Dayton Daily News

Almost every structure damaged at air base

- By Joel Achenbach, Kevin Begos, Dan Lamothe

Tyndall Air Force Base in Florida was damaged from Hurricane Michael, its airplane hangars shredded and largely roofless.

TYNDALL AIR FORCE BASE, FLA.

Col. Brian Laidlaw has a satellite — image on his cellphone showing the eye of Hurricane Michael making landfall. Peer deep into the left side of the eye and you can see two parallel lines. Those are his runways. You see some structures. Those are his hangars.

Somewhere in there on that Wednesday afternoon two weeks ago was the colonel himself, the commander of Tyndall Air Force Base, here on the coast of the Florida Panhandle. He rode out the storm along with 92 other personnel after thousands of people under his command had evacuated.

The hurricane peeled off the roof of Laidlaw’s bunker. When the eye arrived and the winds calmed, everyone went outside to survey the damage and got a glimpse of blue sky. They retreated as the second eyewall approached. When they emerged again, just before sunset, they beheld total devastatio­n. Every structure on the base was damaged, its airplane hangars shredded and largely roofless.

While most of the base’s 55 F-22 fighter jets were flown away in advance of the storm, some remained in those hangars due to maintenanc­e issues. Air Force officials have declined to say exactly how many remained, citing operationa­l security, nor how damaged they might be.

Each F-22, known as the Raptor, is worth more than $140 million. The planes are considered highly nimble at both supersonic and subsonic speeds, and keep a small radar signature that makes it hard for adversarie­s to track. They were first used in combat against Islamic State ground targets in 2014, and flown at high altitudes over Syria because their advanced sensors could track Russian aircraft over the battlefiel­d. The Raptors were all in hangars when the storm hit, but they likely suffered at least some surface damage, and that could impair their radar-deflecting technology.

Asked if he could he have done anything differentl­y in advance of the storm to safeguard the elite stealth fighters, Laidlaw made clear that his highest priority was the safety of the people he commands.

“No one got killed, and no one got hurt. You’ll see what my base looks like. But my people are good,” Laidlaw said as he drove around Tyndall in an SUV with a blownout window. “I can fix things. I can’t fix people.”

The natural disaster has prompted some fears in Florida that the Air Force could shutter the base, which sits adjacent to badly damaged Panama City and along the same coastline as Mexico Beach, which was nearly wiped from the map.

Lawmakers have sought assurances that the service will rebuild Tyndall, a pillar of the region’s economy and a significan­t Panhandle employer. Air Force officials have said that’s their plan, drawing comparison­s to Keesler Air Force Base in Biloxi, Miss., which was devastated during Hurricane Katrina in 2005 and did not fully recover for about five years.

Significan­t damage to Homestead Air Force Base in Florida during Hurricane Andrew in 1992 prompted the temporary transfer of aircraft squadrons to other bases. It was initially targeted for closure afterward, but officials eventually kept it open as a reserve base.

Tyndall is a huge base with significan­t strategic operations. It’s effectivel­y a city, with 4,500 airmen under Laidlaw’s command: the 325th Fighter Wing, known as the Checkertai­ls. Tyndall has not received much media coverage since the hurricane hit because it was closed to media until recent days; local television stations got their first look over the weekend, and The Washington Post went on a tour of the base Monday.

The base did not get completely obliterate­d the way Mexico Beach did, in part because it was on the left side of the hurricane’s eye, and due to Michael’s rotation, the storm surge was to the right of the eye. Most of the damage to Tyndall was from the 155 mph sustained winds.

Some of Tyndall’s enormous hangars are visible from U.S. Highway 98, which cuts through the 29,000-acre base. There are unpopulate­d woodlands — now filled with jackknifed pines, snapped neatly roughly a dozen feet above the ground — along a long stretch of the base.

An official 2018 Economic Impact study estimated that Tyndall contribute­s $596 million to the local economy each year, and that its facilities would cost $3.4 billion to replace. Yearly military payrolls were $276 million, with an additional $94 million for civilians and local businesses.

There were 1,340 buildings on the base before the storm, totaling 5.6 million square feet, including 1.3 million square feet of privatized housing. There also are 62 miles of paved roads; 609,000 feet of electric lines; and about 1.2 million feet of water, sewer and stormwater lines.

The influence of Tyndall extends far beyond the base perimeter. Many civilian employees live in nearby bedroom communitie­s that were chewed to pieces during the storm. Just across the bridge that connects Tyndall to Panama City, Leon’s Donuts survived, and owner Lin Tung, 67, says he’ll stay in business because he can’t afford to move elsewhere. More than a third of his customers came from Tyndall, he said.

“You decide to live here, and a hurricane is one of the things that happens,” Tung said.

Just up the road in a demolished mobile home park, Jacquie Merrill, 47, who works in flight medicine at Tyndall as a civilian employee, said her home was destroyed by Michael. A major setback for Tyndall would be a major setback for her.

“I’d lose my job — on top of my car and my home and everything else,” she said.

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 ?? JOHNNY MILANO / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Drones sit damaged Oct. 13 after Hurricane Michael hit Tyndall AFB in Florida. A study estimated replacing its facilities would cost $3.4B.
JOHNNY MILANO / THE NEW YORK TIMES Drones sit damaged Oct. 13 after Hurricane Michael hit Tyndall AFB in Florida. A study estimated replacing its facilities would cost $3.4B.

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