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Washington’s Place in the Recruiting Hierarchy

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Washington’s Place in the Recruiting Hierarchy


Trying to figure out recruiting success based solely on offers is a bit of a fool’s errand. There is no accountability system out there to verify an offer. Every recruiting service has stories of schools texting/calling an outlet to say we didn’t actually offer that kid. But coaches can’t say anything publicly. And even if they did say the words “we’re offering you a scholarship”, there’s no way to verify that an offer is still valid 1, 3, or 6 months later.

That’s why going off of official visitors is a bit more of a reliable method even if it lowers your sample sizes. Teams are required to put their money where their mouth is when it comes to flying a prospect and their family into town and paying for their meals and lodging while there. The bigger the school, the more likely they’re willing to bring someone on an OV that they don’t really want all that badly. But most of the time if a player takes an official visit it means they’re at worst a high plan B option for the school.

Washington brought in 43 players this cycle for an official visit and 22 of them are committed to the Huskies with a chance at a few more. Those players took an average of 3.3 official visits this spring/summer so for most of them there was a clear indication of who else the Huskies competed against for their commitments.

What better way then to get a sense for how well Washington is recruiting than to look at what schools they were competing against for OVs and how well each school converted for those prospects?

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I put together a little formula for each school that essentially shows how much better or worse UW did at getting a commitment from those mutual prospects than the other school. If neither school got a commitment then it doesn’t count in either team’s favor.

There were 8 schools who Washington shared at least 4 prospects on OVs this cycle. Here they are in order of best to worst for the Huskies to get a sense for where UW stands against their most frequent competition (higher numbers are better and zero is roughly average).

Arizona State: 60.0% (5 prospects: 3 to UW, 0 to ASU)

Mutual players: TE Vander Ploog, TE Baron Naone, S Rylon Dillard-Allen, ED Smith Orogbo, LB Cyrus Polu

There was some serious competition for tight end help between the Huskies and Arizona State this cycle. Three major targets ended up between the two schools as ASU wrapped up AJ Ia early on while both Vander Ploog and Baron Naone took visits to Tempe. Washington ended up being just find that Ia decided to commit before visiting Seattle because the Huskies wound up with both Ploog and Naone who are rated above him in the 247 rankings.

Washington was less happy when Arizona native and four-star safety Rylon Dillard-Allen decided to commit to home state ASU early on this spring before he could take an official visit to Seattle. The Huskies and other schools kept on recruiting RDA though and he eventually decommitted, took several more visits, and picked the Huskies over SEC schools Alabama and Texas A&M among others. Both schools missed out on four-star edge rusher Smith Orogbo (Texas) and LB Cyrus Polu (Utah).

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California: 57.1% (7 prospects: 5 to UW, 1 to Cal)

Mutual players: WR Chris Lawson, TE Vander Ploog, WR Deji Ajose, TE Baron Naone, ED Devin Hyde, S Aiden Manutai, OL John Mills

For a while this looked like it would be close to a clean sweep for the Huskies. The lone player in this group to commit to Cal was Hawai’i safety Aiden Manutai. Washington seemed to be out front for Manutai after they got his last visit but they ended up also landing Rylon Dillard-Allen and are in the thick of it for Ladarian Clardy, each of whom is ranked higher than Manutai. He could be a great pickup for the Bears long-term but the Huskies have to feel okay that they ultimately didn’t end up with his commitment.

The one player who got away from both schools was OL John Mills who ended up committing to Texas. We’ll get to the Longhorns later on but there’s no shame losing out to their recruiting these days.

Adding insult to injury is the fact that Washington came into Cal’s backyard for most of these commitments. Three of the Huskies’ commitments came from players in the greater Bay Area with Chris Lawson (San Francisco), Deji Ajose (Oakland), and Devin Hyde (Menlo Park). The other two were Vander Ploog who is from Southern California and Baron Naone who is mostly in between the two schools in Oregon. No matter the context, Washington pretty soundly kicked Cal’s butt going head-to-head.

UCLA: 57.1% (7 prospects: 4 to UW, 0 to Cal)

Mutual players: LB Zaydrius Rainey-Sale, WR Dylan Robinson, S Rylon Dillard-Allen, ED Devin Hyde, TE Kaleb Edwards, OL Darius Afalava, OL Demetri Manning

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Washington also ended up with 4 of the 7 mutual players who took official visits to both UCLA and UW but this time it was a clean sweep. Edge rusher Devin Hyde is the only player that took visits to all 3 of Cal, UCLA, and UW so it wasn’t just that there was significant overlap between all 3 schools. The Bruins were able to get visits from four-stars Zaydrius Rainey-Sale, Dylan Robinson, and Rylon Dillard-Allen but Washington was ultimately able to win for all 3 prospects (in addition to Hyde).

