane Ivan

 POPULAR PAGES "We're open to anything right now to ease the jail pressure," said Circuit Judge Nelson Bailey.

Bailey assured that all juveniles made at least one appearance before a judge to ensure they had somewhere to go and someone to go home with. If the teens were brought in after curfew hours, they remained held until daylight.

And in some cases where officials wanted to release the teens, Bailey said they couldn't because they couldn't reach their parents.
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Offline Anonymous

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IVAN heads toward Jamaica (Tranquility Bay?)
« Reply #10 on: September 09, 2004, 08:48:00 PM »
//Heard on CNN that Ivan blew away a prison in Guam and the prisoners got away.//
it was Granada, not gaum. But a prison did blow down.
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Offline BuzzKill

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IVAN heads toward Jamaica (Tranquility Bay?)
« Reply #11 on: September 09, 2004, 08:59:00 PM »
http://www.cnn.com/2004/WEATHER/09/09/h ... index.html


//The most powerful hurricane to hit the Caribbean in 10 years damaged 90 percent of the homes in Grenada, killing 13 people there, and destroyed a 17th century stone prison that left criminals on the loose, officials said//


Devastating Hurricane Ivan eyes Jamaica
Florida Keys tourists ordered out
Thursday, September 9, 2004 Posted: 5:27 PM EDT (2127 GMT)


ST. GEORGE'S, Grenada (AP) -- Hurricane Ivan intensified Thursday, heading straight for Jamaica and possibly Florida with 160 mph winds after it killed at least 20 people while pummeling Grenada, Barbados and other islands. Foreigners began fleeing Jamaica, and U.S. officials ordered people to evacuate the Florida Keys.

Widespread looting erupted in St. George's, Grenada's capital, and dazed survivors picked through debris and tried to salvage remnants left by the storm. An Associated Press reporter watched people taking televisions and shopping carts of food from warehouses.

Troops from other Caribbean nations were on the way to help restore order in Grenada, where the country's police commissioner said every police station was damaged.

The most powerful hurricane to hit the Caribbean in 10 years damaged 90 percent of the homes in Grenada, killing 13 people there, and destroyed a 17th century stone prison that left criminals on the loose, officials said.

Ivan was expected to reach Jamaica by Friday and Cuba by the weekend, the U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami said.

Tourists and residents also were told to evacuate the Florida Keys because Ivan could hit the island chain by Sunday. It was the third evacuation ordered there in a month, following Hurricane Charley and hard on the heels of Hurricane Frances.

Hurricane Ivan strengthened early Thursday to become a Category 4 on a scale of 5. It packed sustained winds of 150 mph with higher gusts as it passed north of the Dutch Caribbean islands of Aruba, Bonaire and Curacao.

Four children also drowned after they were swept into the sea from a beach in Santo Domingo, capital of the Dominican Republic, nearly

"The children were in front of the sea when it seems a gigantic wave dragged them into the Caribbean Sea," said Jose Luis German, a spokesman for the National Emergency Commission. Authorities there closed part of the seaside Malecon drive, where massive waves washed over the road.

Jamaican leader P.J. Patterson urged his people to pray.

"We have to prepare for the worst case scenario. Let us pray for God's care," Patterson said Wednesday night. "This is a time that we must demonstrate that we are indeed our brothers' and sisters' keeper."

Amy White, a 29-year-old American living in Jamaica, was planning to fly out of the island Thursday morning for her parents' house in Monroe, New Jersey

"They got worried so they said they wanted me to come home," said White, a marketing manager for a clothing apparel company in Kingston, the Jamaican capital. "I've never been in a hurricane like this before. I feel like it's fate so I'm gonna go."

At Kingston's international airport, dozens of foreigners lined up to get off the island.

"We were going to stick it out but the company I work for told everybody to evacuate," said Dennis Hennessey, 39, a building contractor from Essex Junction, Vermont, who was helping build the new U.S. Embassy in Kingston.

"They say Jamaica is a blessed place, and I hope it is," he said.

Death, destruction in Grenada
On Tuesday, Ivan pummeled Grenada, Barbados and other southern islands and killed three people in Barbados, Tobago and Venezuela.

Details on the extent of the death and destruction in Grenada did not emerge until Wednesday because the storm cut all communications with the country of 100,000 people, and halted radio transmissions on the island.

"We are terribly devastated ... It's beyond imagination," Grenada's Prime Minister Keith Mitchell told his people and the world on Wednesday from aboard a British Royal Navy vessel that rushed to the rescue.

The United States declared Grenada a disaster area, allowing the immediate release of $50,000 for emergency relief.

"This is just a jump start," said spokesman Jose Fuentes of the U.S. Agency for International Development in Washington, which has four members on the ground in Grenada. "As soon as the initial assessment is done we'll be sending more aid."

British Royal Navy crews from two ships said Thursday they have cleared the damaged and flooded airport runway outside St. George's and that emergency relief flights were starting to arrive in the former colony.

The British sailors brought body bags ashore and performed some emergency surgery.

"We were saving lives yesterday, with many of my sailors ashore doing a lot of good work with people who had suffered quite terribly," Royal Navy Commander Mike McCartain said in an interview released by Britain's Ministry of Defense.

Mitchell confirmed that the island's 17th century stone prison was "completely devastated" allowing convicts to escape, including politicians jailed for 20 years for killings in a 1983 left-wing palace coup that led the United States to invade.

Grenada is known as a major world producer of nutmeg and for the U.S. invasion that followed the coup, when American officials had determined Grenada's airport was going to become a joint Cuban-Soviet base. Cuba said it was helping build the airport for civilian use. Nineteen Americans died in the fighting and a disputed number of others that the United States put at 45 Grenadians and 24 Cubans.

