Miami Herald

FEMA: Our response to pandemic prepared agency for hurricane season

- BY SAMANTHA J. GROSS sgross@miamiheral­d.com Samantha J. Gross: @samanthajg­ross

months of responding to the COVID-19 pandemic across the nation, the Federal Emergency Management Agency says it has never been more ready for hurricane season.

“Ninety days of COVID-19 response makes us more ready than ever before,” FEMA Administra­tor Peter Gaynor said Monday at a press conference at the Miami-Dade County EmerAfter gency Operations Center in Doral.

Weather experts are predicting another aboveavera­ge Atlantic hurricane season in 2020, which started June 1 and ends Nov. 30.

Forecasts and models have become more important in a “COVID-19 environmen­t,” where people are paying closer attention to inform their evacuation plan, Gaynor said. Sheltering options will be altered to ensure social distancing, temperatur­e checks will be required at every hurricane shelter, and evacuees will be given hygiene kits with masks and hand sanitizer at the door.

Gaynor underscore­d that people should plan on leaving more time to evacuate and prepare this year but ensured that FEMA Is prepared to potentiall­y handle two state emergencie­s at once. He said FEMA’s budget for nationwide response is double what it usually is going into hurricane season — $80 billion versus the typical $40 billion.

The press conference, which also included Gov. Ron DeSantis, acting Homeland Security Secretary Chad Wolf and MiamiDade Mayor Carlos Gimenez, followed the group’s closed-press tour of the nearby National Hurricane Center.

DeSantis recently made a hurricane-related stop in South Florida when he visited a Boca Raton Home Depot to kick off the start of a sales tax holiday, where shoppers in Florida could avoid paying sales taxes on hurricane preparatio­n supplies ahead of the 2020 season.

The disaster preparedne­ss holiday was passed by the Florida Legislatur­e and signed into law by DeSantis in March as part of a $47.7 million tax package.

The tax holiday, which lasted from June 1 to June 4, saved shoppers $5.6 million, DeSantis said.

Florida has so far been spared this hurricane season despite three early named storms. Tropical Storm Cristobal weakened to a tropical depression Monday morning after crashing ashore Sunday in Louisiana.

The storm spawned dangerous weather farther east however, including a Sunday tornado that uprooted trees and downed power lines near Interstate 75 in Central Florida. The storm also forced a flooded stretch of Interstate 10 in North Florida to close for part of Sunday.

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