Both schools missed out on offensive linemen Darius Aflava (Oklahoma) and Demetri Manning (Oregon) as well as TE Kaleb Edwards (Alabama). The average player who took a visit to UCLA as well was higher than for Cal with a rating of 0.8943 compared to 0.8834 which is roughly the difference between a high three-star and low four-star player.

Utah: 33.3% (6 prospects: 3 to UW, 1 to Utah)

Mutual players: TE Vander Ploog, CB Dylan Robinson, WR Deji Ajose, LB Cyrus Polu, OL Darius Afalava, CB LaRue Zamorano

The Utes have been extremely feisty on the recruiting trail with their sustained success but it looks like Washington still managed to best them for the most part this year. Utah was viewed as the primary contender for TE Vander Ploog but the Huskies were able to close out that recruitment. Four-star CB Dylan Robinson and WR Deji Ajose both took official visits to Utah but didn’t seem to be among the final few schools for either so Ploog was the only true heads up recruiting battle in which Washington prevailed.

Utah was able to land in-state linebacker Cyrus Polu but Washington countered by landing a pair of four-star in-state linebackers of their own to counter the blow. Both schools thought they had a chance with Darius Afalava who was one of the better offensive linemen out West and who ended up picking Oklahoma. CB LaRue Zamorano ended up committing to Michigan State after seemingly being a UW lean for several weeks before Dylan Robinson committed in what may have been a “one spot for two guys” situation.

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Oregon: 0.0% (4 prospects: 1 to UW, 1 to Oregon)

Mutual players: WR Chris Lawson, OL Demetri Manning, TE Kaleb Edwards, DL Josiah Sharma

Technically, both schools were equal here as each one got one commitment out of the group and saw 2 players commit elsewhere. So UW is recruiting just as well as Oregon then, right? This cycle saw more evidence that Jimmy Lake may have been right that UW and Oregon aren’t rivals on the recruiting trail. Oregon has been focused mainly on the national stage in this recruiting class and only have 5 of their 14 current commits from California, Oregon, and Washington. That has led the Huskies to nab the top player from each state and if recent Minnesota OT decommit Zac Stascausky pulls the trigger it will mean Washington has taken 3 players from the state of Oregon who the Ducks didn’t target.

Washington won a battle to end up with WR Chris Lawson who had both the Huskies and the Ducks in his final 3 schools. They also lost the battle for OL Demetri Manning from Bellevue, WA which definitely stings. Manning is currently Oregon’s lowest rated commitment though.

Oddly enough, both Washington and Oregon have at times earned commitments from DL Josiah Sharma who took official visits to both schools. Sharma committed to Washington under DeBoer then decommitted after the coaching change. He pledged to the Ducks at the end of June in what was viewed as a bit of a surprise but less than a month later flipped to Texas who were the favorites the day before his June commitment to Oregon. Both schools missed out on TE Kaleb Edwards who committed to Alabama.

USC: -16.7% (4 prospects: 1 to UW, 1 to Oregon)

Mutual players: OL Champ Taulealea, OL Elijah Vaikona, LB Matai Toga’i, WR Donovan Olugbode, WR Andrew Marsh, WR Phillip Bell

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This is the one entry with the most potential for change. Two out of the 6 players who took visits at both schools are still uncommitted with four-star WRs Andrew Marsh and Phillip Bell. Most recruiting folks have Bell as a contest between Ohio State and USC but he has been high on the Huskies. Meanwhile, Marsh has recently been viewed as a heavy Michigan lean but was on campus at Washington this week and told Dawgman that UW is likely in his top-2 right now. Either would be a massive pull for the Huskies but the smart money is for the reigning Big Ten powers (Ohio State and Michigan) to win out for the pair.

Both Washington and USC were able to win out when they did battle for offensive linemen with the Huskies getting a commitment from Champ Taulealea and USC for Elijah Vaikona. USC already had a commitment from four-star linebacker Matai Togia’i but he opted to take a visit to the Huskies anyways. It doesn’t look like that got him to change his mind but it showed the coaching staff was willing to take a shot by getting him on campus. The other prospect was WR Donovan Olugbode who ended up committing to Missouri with the Huskies seemingly finishing second.

