Las Vegas Review-Journal

Bestoratio­n underway across Sunshine State

Normal life starts again with cleanup from Irma

- By Kelli Kennedy and Tamara Lush The Associated Press

MIAMI — Across Florida, people spent Sunday trying to get back to normal after one of the worst storms to hit the state since Hurricane Andrew.

Keys residents were allowed to visit Monroe County for the first time since Hurricane Irma struck a week ago. Elsewhere, residents are waiting for electricit­y, cleaning up from floods or just trying to take a breath and remember what normal is like.

Officials are still tallying the damage, which includes everything from homes to grapefruit groves to mom-and-pop attraction­s like Pirate’s Town in Orlando, which was a replica of an 18th-century sailing vessel that offered dinner theater to tourists.

Nowhere save for the Panhandle was untouched.

Julie Botteri and her husband had been anxiously waiting to return to their home and rental property in Marathon. They arrived Saturday morning to find minimal damage other than outdoor repairs including a fence that needs to be replaced.

The attitude throughout the island iswork,work,work.

Federal Emergency Management Agency Administra­tor Brock Long said the government response to Hurricane Irma has shifted from saving lives to recovery. There were more than 40 storm-related deaths.

Long said at a briefing Friday that good progress is being made in getting people back into their homes or into temporary housing such as apartments or hotels. About 4,000 people remain in emergency shelters, and 675,000 accounts, both residentia­l and commercial, are still without power.

Federal officials are focused on restoring electrical power and getting gasoline into areas suffering fuel shortages. Long said the lack of electricit­y has affected supplies because many gas stations have not been retrofitte­d to run their pumps on generator power.

Energy Secretary Rick Perry, who appeared with Long, urged people still without electricit­y in Florida and other affected states to be patient. He said the severe damage from Irma’s winds will require that parts of the power grid effectivel­y be rebuilt.

Perry said 60,000 utility workers from the U.S. and Canada are working to get power back on. But electricit­y wasn’t the only concern.

In Jacksonvil­le, officials worried about pollution in runoff mingling with floodwater­s. In Naples, in the southwest corner of the state, residents of one mobile home park are living in condemned homes because they have nowhere else to go. And in Pasco County, north of Tampa, thousands were urged to evacuate a week after Irma’s rains overflowed the Withlacooc­hee River.

In the Florida Keys, probably the state’s hardest-hit area, Monroe County Mayor George Neugent said they’d already done some difficult work but had more to do to help residents “get back to work so we can get our businesses running, so we can get our economy going.”

Officials warned residents who weren’t prepared to take care of themselves for at least several weeks to stay away so they don’t deplete already limited resources. That means providing their own food, water and shelter.

Twenty-one checkpoint­s were set up in the hardest-hit neighborho­ods to ensure that only residents, contractor­s and relief workers were allowed in. There is a heavy police and military presence, along with strict curfews because of looting.

State Rep. Holly Raschein said the Keys are a resilient community.

“You’re not going to come home to the same neighborho­od, but we will rebuild,” she said.

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