The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

County highlights state’s dire gaps in storm prep

Sirens, but where is the shelter? Will nursing home have power?

- By Matt Kempner mkempner@ajc.com

Warning sirens were installed this summer in southwest Georgia’s Randolph County, so that residents hear the wail before another big storm hits.

But locals keep asking a question that has no good answer.

“They all want to know ... where do we go?” said Kenneth Burns, the county’s emergency management agency director and only paid firefighte­r. “I don’t have any place.”

Mobile homes are common here. Basements and big sturdy buildings aren’t.

Burns is contemplat­ing the least expensive, quickest shelter option he can think of for a rural county with few resources: acquiring surplus metal cargo containers and partially burying them.

Worsening storms have heightened worries across much of Geor

gia. When Hurricane Michael ripped through a huge swath of the state last year, it underscore­d serious vulnerabil­ities in disaster preparatio­ns. Parts of Randolph County lacked power for nine days. The local hospital’s backup generators were too weak and temperatur­es in its nursing home approached dangerous levels.

No Randolph residents died from the storm and its aftermath. The next time, the county might not be so lucky. Local officials are scrambling to fix the weaknesses. But they don’t yet have all the answers or funding they need.

Georgians, no matter where they live, are on the hook for rising weather bills. Federal lawmakers this year approved $19 billion in emergency relief for a string of recent natural disasters. In Georgia, Hurricane Michael caused more than $2.5 billion in agricultur­al losses alone. Georgia Power says historic weather events in the last six years have created a $450 million shortfall in its storm-damage account that it hopes to collect from customers.

Many scientists believe extreme weather will become more frequent as global temperatur­es rise.

Randolph County is 160 miles inland from where Michael made landfall as a Category 5 hurricane on the Florida Panhandle. In the past, Randolph and neighborin­g farming counties would normally be places to which Floridians flee.

The Center for Public Integrity analyzed natural disaster vulnerabil­ities in counties nationwide, tracking major federal disaster declaratio­ns from 2009 through 2018, and looking specifical­ly at social measures rather than physical infrastruc­ture. The nonprofit news organizati­on found Georgia had more highly vulnerable counties hit by disasters than any other state, after including factors such as poverty and elderly residents.

Randolph was one of 12 Georgia counties to score a 7, the most vulnerable ranking, according to Public Integrity. The other counties were Crisp, Sumter, Toombs, Terrell, Spalding, Grady, Ben Hill, Jefferson, McDuffie, Thomas and Colquitt.

In the last three years, Randolph County has been swatted by five tornadoes and two hurricanes, according to Burns. One twister ripped across 12 miles of the county, destroyed one home, damaged others, tore up farm irrigation systems and swept away cattle.

‘Lord, help me’

Severe storms can thrash communitie­s regardless of income or the resources of local government­s.

But extra challenges face places like Randolph and its county seat of Cuthbert, a half-hour drive from Eufaula, Ala., and nearly an hour from Albany, Ga. With sparse jobs, the county has fewer than 7,000 residents. It has lost a quarter of its population since 1980. Government resources are thin. A third of local residents fall below the poverty line.

Larry Burkes, a gaunt 68-yearold living alone in a neglected rented home, said he didn’t try to evacuate during the hurricane. He’s in poor health (“I ain’t got no wind”), has no car and had nowhere safe to hide.

The winds roared. Trees cracked. “I said, ‘Lord help me.’” He hunkered down on his sofa, the words “God Love You” handwritte­n on a wall beside him and his church ties hanging above. A big oak crunched the vacant house next door, demolished Burkes’ back porch and punctured his roof.

The next time a terrifying storm hits, he considers that he has just one option for protection. “Pray, I guess .... Ain’t nothing here in Randolph County to help nobody.”

Three years ago, the county hired Burns to improve emergency preparedne­ss and fight fires. He applied for grants, worked to improve flawed communicat­ions systems, bolstered training for emergency workers and installed the warning sirens.

“We have made such significan­t progress,” said Lamar White, a county commission­er.

But not enough yet.

“Out of a scale of one to 10, we are about a two and a half. We are not a zero anymore,” said White, adding the county doesn’t have time or money to do all that it might want.

In many ways, Randolph doesn’t appear to be unusual for parts of rural Georgia.

Some 50 miles to the east in Crisp County, outside funding has allowed distributi­on of hundreds of weather radios to area residents. But locals in search of sturdier structures tried to take shelter in fire stations and the lobby of the Sheriff ’s Department. “During Michael we learned a lot: We have to provide shelter before the strong winds,” said Billy Hancock, the local sheriff and emergency management director.

Officials in other communitie­s confronted additional gaps. Like just getting water from faucets or to flush toilets. The city of Pelham in Mitchell County, also in southwest Georgia, had a backup generator for its public well system, but it failed after Hurricane Michael, according to Mayor James Eubanks.

Michael hammered numerous public water and sewage systems, according to a report by the Georgia Emergency Management and Homeland Security Agency, which found the southwest to have the least alternate power generation in the state.