Alabama: -25.0% (4 prospects: 1 to UW, 2 to Bama)

Mutual players: S Rylon Dillard-Allen, CB Dijon Lee, TE Kaleb Edwards, DL Josiah Sharma

Given that Alabama just stole away Washington’s head coach and most of their staff, it’s not a surprise that this matchup has gone in the Tide’s favor. Husky fans will no doubt be irked to see that DeBoer and company have been on fire recruiting at Alabama and that includes winning battles for California four-stars Dijon Lee and Kaleb Edwards. Both were looking like potentially elite pickups with heavy interest in Washington before the coaching changes but instead are following DeBoer to Tuscaloosa.

Washington did manage to get a commitment from Rylon Dillard-Allen who had Alabama in his final five and did take a visit there. It’s worth noting that Alabama currently has 0 committed safeties in their class of 2025 so it’s not as if the Tide already had multiple higher rated safeties in the boat and didn’t have room for RDA. Both schools missed out on Sharma as he flipped from UW to Oregon to Texas.

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Texas: -42.9% (7 prospects: 0 to UW, 3 to Texas)

Mutual players: ED Smith Orogbo, DL Josiah Sharma, OL John Mills, WR Andrew Marsh, LB Madden Faraimo, TE Kaleb Edwards, CB Dijon Lee

Now we get to the only school that has been a complete sweep going against Washington. It’s not a completely foregone conclusion. The aforementioned WR Andrew Marsh as well as four-star LB Madden Faraimo haven’t committed anywhere yet. There’s still a chance that the Huskies win out for one of them. But despite having beaten Texas on the field in consecutive seasons, Sark has been whipping UW on the recruiting trail.

It was no surprise that they were able to get in-state four-star edge rusher Smith Orogbo to stay home. It would be a shock if UW beat the Longhorns for a priority recruit from the state of Texas. They were able to go into California though and win battles for both Josiah Sharma and OL John Mills who were both three-star prospects at the time. You might expect Texas to not need to come into California for that caliber of prospect but this year they did and it dented UW’s class potentially.

Conclusion

The results from this aren’t particularly surprising. Washington was able to win almost every time that they went head-to-head with any former Pac-12 school other than Oregon or USC. That includes against UCLA who is headed to the Big Ten with a bigger financial share but obviously has had a lot less recent on-field success.

Things have been tilted in Oregon and USC’s favor but this cycle when they’ve gone head-to-head the Huskies have been able to beat each school once for a four-star player. It’s not a given that Washington will win any given battle against either program but it shows that there are going to be isolated contests for very good players that UW can win against them.

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We’ll see whether Kalen DeBoer continues to recruit the west coast as heavily at Alabama as we move along and his ties become stronger in the Southeast. But this year the connection between the coaching staff meant the two schools went head-to-head more often than they normally do and it isn’t a shock that the Tide won more than they lost.

The big thorn in Washington’s side has been Texas who overlap with Washington in both California and Texas and who UW hasn’t had success against in recruiting in a long time, not just this year. No school had more mutual targets against the Huskies this year and no team has beaten them off the field more consistently. If you ever want an indication that recruiting isn’t about on-field head-to-head results (2-0 for UW in the last 20 months), you’re looking at it.



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Washington Nationals news & notes: Leftover Trade Deadline talk; Lane Thomas love + more

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Washington Nationals news & notes: Leftover Trade Deadline talk; Lane Thomas love + more


LEFTOVER TRADE DEADLINE BITS:

Davey Martinez was in his second year on the bench when Washington won it all in 2019, but since then (or since 2021/2022, really), he’s overseen the reboot/rebuild in D.C., guiding the Nationals through an at-times difficult process as they traded away players on expiring deals who helped in ‘19, and some others with a few years of control remaining (Trea Turner & Juan Soto) who were part of that team.

Again this year, the club made moves which make sense in context of trying to build up the next championship-caliber club in the nation’s capital, but it hasn’t really made it any easier to watch all the talent departing, even if they’ve turned those players into a stockpile of real high-end prospects, and, in addition to what they’ve added in the draft, they have what they think is the core of the next contender.

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Photo by Brett Coomer/Houston Chronicle via Getty Images

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“Those were really tough,” he said of the past four deadlines, but especially the first few when members of the ‘19 team were traded. “But that group of guys, we did something really special. We won a championship together. My hope is that with the guys we got in here, the core kids we got in here, and some added help, we can do something again like that.

“I really think that the direction we’re going in we’ll have a chance to win another World Series.”

The possibility of the club buying at next year’s trade deadline after all the selling, has both the manager and GM and President of Baseball Operations Mike Rizzo excited about what the future holds.

“Yeah it will be amazing, it really will,” the seventh-year manager said after this year’s deadline passed. “The key is if we start doing that [buying vs selling], it means at the end of the year we’re really going to play for something. I don’t really feel like right now we’re out of anything by any means, we’re close…”

“It’s more fun,” Rizzo said of eventually being buyers again. “I know that much.

