To visit or not to visit...1yr on
We're heading out to Vic later this month for the Otway Odyssey (:eek:) and have been thinking about doing a side trip to Kinglake/Marysville.
More info here on this weekend's 1yr anniversary:
http://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/vic...-1225826915338
http://www.news.com.au/breaking-news...-1225826619162
My question is this : We'd like to visit the pub & support the local community. Some locals want people to visit, others aren't so sure. Is it too soon to visit a place that was badly devastated & traumatised a year ago?
Any thoughts?
the New Orleans perspective
I take deep exception to Oakleaf's statement about New Orleans, and let's leave it at that.
CC - I don't know about KingLake, but our (N.O.) economy is somewhat centered on tourism, despite the fact that we have other industries. I never really realized this until post-Katrina. So if an economy is based on tourism, and you have a major disaster, it's even harder to rebuild. As sadistic as it sounds, some of the tour companies around her started doing "disaster tours" - taking people to some of the hardest hit areas. Partly because if you come to a convention, and stay in the French Quarter, you're in areas that weren't directly affected by the floodwaters, you'd never know anything happened. For some people, it doesn't seem real until they've seen it with their own eyes.
Five years later, we're still rebuilding. I drove I-10 east yesterday through the city to Mississippi, and drove past neighborhoods that still have houses, apartments, and commercial structures that are not secured or are in sore need of being demolished - despite of city ordinances. On average it takes 10 years to rebuild from a major disaster.
As trite as this may sound, after the Saints won the Superbowl, bookings for future conventions shot up. Their win validated that the fact that the city is alive. We had the biggest turn out for Mardi Gras ever this year. I met people from Michigan, New York, Texas and California on the parade routes - and none of them had ties to the city (former residents or had family in the area, they were 100% tourists). Thank you for spending your money here. :D
So, CC, I'm glad you went to KingLake and spent some money. Even buying lunch at a local restuarant helps a bit, as that's new money brought into the system. It also helps disuade some local fear of "what if the tourists don't come back?" It will be a long haul for the areas hit by the Kilmore East Fire to rebuild, with many challenges.