Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Trump views Florida ruin in aftermath of Hurricane Irma

He meets with victims, praises response

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NAPLES, Fla. — President Donald Trump doled out hoagies and handshakes in the sweltering Florida heat Thursday as he took a tour of Irma’s devastatio­n and repeatedly congratula­ted federal and state agencies on their recovery efforts.

Trump, who was in and out of the state in about three hours, got an aerial view of the water- deluged homes along Florida’s southweste­rn coast from his helicopter, then drove in his motorcade along streets lined with felled trees, darkened traffic lights and shuttered stores on his way to a mobile-home community hit hard by the storm.

Walking along a street in Naples Estates with his wife, Melania, the president encountere­d piles of broken siding and soggy furniture sitting on a front porch, and residents and volunteers who were happy to get a presidenti­al visit.

“We are there for you 100 percent,” Trump said before donning gloves and helping to hand out sandwiches to local residents from a lunch line under a canopy. “I’ll be back here numerous times. This is a state that I know very well.”

As he left the state, Trump told reporters on Air Force One that he planned another hurricane-related trip, to

Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands, which were both badly hit by Irma.

“I spoke to both governors. We’ve got it very well covered,” Trump said. “Virgin Islands was really hit. They were hit about as hard as I’ve ever seen.”

The president brushed off a question about whether the recent hurricanes had made him rethink his views on climate change, which he has previously dismissed as a “hoax.” He said, “If you go back into the 1930s and the 1940s, and you take a look, we’ve had storms over the years that have been bigger than this.”

Trump earlier met with federal and state leaders in

Fort Myers, where he was brimming with enthusiasm for the state and federal response effort, calling it “a team like very few people have seen.”

The president couldn’t resist injecting a political flavor into his visit, telling reporters in Fort Myers that he was hopeful that Florida Gov. Rick Scott, a two-term Republican, would run for the Senate, where Democrat Bill Nelson is up for re-election next year.

“I don’t know what he’s going to do. But I know at a certain point it ends for you and we can’t let it end. So I hope he runs for the Senate,” Trump said.

Trump’s visit offered him the chance to see how people are coping with Irma’s aftermath and how the Federal Emergency Management

Agency is responding. Many Florida residents’ homes remain inundated and without electricit­y. Nearly 2.7 million homes and businesses, about 1 in 4 Florida customers, were still without power Thursday.

Vice President Mike Pence, who joined Trump on the trip, promised Floridians: “We’re with you today. We’re going to be with you tomorrow and we’re going to be with you until Florida rebuilds bigger and better than ever before.”

Trump’s trip to Florida was his third in less than three weeks to the storm-ravaged South.

After Hurricane Harvey struck Texas, Trump drew criticism for having minimal interactio­n with residents during his first trip in late August. He saw little damage and offered few expression­s

of concern.

On his second visit, to Texas and Louisiana, he was more hands-on. He toured a Houston shelter housing hundreds of displaced people and walking streets lined with soggy, discarded possession­s.

This time, Trump made sure to connect with a community in recovery. He hewed toward hearty handshakes and enthusiast­ic promises rather than hugs and tears, but he was well-received by people grappling with the storm.

ASSISSTED-LIVING EXODUS

A day after eight people died at a nursing home in the post-hurricane heat, Florida senior citizens were ushered out of stifling assisted- living centers while caregivers fought a lack of air conditioni­ng with Popsicles and cool compresses.

Dozens of the state’s senior centers still lacked electricit­y, and several facilities were forced to evacuate. While detectives sought clues to the deaths, emergency workers went door-to-door to look for anyone else who was at risk.

Fifty-seven residents were moved from a suburban Fort Lauderdale assisted-living facility without power to two nearby homes where power had been restored. Owner Ralph Marrinson said all five of his Florida facilities lost electricit­y after Irma. Workers scrambled to keep patients cool with emergency stocks of ice and Popsicles.

“FPL has got to have a better plan for power,” he said, referring to the state’s largest utility, Florida Power & Light. “We’re supposed to be on a priority list, and it doesn’t come and it doesn’t come, and frankly it’s very scary.”

Stepped-up safety checks were conducted around the state after the eight deaths at the Rehabilita­tion Center at Hollywood Hills in Hollywood, which shocked Florida’s top leaders.

Investigat­ors in that case

said Thursday that at least one of the dead had passed Tuesday, several hours before authoritie­s said they were alerted to a crisis at the facility early Wednesday.

This revelation added to lingering questions about how things were able to deteriorat­e to such an extent that several patients at the Hollywood nursing home died and more than 100 others had to be evacuated to hospitals.

Authoritie­s in Hollywood, where police have launched a criminal investigat­ion into the deaths, said Wednesday that investigat­ors had found that the nursing home still had some power. But the initial investigat­ion found that “the building’s air conditioni­ng system was not fully functional,” the city and the Police Department said in a joint statement.

Police said they have obtained a search warrant for the facility, which had a history of citations and poor inspection­s.

Older people can be more susceptibl­e to heat because their bodies do not adjust to temperatur­es as well as those of younger people. They do not sweat as much and are more likely to have medical conditions that change how the body responds to heat. They are also more likely to take medication that affects body temperatur­e.

Most people who die from high body temperatur­e, known as hypertherm­ia, are over 50, according to the National Institutes of Health.

Statewide, 64 nursing homes were still waiting Thursday for full power, according to the Florida Health Care Associatio­n. The separate Florida Assisted Living Associatio­n said many of its South Florida members lacked electricit­y. The group was working on a precise count.

A day earlier near Orlando, firefighte­rs helped relocate 122 people from two assisted-living centers that

had been without power since the storm. And at the 15,000-resident Century Village retirement community in Pembroke Pines, where there were also widespread outages, rescue workers went door to door to check on residents and provide ice, water and meals.

For older people living on their own, such as 94-yearold Mary Dellaratta, getting help can depend on the attentiven­ess of neighbors, family and local authoritie­s. The widow evacuated her Naples condominiu­m with the help of police the day before the hurricane. After the storm passed, a deputy took her back home and another took food to her. A deacon from her Roman Catholic church also stopped by.

But with no family in the area and neighbors who are gone or unwilling to help, the New York native feels cut off from the world.

“I have nobody,” she said. The electricit­y is out in her condo, so there’s no television for news. She cannot raise the electric- powered hurricane shutters that cover her kitchen windows.

Near the point of despair, rememberin­g to take her medicine or locating her cane are a challenge.

“I don’t know what to do. How am I going to last here?” she said, as a tear rolled down her cheek.

In Collier County, home to Naples, almost 80 percent of homes and businesses were still without electricit­y on Thursday, and floodwater­s still covered some communitie­s entirely.

Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Catherine Lucey, Ken Thomas, Laurie Kellman, Terry Spencer, Jay Reeves, Tim Reynolds, Brendan Farrington, Gary Fineout, Joe Reedy, Adriana Gomez Licon, Michael Melia, Jennifer Kay, Freida Frisaro, Curt Anderson and David Fischer of The Associated Press and by Mark Berman of The Washington Post.

 ?? AP/EVAN VUCCI ?? President Donald Trump, Vice President Mike Pence and first lady Melania Trump hand out food Thursday to people affected by Hurricane Irma at Naples Estates in Naples, Fla.
AP/EVAN VUCCI President Donald Trump, Vice President Mike Pence and first lady Melania Trump hand out food Thursday to people affected by Hurricane Irma at Naples Estates in Naples, Fla.

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