Mitchell, whose own home was flattened, said he feared the death toll would rise and much of the country's agriculture had been destroyed, including the nutmeg crop.

U.N. spokesman Fred Eckhard said virtually every major building in St. George's has suffered structural damage and that the United Nations was sending a disaster team. Grenada's once-quaint capital boasted English Georgian and French provincial buildings.

"It looks like a landslide happened," said Nicole Organ, a 21-year-old veterinary student from Toronto at St. George's University, which overlooks the Grenadian capital. "There are all these colors coming down the mountainside -- sheets of metal, pieces of shacks, roofs came off in layers."

Students there, mostly Americans, were arming themselves with knives, sticks and pepper spray against looters, said Sonya Lazarevic, 36, from New York City. "We don't feel safe," she said on a bad telephone line.

When Organ wandered downtown after the hurricane passed, she said she saw bands of men carrying machetes looting a hardware store. She said she saw a bank with glass facade intact on her way down that was totally smashed when she returned.

In St. George's, looters smashed shop windows and cleared out a huge dry goods warehouse filled with rice, sugar, flour, butter and soap.

Damage widespread in other places
Elsewhere, Ivan pulverized concrete homes into piles of rubble and tore away hundreds of landmark red zinc roofs.

Its howling winds and drenching rains also flooded parts of Venezuela's north coast, and a 32-year-old man died after battering waves engulfed a kiosk.

In Tobago, officials reported a 32-year-old pregnant woman died when a 40-foot palm tree fell into her home, pinning her to her bed.

A 75-year-old Canadian woman was found drowned in a canal swollen by flood waters in Barbados. Neighbors said the Toronto native, who had lived in Barbados for 30 years, braved the storm to search for her cat.

A meteorologist at the Miami center, Hugh Cobb, said that if Ivan hits Jamaica, it could be more destructive than Hurricane Gilbert, which was only Category 3 when it devastated the island in 1988.

Jamaica posted a hurricane warning Thursday morning. Government schools were closed and fishermen advised to pull their skiffs ashore and head for dry land. Haiti's southwest remained on hurricane watch and tropical storm warning. Dominican Republic was under hurricane watch and tropical storm warning for the Barahona peninsula with a tropical storm watch over the southwest coast. Cayman Islands posted a hurricane watch as did Cuba for central and eastern parts of the island.

At 5 p.m. EDT, Ivan was centered about 350 miles southeast of Kingston, Jamaica. Hurricane-force winds extended up to 35 miles and tropical storm-force winds another 175 miles. Ivan was moving west-northwest at 15 mph.

The U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami warned it was riling large and dangerous battering waves and rain that could cause life-threatening flash floods and mudslides.

Ivan became the fourth major hurricane of a busy Atlantic season Sunday.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Copyright 2004 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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Offline Anonymous

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IVAN heads toward Jamaica (Tranquility Bay?)
« Reply #12 on: September 09, 2004, 09:15:00 PM »
Now, back to some important questions.  Does everyone think the children currently under a certain "behavioral modification program" are being cared for properly prior to a hurricane?

Should these children be sent home?

Does the U.S. Embassy now represent these kids once "BMP" washes their hands of them?

When & or if the Embassy should step in & become involved?

At what point should they be considered in harms way?

Regards,

turbinekat
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Offline Deborah

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IVAN heads toward Jamaica (Tranquility Bay?)
« Reply #13 on: September 10, 2004, 12:15:00 AM »
Hurrican Annie hits TB Tonight
In addition to Shelby and Tim, a british mom who pulled her son from TB this morning, after an unannounced visit.
Go to the archives and select the Family Hub program.

1. This Thursday Evening, September 09, 2004 @ 5pm Pacific Standard Time: PREMIERE of Family Hub Series - Part 1:
Parental Discretion is Advised.

Topic: Behavior Modification Programs - What you DON'T know!

http://www.worldtalkradio.com/archive.asp?aid=2259

Parents, this is definitely the program for you. Tune in today and find out the truth about what really occurs in behavior modification programs,
boot camps, wilderness camps, and drug rehabs. Can such facilities be considered as cults, and/or involved in cult-like activities?
What ?treatments? are really being offered at these centers? Are your children being ?treated? or ?abused??
Do children commit suicide while / after going through the ?treatments? offered in these programs?

You are invited to join Annie Armen together with special guests Shelby Earnshaw, national director of ISAC Corporation http://www.isaccorp.org
and child advocate Tim Rocha, and UNITED, let's STOP the silence within and STOP the abuse throughout!

This show is sponsored in part by ISAC Corporation.
Check out ISAC's New Company Distinguished Guest Page on Annie Armen Live by visiting http://www.worldtalkradio.com/guests.asp?sid=97.
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gt;>>>>>>>>>>>>>><<<<<<<<<<<<<<
Hidden Lake Academy, after operating 12 years unlicensed will now be monitored by the state. Access information on the Federal Class Action lawsuit against HLA here: http://www.fornits.com/wwf/viewtopic.php?t=17700

Offline Anonymous

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IVAN heads toward Jamaica (Tranquility Bay?)
« Reply #14 on: September 10, 2004, 11:32:00 AM »
So WWASP - clue us in.

"How do you batten down the hatches at TB in a catagory 5 storm? "

Here you go: ask them:

(435)656-2313
[email protected]

Jamica Embassy : Bruce Kraft: 876 929-5374
fax  876 935 6018

Jamaican police 876  967 1110
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