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“It’s way more fun grabbing All-Star players than it is giving away All-Star players, so in that regard it will be a lot more fun, but this is challenging, and this is a tough time for players, and we recognize that, and we think it’s a necessary time, and I think that this organization, this front office did a remarkable job and has always done a remarkable job at the trade deadline, and I think this year was no different.”

Washington Nationals and the Cincinnati Reds at Nationals Park

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Amanda Andrade-Rhoades for The Washington Post via Getty Images

Closer Kyle Finnegan was the subject of plenty of rumors going into the trade deadline, but he wasn’t dealt in the end, and he said he was happy to stay, having joined the club back in 2020 and carved out a role for himself during the reboot years.

He said he hopes he’s here for the good times too.

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“Just like seeing this thing through. You can see it starting to come together, and the young talent that we have is exciting to watch every night,” Finnegan said.

“And to be out there pitching in front of these guys and have them behind you, it’s special.

“Just to have a jersey in this league is something that I don’t take for granted.”

ALL-AMERICAN BOY:

As he explained it, a day after he traded Lane Thomas to the Cleveland Guardians in return for a prospect package which included lefty Alex Clemmey, 19, infielder José Tena, 23, and 19-year-old infielder Rafael Ramirez Jr., Nationals’ GM (and President of Baseball Ops) Mike Rizzo told reporters he made the deal because Washington got what they thought was fair market value for the 28-year-old outfielder.

“That was the reason we pulled the trigger,” Rizzo said. “When you can headline it with the upside 19-year-old Clemme, and Tena, and Ramirez, [Jr.], I think that was — the surplus value of those guys and the impact that they could have, and the upside that they all have, I thought was a good return for a really good player in Lane Thomas.”

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A day after the deadline, Rizzo talked with 106.7 the FAN in D.C.’s Sports Junkies about their decision to trade Thomas, with a year and a half of team control remaining, after helping to build him up after acquiring him at the deadline in 2021 (straight up for Jon Lester).

MLB: AUG 02 Orioles at Guardians

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“Lane’s a terrific player for us,” Rizzo told the Junkies. “Last year he was All-Star quality for us, and probably should have made the team. This year, dominating lefties again, and playing good outfield. He’s got a cannon for an arm, he’s stealing bases. A leader in the clubhouse and he’s just an all-around American boy, he’s just a great kid. And did a lot of good things for the organization and we’ll miss him.”

“He’s one of my quiet leaders out there. It’s tough. We have a good relationship. Players love him,” manager Davey Martinez said after losing his right fielder.

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“He’s really good player. Cleveland’s going to get a really good player. I wish him all the best.”

Moving on without Thomas, Martinez said, would be a little weird, especially for the young players on the club, for whom Thomas was a mentor.

“It’s going to be a little — I won’t say difficult, but weird without him, because he was that veteran guy for those guys.”

Rizzo and Co. in the Nationals’ front office saw an opportunity to deal Thomas at his peak value, addressing what they saw as organizational needs in the process.

“When you think about the trade deadline, you think about what you have at the big league level, where your deficiencies are in the minor league level, and what you need to do to become a championship-caliber club,” the GM explained.

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Baltimore Orioles v Cleveland Guardians

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“And we saw Lane probably being at his apex of his trade value,” Rizzo continued.

“More trade value this year for Lane Thomas than there was last year for some reason, even with there being more control last year.

“We had a market value in our minds for what we would do Lane for and bounced around a lot of teams and there was a lot of interest and lot of action with him with the contenders. And you package in the fact that we’ve got some outfielders that are close to the big leagues that will impact the team in the very near future we thought that it was a deal that we couldn’t pass up at this time.”

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LAST NIGHT’S GAME HIGHLIGHTS – BREWERS 8; NATIONALS 3:





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Denis Shapovalov defaulted in Washington D.C. for swearing at spectator

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A lengthy discussion between Shapovalov, the chair umpire, Shelton and the supervisor ensued. The chair umpire told the supervisor that Shapovalov said a spectator provoked him, but that he didn’t know what was said.

“I heard it,” insisted Shelton.

Then the chair umpire communicated to the supervisor what Shapovalov said in return.

“I would let it go,” said Paul Annacone on Tennis Channel during the broadcast, emphasizing the subjectivity of the call.

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But the supervisor did not. Despite the juncture of the match, with Shapovalov down three match points, Shelton was given the match when the Canadian was defaulted.

