Times Colonist

Some Canadians flee storm, but others can’t escape

- The Canadian Press

TORONTO — Canadians who fled to Florida in search of warmer climes were preparing for the force of hurricane Irma as the storm descended on their new home state.

Some hunkered down with supplies while others fled in fear.

Reports of Irma’s pending impact have been circulatin­g for days, causing anxiety to soar among residents uncertain whether to heed mandatory evacuation orders or try to ride out the storm.

For Toronto-born Gavin Wolpert, the issue was moot. He, his wife and three children booked flights to New York City early last week, but the increasing­ly dire warnings prompted them to move up their plans to flee to safety.

They rented a car and slipped out of their home in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida, just hours before the roads clogged with other residents with similar plans. They drove to Charlotte, North Carolina, where they caught a plane to New York City and relative safety.

Wolpert said his experience­s with previous, weaker hurricanes made it clear to him that he and his family needed to get out.

“I was scared last time. My heart couldn’t take being here for another one,” Wolpert said on the phone. “Even though I trust my house’s structure, there’s noise, and it’s really scary.”

Wolpert said the experience of past hurricanes sounded like a battering ram clobbering his concrete home, adding he felt it was best not to expose his three children under the age of 10 to potential alarm.

Even as forecaster­s downgraded Irma’s severity Saturday, all anticipate­d the storm would be among the most severe to hit Florida in decades.

For at least one Canadian currently calling Florida home, joining the evacuation was out of the question.

Shruti Patel of Waterloo, Ont., said a scarcity of gas and extreme gridlock on local roads made it impossible to drive to safety. Instead, she stocked up on food, water, candles and batteries, powered up her electronic devices and prepared to ride the storm out from her apartment in Estero.

“We are nervous about this,” she said. “It’s getting windier now. We don’t know what’s going to happen, but it’s not going to be fun.”

Concern also gripped Canadians farther away from the centre of the storm.

Safe at their primary home in Prince Edward County, Ont., Bob Ritzer and Vivian MacLean were anxiously wondered about the fate of their ground-floor condominiu­m in Fort Pierce, Florida.

The shift in the storm track might have offered them at least a partial reprieve, but both said they were concerned about potential flood damage in Irma’s wake.

That outcome, Ritzer said, causes anxiety about the future.

“I’m sitting here thinking: ‘I don’t want to lose that investment, and I don’t want to stop going to Florida,’ ” he said. “Either of those two things would be a big dent in our plans. It wouldn’t be the end of the world, but it would be significan­t.”

Global Affairs Canada said it was closely monitoring the progress of Irma, as well as hurricane José, which is currently on track to hit the same region in the coming days.

Officials said they had received calls from about 222 Canadians across numerous Caribbean islands requesting consular help, adding that number is expected to rise as Irma reaches Florida.

Disaster assessment teams are poised for deployment if necessary, they added.

“There are many Canadians in hurricane Irma’s path, and our teams are doing their best to ensure that we get in contact and help everyone as necessary,” Global Affairs Parliament­ary Secretary Omar Alghabra said.

 ?? TNS ?? Roadways and freeways sit quiet in Miami on Saturday as curfew — and hurricane Irma — approaches.
TNS Roadways and freeways sit quiet in Miami on Saturday as curfew — and hurricane Irma — approaches.

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