Dr. Clay, an educator who has led dozens of community eclipse briefings, told a Clinton audience that the town sits “right smack dab in the middle” of the April 8, 2024 path of totality and urged local preparation for heavy visitation and service disruptions.
He highlighted the event’s timing and scale: partial phases will begin in the afternoon and totality for Clinton will be unusually long — more than four minutes — around 01:50 local time on April 8, 2024. “You are in prime location,” he said, noting the shadow across Arkansas is roughly 115 miles wide and travels about 2,000 miles per hour.
Why it matters: Dr. Clay said many visitors will arrive days early and could be unable to leave immediately after the eclipse, creating congestion and supply pressure. “They’re not gonna be able to get out of here. It’s gonna be Tuesday,” he warned, citing traffic and lodging patterns from prior eclipses.
Infrastructure and supplies: He urged residents to treat the event like a prolonged local emergency: keep prescription medicines, especially insulin and heart medications, stocked for at least a week before the eclipse; expect strain on police, fire, medical services, utilities and delivery networks; and plan for limited local access until traffic clears.
Safety and equipment: On eye safety, Dr. Clay stressed the need for certified eclipse glasses for partial phases and recommended removing them during totality. He advised buying only ISO-certified filters and offered glasses he said were from NASA and Carnegie for sale at cost. “Eclipse glasses ... are essential, particularly if you’ve got young kids,” he said.
Schools, volunteers and logistics: Dr. Clay recommended that school districts consider cancelling classes or otherwise involving students as volunteers in planning and crowd management. He emphasized recruiting trained volunteers (he cited successful use of high school students in other communities), staging parking areas and contracting refrigerated trucks or other contingency measures for food service and preservation.
Economic opportunities and limits: While warning of potential shortages and congestion, Dr. Clay also highlighted local economic opportunities — parking, food, crafts and lodging — and recounted a past operator who reported $3,000,000 to the IRS for eclipse-related activity. He urged residents to balance entrepreneurship with public-safety planning.
Q&A and next steps: Attendees asked about airport traffic, flights and rural road use; Dr. Clay encouraged coordination with airport managers and cautioned that day-trip arrivals may be unrealistic because of expected congestion. He also directed listeners to a Solar Eclipse Arkansas 2024 Facebook page and said he can share his slides and give school presentations.
The presentation closed with Dr. Clay repeating preparedness steps: stock medicines and supplies, recruit volunteers, obtain certified eclipse glasses, and work with local authorities on traffic and emergency plans. He said he would provide materials and urged the community to "work together" to both welcome visitors and protect residents.
Ending: The talk closed after audience questions; Dr. Clay offered follow-up materials and contact via social media for event updates and recommended planning actions.