“The rules are what they are,” said TC’s Brett Haber, “and it’s a slippery slope if you let someone get away with it, how you control it the next time.”

After speaking directly with the supervisor, the 25-year-old remained at the baseline, incredulous at the outcome.



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With a fire burning just miles away, residents of a Washington town dig in

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With a fire burning just miles away, residents of a Washington town dig in


Sentiments like these are common during high-stress wildfires throughout the rural West. As large, intense wildfires and evacuations become more common, some residents are growing tired of uprooting their lives and are growing inured to the risk — or more confident in their own abilities to manage it themselves. 

That means some people are determined to stay in their homes even when authorities say they ought to leave, particularly when there are rifts in trust between communities and those managing wildfires and emergency response.

“Especially in rural communities, we’ve started seeing a lot more folks decide to stay and defend,” said Amanda Stasiewicz, an assistant professor of environmental studies at the University of Oregon who studies evacuation decisions. “There’s a lot of mistrust going on there.”

As fire behavior grows intense because of climate change and overgrown forests, doubts can fester in rural communities as fire managers operate more conservatively than in the past.

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“People were used to seeing fires attacked in different ways decades ago and now there’s a different reality,” Stasiewicz said. “Now, we’re seeing fires act more radically, make their own weather and be more unpredictable.”

This dynamic is playing out in rural communities elsewhere.

Some Northern California residents whose homes are threatened by the Park Fire — now more than 397,000 acres and the fourth-largest in state history as of Friday morning — have similarly decided not to evacuate, the San Francisco Chronicle reported. One couple told the Chronicle that they’d soured on evacuating after they had to wait 10 days to return home after the 2018 Camp Fire.

Some 94 large fires are burning across the West, which more than 29,000 wildland firefighters are working to suppress, according to the National Interagency Fire Center. Of those blazes, 28 have active evacuation orders.

“When it gets like this, it’s all hands on deck, and they’re running out of resources,” said Brad Bramlett, a public information officer assigned to the Pioneer Fire.

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The Pacific Northwest, in particular, is reeling this summer as some 51 major fires burn in Oregon, Washington and Idaho. A hotter and drier-than-normal spring and summer primed the landscape to burn.

As of Friday morning, the Stehekin area was under a red flag warning for dangerous fire weather, according to the National Weather Service. The Pioneer fire had grown to more than 33,700 acres and was about 12% contained.

In most years, the fire season would only have just begun.


Stehekin’s full-time population is about 85, and its residents take small-town living to the extreme. The community famously resisted telephone service into the early 2000s.

Surrounded by glaciated peaks and the clear waters of Lake Chelan, the town swells in population during the summer, as tourists take 2.5-hour ferry rides to access trailheads in North Cascades National Park that begin in Stehekin.

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The Pioneer Fire began on June 8 and has been slowly creeping north. It’s burning in some of the most challenging terrain firefighters must deal with in the U.S., with steep slopes, rocky outcrops and few trails.

“As soon as I heard about it, it was, ‘OK, here we go,’” Courtney said. “We all know how dry and early spring has been. It felt like the fire season was going to be accelerated.”

Stehekin residents have been planning and preparing, Courtney said, removing brush near homes, constructing a floating dock in the harbor and holding community meetings.

Tourists were forced away on July 25, when emergency officials raised the evacuation level to 2 of 3.

Meanwhile, firefighters have flooded into Stehekin. More than 640 fire personnel are working the fire, though not all are based in the town. Johnston said she and her staff of six have served about 200 meals a day to crews.

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On Sunday, emergency officials asked everyone in the town to leave.

Magnussen said emergency management officials can’t guarantee any kind of help, particularly if the boat dock — “the only way out,” as he described it — burns.

“When they choose to stay, they’re doing so at their own risk,” he said.

Courtney said she recognizes that but worries that leaving Stehekin now could mean she won’t be able to return for weeks, if not longer. She feels her self-reliant community, which is filled with people who have boats and are used to working the land, is prepared to fend off fire, for now.

Some previous close calls have also hardened her demeanor toward fire. Courtney witnessed the 2015 Wolverine Fire, which burned more than 60,000 acres near Stehekin, and last month, she joined family and friends a few miles “down lake” to save her uncle’s property after firefighters had left.

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“My tolerance has gone up,” she said.

Stasiewicz said that based on her own focus groups, surveys and interviews, sentiments like Courtney’s are becoming more common in rural communities. Evacuation often carries a stiff financial cost, she said, and some rural residents worry their properties won’t be prioritized.

“We can sometimes see rural communities lose compared to more developed areas. There is this mentality, ‘Maybe we do have to take care of ourselves,’” Stasiewicz said.



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