Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Work not done, but Mexico Beach has ‘high spirit’

- By Kevin Spear

One year after Category 5 Hurricane Michael barreled over the Florida Panhandle and into Georgia, Mexico Beach is urgently working to bring in more visitors, thousands of Panama City families are still “couch surfing,” a prison with critically needed jobs remains shuttered in Marianna and tarps still cover hundreds of homes in south Georgia.

The year of recovery has meant victories finally over mountains of debris, exhausted budgets of cities and counties, communitie­s unified as never before and realizatio­ns that many things will never rebound.

“I didn’t have a clue of where we would be a year after …,” said Mexico Beach Mayor Al Cathey of the natural apocalypse that struck his Panhandle city Oct. 10 last year. “We still have a high spirit.”

From landfall at the beachside getaway, the storm kept its hurricane strength until central Georgia and dumped heavy rain as far along its path as New Jersey. Michael was blamed for 16 deaths and nearly $25 billion in damage in the U.S., according to the National Hurricane Center.

In Mexico Beach, where homes This NOAA/RAMMB satellite image taken in 2018 shows Hurricane Michael as it approaches land near the U.S. Gulf Coast.

and businesses south of U.S Highway 98 were largely bulldozed by 14 feet of wave-topped storm surge, most tree and building debris has been removed.

“Now we need to get back in business,” Cathey said of a push to reopen rental properties, restaurant­s and mom-and-pop stores. “We can’t sit here with our hands out for charity.”

Cathey said the city’s progress includes extensive restoratio­n of utilities, a rewriting of rules for constructi­on and a surge of applicatio­ns in the past

90 days for homes and business building permits: 44.

“Our No. 1 need is to get our rental inventory open,” Cathey said. “We can’t sustain our recovery without visitors.”

Another economic driver still largely out of action is St. Joseph Peninsula State Park, which juts into the Gulf of Mexico about a dozen miles south of Mexico Beach.

With a previous 300,000 visitors annually, the park had generated an estimated $22 million in local economic impact. Now, only a portion of park beach is open for day visits.

Florida’s park service plans to rebuild roads, water and sewer systems and a pair of campground­s. But the cost and timing remain unknown.

“There are so many factors; there is no good answer for that yet,” said Warren Poplin, the area’s park service bureau chief.

From the window of an airliner crossing Mexico Beach, the path of buildings and vegetation shredded by the storm was plainly visible months afterward.

Also not hard to see was that Callaway and Panama City weren’t precisely at landfall – which occurred between Mexico Beach and Tyndall Air Force Base – but were caught in the destructiv­e churn.

“We are much better off but nowhere near where we need to be,” said Mark McQueen, city manager for Panama City.

“More than 80% of the structures in our city — houses and businesses — were damaged or destroyed,” McQueen said. “It’s been a long slog, with having to overcome issues with insurance, then a shortage of skilled tradesmen, roofers, carpenters, etc.”

The city remains in a bind of not being able to get workers because there isn’t enough housing for them, but it is unable to build

housing without said.

More than 25%, or as many as 9,000 residents, moved outside of the city, including to the west in the relatively intact Panama City Beach.

McQueen said nearly 5,000 Panama City public-school students and their families are still “couch surfing, and not in a home of any permanent type.”

The city’s initial bill for debris and repairs to utilities was $153 million, a cost that may take years to recover from FEMA.

Panama City had $14 million in reserves, “a very healthy reserve,” McQueen said, but had to borrow $75 million initially and expects to borrow another $25 million soon.

But more businesses are reopening every week, boosting the local economy and reviving salestax revenues.

A post-storm drop in assessed property values was partly offset when city commission­ers raised the tax rate in September.

The trauma has had the upside of encouragin­g a cohesive vision for the city’s direction, McQueen said.

“It’s exciting to see the potential,” McQueen said. “We are going to be the premier city of the Panhandle.”

About 20 miles to the northeast,

workers,

McQueen

in the tiny burg of Broad Branch in Calhoun County, David Stone and his family relied on a generator for 29 days after the storm. They washed clothes in a wheelbarro­w, bought gasoline in Georgia and cooked meals on a barbecue grill.

“It seems like five years ago,” Stone said.

He and his wife own a buildingco­ntractor business, having two employees – themselves – and hiring subcontrac­tors.

Business was modest Michael.

Now they are building four homes, remodeling others and turning down work “all the time.”

He is working for friends, neighbors and acquaintan­ces in rural Calhoun County. The financial challenges are familiar and shared: high deductible­s, low-ball settlement­s or little to no insurance.

Meanwhile, to Stone’s amazement, the social and political ground is shifting beneath the traditiona­l agricultur­al mainstay of timber, which was crushed by Hurricane Michael.

With a new state law this year, landowners along the storm’s path are moving to embrace hemp as a cash crop, which has uses for clothing, animal feed, packaging and building products. before

“We said.

To the north, Marianna’s city manager, Jim Dean, worries his city at Interstate 10 an hour west of Tallahasse­e will struggle to grow and thrive.

Dean has kept an eye on the city’s water, sewer and natural gas accounts. The number dropped by 130 in the past month, which means fewer residents and less essential income for the city’s budget.

Marianna is 60 miles from where Michael made landfall. Yet the storm was able to ravage two, critical contributo­rs to the economy.

Florida Caverns State Park has partly reopened; a federal prison that employed more than 400 has not.

“We were told it would open in March or April, and then in August or September,” Dean said. “Meanwhile, the city bills are still coming due.”

Michael ranks as one of Florida’s strongest hurricanes. When it crossed the Chattahooc­hee River into Georgia – more than 80 miles northeast of landfall – it became that state’s most fearsome storm on record. are battling back,” Stone

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