South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Residents on barrier islands rebuild despite risks

- By Abigail Hasebroock

Sandy toes, striped swimsuits and surfboards. The Sanders sisters’ childhood in Fort Myers evoked an endless summer.

When they weren’t sitting in the backseat of their mom’s light green Ford Maverick helping her toss newspapers, Kimberly and Kathy spent time with their grandmothe­r, the owner of Edna Mae’s Surf Shop on Fort Myers Beach.

“She had it down at what we call ‘Times Square,’ ” Sanders said. “It was a touristy shop, you go in there and buy coconut heads and silly things.”

The shop changed hands over the years but stayed true to old Florida beach nostalgia. Times Square, with its colorful clock and painted brick walkways, remained a favorite place to pick up vintage T-shirts or sip a mojito at a palmshaded café.

But today, the beach shop, its neighbors and the iconic Times Square clock no longer stand. They were destroyed along with thousands of other businesses and homes when Hurricane Ian ripped through Southwest Florida in September 2022.

After hitting Cuba as a Category 3 hurricane on Sept. 27, Ian gained strength over the warm waters of the Gulf of Mexico. On Sept. 28, the monstrous Category 4 hurricane struck southwest Florida’s beloved barrier islands including Fort Myers Beach, Sanibel, Captiva and Pine Island, the largest island on Florida’s Gulf Coast.

Six months later, those islands are still in various stages of clean-up and rebuilding. But whether they can retain their character of mixed-income homes and vintage beach vibes, especially in a time of climate change, is far from certain.

Florida’s island population

Florida is home to the most extensive system of barrier islands in the United States, encompassi­ng a third of the nation’s barrier shoreline running along the Gulf and Atlantic coasts.

Florida also has the largest population of people living on barrier islands of any state in the

Aerial photos show Sanibel Island five months after Hurricane Ian.

nation, with hundreds of thousands inhabiting the vulnerable, shifting landscapes. The risk has long been worth it for families like Sanders.’ But Hurricane Ian — and the science that climate change can make storms more severe — is changing that calculatio­n.

Sanders, 61, now lives in Lehigh Acres, about 30 miles inland from Fort Myers Beach. She was a paramedic for almost 30 years with Lee County emergency services and now helps with cleanup efforts after disasters.

She said she is a descendant of the Blount family, who settled in the region during the 19th century. Since Ian, she has been working to aid recovery across the region she and generation­s of her family have called home.

“The amount of debris is unbelievab­le,” she said. “They’re going to be cleaning for a year.”

Sanibel may have a reputation for affluence — it is dotted with multi-million-dollar homes, after all. But before Ian, people of varying socioecono­mic classes lived on both Sanibel and nearby Estero and San Carlos, the two barrier islands straddled by Fort Myers Beach.

Sanders helped clean up Periwinkle Park and Campground, a trailer park on Sanibel, in the wake of the storm. The people there lost everything, she said.

“These people, they’re not

wealthy, but they pay their bills,” she said.

The risks of living on barrier islands threaten people of different income levels, though higher-income residents can more easily fortify their homes, evacuate and rebuild. Some people did not have the money to leave.

Or maybe it was something they’d never consider, no matter what happened, not even a hurricane. Jennifer Sawyer’s parents, who live on Sanibel Island, fall into that category.

Sawyer, 27, said her parents decided to hunker down in their Sanibel home as Hurricane Ian approached. Sawyer’s dad likened the storm surge to the Colorado River with its violent rapids.

The first floor of their house flooded. Sawyer, who lives in Miami as she goes to school at Florida Internatio­nal University, lost contact with her parents.

“I started hearing, ‘two people dead on Sanibel,’ ” she said. “Oh my God, is this my mom and dad?”

Five frightenin­g days later, Sawyer and her parents reunited.

Despite living through one of the worst storms in Southwest Florida history, Sawyer said her parents are working to fix the house and remain on the island even as fears of future storms loom.

“It’s just going to keep getting worse and worse,” she said, “but I just hope in their lifetime it’s not going to be too big of a deal.”

