Candles, flashlights, no AC in hurricane zone
PANAMA CITY, Fla. — It’s the greatest need after a hurricane and sometimes the hardest one to fulfill: electricity.
More than a week after Hurricane Michael smashed into the Florida Panhandle on a path of destruction that led all the way to the Georgia border, more than 100,000 Florida customers were still without power, according to the state Department of Emergency Management website.
Martha Reynolds sat outside her mother’s home Friday with relatives in a low-income Panama City neighborhood. The electricity has been off since the day Michael struck.
Candles and flashlights provide light after dark, she said, and they crank up a generator at night to power an air conditioner that cools four adults and five kids.
“We try to eat off the grill and keep as much ice as we can,” she said. “We’re all here, so that’s a blessing.”
While more than half the outages are in Bay County, where the storm came in between coastal Mexico Beach and Panama City, rural counties had a greater percentage of people without power eight days after the storm. That includes Calhoun County, where 86 percent of customers of the local electric cooperative had no electricity.
In Bay County alone, thousands of utility poles were blown down or snapped in half like toothpicks. Power lines drooped over roadways or were tossed to the ground like piles of spaghetti.
Many transmission line towers — the enormous metal structures that bring electricity to substations that then route it into specific neighborhoods — were left in twisted piles or knocked to the ground.
New power poles and lines are going up quickly in a visible sign of progress.
Long lines of utility trucks snake through Panama City streets every morning on the way toward areas where service is still out. Workers suspended in buckets from nine trucks strung lines along just one street on Thursday, and the same scene was being repeated countless times each day.