Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

50,000 line up in South Fla. seeking post-hurricane aid

Massive turnout stuns state officials

- By Glenn Garvin

Miami Herald

MIAMI — Tens of thousands of South Floridians stood for hours in the sweltering, soggy heat Sunday at Tropical Park, waiting to apply for special food stamps available only to victims Hurricane Irma, stunning state officials who were expecting far fewer people.

“We’ve been dealing with about 10,000 people a day,” said Ofelia Martinez, the Miami site manager for the state Department of Children and Families. “But when we opened the doors this morning, the police told us there were already 50,000 people waiting outside.”

Whether they would all get their chance to apply for the food stamps was uncertain as the relentless heat burned on Sunday afternoon.

The Food for Florida Disaster Food Assistance Program, as the program is known, funded by the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e and operated by DCF, is designed for people in 48 counties across the state who aren’t ordinarily eligible for food stamps but suffered losses during Hurricane Irma last month.

It opened in MiamiDade and Broward counties Wednesday and drew steadily bigger crowds through its Sunday finale. The crowds were so large and rowdy on Saturday that five of the distributi­on points closed early in the day — in some cases, before serving even a single client.

But the turnout at Tropi ca l Park in Miami, though huge, was orderly if exhausted.

The food stamps are distribute­d on a sliding scale that factors in family size, income and amount of hurricane damage, so there’s a wide variance in how much a client might get. But DCF officials said a typical single person could qualify for about $300, and a typical family of four could get $1,300.

“We got here at 5 a.m. and saw how huge the line was, and we said, this is nuts, let’s go home,” said Socrates Arauz, a constructi­on worker who lives in the Fontainebl­eau neighborho­od just outside Sweetwater. “But — well, here we still are.”

 ?? Matias J. Ocner/Miami Herald via AP ?? Cecil Umana, 64, walks past hundreds of people who are in line hoping to receive aid from a post-hurricane disaster center outside of Tropical Park on Sunday in West Miami-Dade, Fla.
Matias J. Ocner/Miami Herald via AP Cecil Umana, 64, walks past hundreds of people who are in line hoping to receive aid from a post-hurricane disaster center outside of Tropical Park on Sunday in West Miami-Dade, Fla.

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