Lodi News-Sentinel

FEMA estimates 25 percent of Florida Keys homes are gone

- By Jason Dearen and Martha Mendoza

LOWER MATECUMBE KEY, Fla. — Search-and-rescue teams made their way into the Florida Keys’ farthest reaches Tuesday, while authoritie­s rushed to repair the lone highway connecting the islands and deliver aid to Hurricane Irma’s victims. Federal officials estimated one-quarter of all homes in the Keys were destroyed.

Two days after Irma roared into the island chain with 130 mph winds, residents were allowed to return to the parts of the Keys closest to Florida’s mainland.

But the full extent of the death and destructio­n there remained a question mark because cellphone service was disrupted and some places were inaccessib­le.

“It’s going to be pretty hard for those coming home,” said Petrona Hernandez, whose concrete home on Plantation Key with 35-foot walls was unscathed, unlike others a few blocks away. “It’s going to be devastatin­g to them.”

Elsewhere in Florida, life inched closer to normal, with some flights again taking off, many curfews lifted and major theme parks reopening. Cruise ships that extended their voyages and rode out the storm at sea began returning to port with thousands of passengers.

The number of people without electricit­y in the steamy late-summer heat dropped to around 10 million — half of Florida’s population. Utility officials warned it could take 10 days or more for power to be fully restored. About 110,000 people remained in shelters across Florida.

The number of deaths blamed on Irma in Florida climbed to 12, in addition to four in South Carolina and two in Georgia. At least 37 people were killed in the Caribbean.

“We’ve got a lot of work to do, but everybody’s going to come together,” Florida Gov. Rick Scott said. “We’re going to get this state rebuilt.”

In hard-hit Naples, on Florida’s southwest coast, more than 300 people stood outside a Publix grocery store in the morning, waiting for it to open.

A manager came to the store’s sliding door with occasional progress reports. Once he said workers were throwing out produce that had gone bad, another time that they were trying to get the cash registers working.

One man complained loudly that the line had too many gaps. Others shook their heads in frustratio­n at word of another delay.

At the front of the line after a more than two-hour wait, Phill Chirchiril­lo, 57, said days without electricit­y and other basics were beginning to wear on people.

“At first it’s like, ‘We’re safe, thank God.’ Now they’re testy,” he said. “The order of the day is to keep people calm.”

Irma’s rainy remnants, meanwhile, pushed through Alabama and Mississipp­i after drenching Georgia. Flash-flood watches and warnings were issued around the Southeast.

While nearly all of Florida was engulfed by the 400-milewide storm, the Keys — home to about 70,000 people — appeared to be the hardest hit. Drinking water and power were cut off, all three of the islands’ hospitals were closed, and the supply of gasoline was extremely limited.

Officials said it was not known how many people ignored evacuation orders to stay behind in the Keys.

Federal Emergency Management Agency administra­tor Brock Long said that preliminar­y estimates suggested that 25 percent of the homes in the Keys were destroyed and 65 percent sustained major damage.

 ?? CAROLYN COLE/LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? Carol Orr, 61, wades through knee-deep waters on Tuesday to check on his 82-year-old father Bernard Orr who lives by the river in Jacksonvil­le, Fla.. In Jacksonvil­le, water levels caused by river surge and Hurricane Irma led to some of the worst...
CAROLYN COLE/LOS ANGELES TIMES Carol Orr, 61, wades through knee-deep waters on Tuesday to check on his 82-year-old father Bernard Orr who lives by the river in Jacksonvil­le, Fla.. In Jacksonvil­le, water levels caused by river surge and Hurricane Irma led to some of the worst...

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