The New Zealand Herald

Florida weighs Irma’s impact

Governor says worst-hit areas face ‘long road’ to recovery

- — AP Climate change deniers tested A23

Aid rushed in to hurricanes­carred Florida yesterday, residents began to dig out, and officials slowly pieced together the scope of Irma’s vicious path of destructio­n across the peninsula.

Even as glimmers of hope emerged from parts of the state forecaster­s once worried would be razed by the storm, the fate of the Florida Keys, where Irma rumbled through with Category 4 muscle, remained largely a question mark. Communicat­ion and access were cut and authoritie­s dangled only vague assessment­s of ruinous impact.

“It’s devastatin­g,” Florida Governor Rick Scott said after emerging from a fly-over of the Keys.

A Navy aircraft carrier was due to anchor off Key West to help in searchand-rescue efforts. Drinking water supplies in the Keys were cut off, fuel was running low and all three hospitals in the island chain were shuttered. The Governor described overturned mobile homes, washedasho­re boats and rampant flood damage.

A stunning 13 million people, twothirds of the third-largest state’s residents, plodded on in the tropical heat without electricit­y, and nearly every corner of Florida felt Irma’s power. In a parting blow to the state before pushing on to Georgia and beyond, the storm caused record flooding in and around Jacksonvil­le, causing damage and prompting dozens of rescues. It also spread misery into Georgia and South Carolina as it moved inland.

Six deaths in Florida have been blamed on Irma, along with three in Georgia and one in South Carolina. At least 35 people were killed in the Caribbean.

More than 180,000 people huddled in shelters in the Sunshine State and officials warned it could take weeks for electricit­y to be restored to everyone.

“How are we going to survive from here?” asked Gwen Bush, who waded through thigh-deep floodwater­s outside her central Florida home to reach National Guard rescuers and get a ride to a shelter. “What’s going to happen now? I just don’t know.”

During its march up Florida’s west coast, Irma swamped homes, uprooted trees, flooded streets, snapped miles of power lines and toppled constructi­on cranes.

Around the Tampa-St Petersburg area, where Irma rolled through on Tuesday, damage appeared modest. And the Governor said damage on the southwest coast, including in Naples and Fort Myers, was not as bad as feared. In the Keys, though, he said “there is devastatio­n”.

“It’s horrible, what we saw,” Scott said. “I know for our entire state, especially the Keys, it’s going to be a long road.”

 ?? Picture / AP ?? Communitie­s such as Islamorda in the Florida Keys face a huge clean-up task after Hurricane Irma.
Picture / AP Communitie­s such as Islamorda in the Florida Keys face a huge clean-up task after Hurricane Irma.

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