Austin American-Statesman

Eclipse claims cloud Travis County

- Kwasi Gyamfi Asiedu

A solar eclipse is coming, and viral misinforma­tion is casting a shadow on the experience.

Ahead of the April 8 total eclipse, several social media posts claim officials in Travis County are not telling the public about a major calamitous event linked to the eclipse.

The caption of an Instagram video showing officials talking about school closures and emergency declaratio­ns claimed, “They know something catastroph­ic will happen.”

In a separate post, a woman claims doom is on the horizon.

“They believe the hospitals will be full, there is going to be a lot of chaos going around, schools are going to be closed,” she said. “They are asking people to have two weeks’ worth of food. No signal? Something just doesn’t add up. We have had eclipses before, and we have never seen this type of stuff.”

Both videos cite a news report from KTBCTV showing city officials explaining preparatio­ns for the eclipse.

The Instagram posts were flagged as part of Meta’s efforts to combat false news and misinforma­tion on its news feed in partnershi­p with PolitiFact. Meta owns Facebook and Instagram.

These posts are misleading and promote conspiracy theories. We’ve seen similar posts in other areas within the path of totality.

A Travis County official issued a local disaster declaratio­n March 8 in anticipati­on of large crowds that will increase traffic and demand for emergency responders.

“What the disaster declaratio­n does is it makes it easier for us to require things that are going to make it easier for emergency vehicles to get around,” Travis County Judge Andy Brown told KXAN-TV.

Under the rules, people hosting large viewing parties in unincorpor­ated parts of the county have to disclose their party on a form available to first responders.

One eclipse forecastin­g model predicted as many as 3.7 million people will travel from other parts of the U.S. to towns and cities within the eclipse’s path of totality. For small towns, a sudden surge in large crowds could strain unprepared emergency services.

Part of the draw is the rarity of a total eclipse. The sun will be completely blocked by the moon for three to four minutes in most places, according to NASA. The next total solar eclipse visible in the contiguous U.S. will be in 2044.

Some school districts have given students the day off.

“The start of the school day could be an issue for campuses and, of course, pickup, right? Dismissal could also be a real challenge,” Marco Alvarado, the Lake Travis school district’s spokespers­on, told Fox 7.

Large crowds in a small area using cellphones could also mean slower internet speeds; cellphone carriers have said they are working to reduce interrupti­ons.

Travis County is not the only place in the eclipse’s path of totality that is preparing for large numbers of out-of-town visitors who would travel to view the rare astronomic­al event. PolitiFact has debunked claims that the Oklahoma National Guard’s deployment to prepare for eclipse crowds signals sinister motives.

We rate the claim that Travis County officials preparing for the April 8 eclipse “know something catastroph­ic will happen” False.

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