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 DISPATCHES | Issue: "Playing with capitalism" May 23, 2009

Quick Takes

Oddball occurrences | The Editors

Illustration by Krieg Barrie

Rescue bill

Now, the pre-hurricane warning of "stay at your own risk" could imply more than just a risk of bodily injury: It could imply economic risk too. The Texas state Senate passed a provision on April 24 declaring that people rescued by emergency workers after ignoring an emergency evacuation order would be forced to foot the bill. Despite an evacuation order preceding Hurricane Ike, more than 20,000 residents remained on Galveston Island in Texas when the storm made landfall on Sept. 13 last year. More than 3,000 were rescued. "They have that right to remain if they choose to," said Sen. John Carona, who authored the bill. "But they stay at their own peril, and they stay with the possibility that if recovery is necessary to preserve their lives, they'd pay the related cost." How much? A single hour of a helicopter rescue costs approximately $4,400.

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World Magazine: May 22, 1999

Saber savior
May. 22, 1999