The growing risks

Scientists have flashed warnings about living on barrier islands for decades. “Barrier islands, particular­ly on the ocean side, have always been hazardous places for man,” researcher­s warned in the American Scientist in 1980. “Over the last several decades, however, this pattern of developmen­t has reversed, with most constructi­on taking place dangerousl­y close to the shoreline.”

“This trend stems from a strong desire to be near the water’s edge, even though that location clearly introduces serious risks to both life and property.”

Those risks have only gotten worse. As global temperatur­es rise, sea levels also rise due to melting ice sheets and glaciers and expansion of seawater as it warms. The higher seas worsen storm surge and erosion. Both encroach upon barrier islands — and can even eliminate them entirely. Climate change also shares a link with hurricanes because warmer ocean water and increasing moisture in the atmosphere can lead to more Category 4 and 5 hurricanes.

Storms and their effects, like flooding and erosion, are natural processes, which is also important to recognize, said John Jaeger, a geology professor at the University of Florida.

“It’s the built environmen­t that has a hard time coping,” he said.

Jaeger works on coastal geology, which is becoming increasing­ly important as seas rise and damaging storms like last fall’s Ian and Nicole continue to threaten the state and communitie­s near and on the water.

When barrier islands retreat over time or hurricanes and other storms pass through, the land cover changes are just nature running its course, Jaeger said.

In fact, hurricanes can entirely change the land cover on coastal landscapes, which is what researcher­s from North Carolina determined in a 2021 study.

The researcher­s analyzed land cover changes, such as marsh, vegetation and sand dunes, after Hurricanes Irene and Sandy on Pea Island National Wildlife Refuge, a coastal barrier island that constitute­s a portion of the Outer Banks. The study highlighte­d the extent to which the hurricanes reshaped Pea Island.

Coastal ecosystems act as barriers — hence the name “barrier islands” — that protect ecological and human communitie­s from storm and sea level rise, according to the study. The takeaway is that any efforts to preserve and rebuild coastal infrastruc­ture must take into account the role of storms and erosion, said Elizabeth Sciaudone, a North Carolina State University engineerin­g research professor who was one of the authors. For the barrier islands in Florida that continue to attract thousands of visitors and new residents each year, long-term planning is essential.

“When communitie­s are doing these long-range plans, they really need to evaluate for themselves … what a resilient and sustainabl­e future looks like,” Sciaudone said.

“How do you adapt to this compressio­n of this coastal zone?” Jaeger asks. “There’s a lot of solutions people put out about trying to minimize the wave impact, how to deal with the rising sea level, all of those, but they still require some adaptation­s that a lot of people aren’t willing to put up with yet.”

Jaeger said the mentality is to “build back” rather than to retreat because that term is negatively connotated. For many people, it may signify a loss; a surrender.

Build back or retreat?

Chauncey Goss is one of the many who believe Sanibel will build back to its old-Florida charm.

The former Sanibel city council member and current South Florida Water

Management District Board chairman said his family lost their home to Hurricane Ian.

“I lost everything, and most of my friends did, too,” he said. “It’s tough, but you know, it’ll build back, we’ll be fine, and we’ll try and learn from it so that if the next storm that comes, we’ll be able to bounce back even quicker.”

This sentiment was evident on the island within weeks after the storm among both residents and government. Amid the rubble were signs spray painted with messages like “Still A Fisherman’s Paradise,” “Have Great Faith” and “Like A Good Pot Of Soup This

Will Take Time.” The state finished emergency repairs to the Sanibel Causeway in 15 days; Lee County and federal authoritie­s are now working to permanentl­y repair the causeway and two other bridges at a total cost of more than $400 million.

Goss said Sanibel’s allure is that the island hasn’t changed — its history is preserved, making it a treasured time capsule.

“People came when their grandparen­ts owned a place there, and then they keep coming back, and then they have kids, and it’s just generation­al,” he said. “A lot of the rest of Florida feels like it has changed a lot. And one

Abigail Hasebroock is a journalism student at the University of Florida and a reporter for The Independen­t Florida Alligator. This story was produced in partnershi­p with the Florida Climate Reporting Network, a multinewsr­oom initiative founded by the Miami Herald, Orlando Sentinel, the South Florida Sun Sentinel, The Palm Beach Post, WLRN Public Media and the Tampa Bay Times.

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