San Francisco Chronicle

Power generators pose risk as recovery gains momentum

- By Jennifer Kay and Tim Reynolds Jennifer Kay and Tim Reynolds are Associated Press writers.

MIAMI — Nearly a week after Hurricane Irma walloped Florida, the recovery mission picked up momentum Friday as more people had electricit­y and schools made plans to reopen.

Still, dangers lingered, mostly in the form of noxious gas from generators serving those who still didn’t have power. North Carolina reported its first Irma-related death on Friday after a man died from carbon monoxide poisoning, and two more people died in Florida from the dangerous fumes, including a woman in Palm Beach County.

Near Miami, a family of four was treated for exposure to the fumes from a generator outside their apartment.

At least 36 people have died in the U.S. under Irma-related circumstan­ces, the vast majority in Florida. The death toll across the Caribbean is 38.

Meanwhile, the state urgent worked to protect the vulnerable elderly. Eight people died at a nursing home when the hurricane knocked out power and the facility lost air conditioni­ng. The deaths at the Rehabilita­tion Center at Hollywood Hills were believed to be heat-related.

Several other nursing homes were evacuated because of a lack of power or air conditioni­ng, and workers scrambled to keep patients cool with emergency stocks of ice.

Officials said about 1.9 million homes and businesses were without power, including 64 nursing homes.

Florida Gov. Rick Scott announced Thursday night that he directed the Agency for Health Care Administra­tion to terminate the Hollywood Hills center as a provider for Medicaid, which helps low-income people receive health care.

Older people can be more susceptibl­e to heat because their bodies do not adjust to temperatur­es as well as younger people.

“The thing that hits them first is dehydratio­n and then their temperatur­e increases and then respirator­y issues kick in,” Broward County Commission­er Nan Rich said.

 ?? Nicole Raucheisen / Naples (Fla.) Daily News ?? Louis Sarangi (center) and Carlos Hernandez (right) ferry supplies to their home in Bonita Springs, Fla.
Nicole Raucheisen / Naples (Fla.) Daily News Louis Sarangi (center) and Carlos Hernandez (right) ferry supplies to their home in Bonita Springs, Fla.

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