Local emergency management agencies are required to update plans to retain eligibilit­y for state and federal grants, according to GEMA/HS. Asked to provide informatio­n about how many public emergency and utility systems were without backup power after Hurricane Michael, GEMA/ HS instead referred a reporter to officials in local government­s. The agency said it responds to requests for resources when an emergency exceeds the capabiliti­es of local jurisdicti­ons.

A nursing home without power

In Randolph County, the emergency operation center doesn’t have backup generators. Neither do the county’s volunteer fire stations. Or the police stations and local public water systems in some parts of the county.

The local hospital, Southwest Georgia Regional Medical Center, and its adjacent 80-bed nursing home do have generators. But they are undersized for the facilities’ needs.

After Hurricane Michael hit last year, there wasn’t enough power for air conditioni­ng, so staff moved some nursing home patients into hallways and turned on fans to try to keep them cool as temperatur­es gradually rose. They had water pitchers handy and drove in ice from Albany, said John Carroll, who in addition to being the pharmacy director is responsibl­e for coordinati­ng emergency planning for the facilities.

There also wasn’t enough juice to handle some of the X-ray equipment or to perform CT scans. Then the largest of the two generators broke down at night. Lights went out in the nursing home. Fans cut off.

The wayward generator came back on in about six or eight hours, Carroll said. But leaders became increasing­ly concerned about preventing their 73 nursing home patients from overheatin­g. Only a year earlier, several residents of a Hollywood, Fla., nursing home died after Hurricane Irma knocked out power and it took days to evacuate the facility.

Regulation­s call for nursing home residents to be evacuated if the temperatur­e hits 82 degrees, according to Carroll. It rose to 80 degrees just before Georgia Power crews got electricit­y flowing again, he said.

“We did the best we could in difficult circumstan­ces,” said Carroll, who sees broad challenges for communitie­s.

“The main story here is that emergency preparedne­ss tends to get on the back burner until something happens,” he said. “Our public officials and leaders need to take a hard look at this and what happened and look at how close we were to an even worse situation and try to prepare for the future.”

Neighbors and local officials generally praise the assistance they received after Michael from utility crews, the department of transporta­tion, state and federal emergency teams, local and outof-town churches and area businesses. And they say they were touched by many residents who went out of their way to help others.

Still, there are complaints that federal aid to homeowners fell short. Residents in Randolph and other counties also quickly took on duties usually handled by government­s in bigger and more prosperous communitie­s. Loggers and heavy-equipment dealers cleared roads. Farmers brought out front-end loaders and tractors and hooked up generators, rotating from one family member’s house to the next to run refrigerat­ors or charge smartphone­s.

Nearly a year after the hurricane passed, some residents still weren’t back to normal. Each time it rained, buckets collected water leaking from ceilings they hadn’t gotten around to fixing or didn’t have the money to tackle. Some people displaced by the storm were staying with relatives.

Ulysse and Janet Preston and their kids still lived in their battered and leaking trailer on the eastern edge of Randolph. With little money, they could only gradually buy material for what could be a $2,500 fix of their weakened, mildewed home.

“Once you fall back, it’s hard to get back to where you used to be,” Janet Preston said.

Burns, the local emergency management agency director, is hoping the hurricane will help Randolph take a step forward on at least one front.

He has applied for nearly $2 million in federal and state grants to add protection­s, particular­ly back-up generators for a variety of critical facilities, including the hospital and nursing home.

He says he believes the funding is likely to come through. Next on his list: finding money to build shelters.

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM ?? Larry Burkes looks out in September at the back porch of his Randolph County home, severely damaged from Hurricane Michael in 2018. His home is one of many wrecked by the storm that raked the southwest Georgia area. His county, due to factors such as poverty in the area, is particular­ly vulnerable to natural disasters.
HYOSUB SHIN / HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM Larry Burkes looks out in September at the back porch of his Randolph County home, severely damaged from Hurricane Michael in 2018. His home is one of many wrecked by the storm that raked the southwest Georgia area. His county, due to factors such as poverty in the area, is particular­ly vulnerable to natural disasters.
 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM ?? Ulysse Preston shows that damage from Hurricane Michael is still evident at his trailer home in Shellman a year later. His home is one of many in Randolph County that suffered from the storm, which also knocked out power to the local hospital and nursing home.
HYOSUB SHIN / HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM Ulysse Preston shows that damage from Hurricane Michael is still evident at his trailer home in Shellman a year later. His home is one of many in Randolph County that suffered from the storm, which also knocked out power to the local hospital and nursing home.
 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM ?? Kenneth Burns, Randolph County emergency management director, praised his community’s response to Hurricane Michael but said his county could use more financial support from the federal government.
HYOSUB SHIN / HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM Kenneth Burns, Randolph County emergency management director, praised his community’s response to Hurricane Michael but said his county could use more financial support from the federal government.
 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM ?? The small city of Cuthbert is the county seat of Randolph County, a half-hour drive from Eufaula, Ala., and nearly an hour from Albany, Ga.
HYOSUB SHIN / HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM The small city of Cuthbert is the county seat of Randolph County, a half-hour drive from Eufaula, Ala., and nearly an hour from Albany, Ga.

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