The Columbus Dispatch

Residents cope with destructio­n as Irma chugs across South

- By Alexander Burns |

Florida emerged from Hurricane Irma on Monday as a landscape of blacked-out cities, shuttered gas stations, shattered trees and flooded streets, while the now-weakened storm kept sweeping northward.

Major streets remained underwater in cities from Miami to Jacksonvil­le, with even more roads snarled by debris. As many as 9 million Floridians lost electricit­y at some point during the storm, and the chief executive of a major utility, Florida Power & Light, said that it could take weeks to restore full service.

Officials were still assessing Irma’s impact in the Florida Keys, which may have borne the worst of the storm. After

a survey of the islands, Gov. Rick Scott told reporters he had seen crippling damage there, including countless overturned trailers and many boats washed ashore. Recovery in the Keys will be a “long road,” he said.

“I just hope everybody survived,” Scott said. “It’s horrible, what we saw.”

Later Monday, the Defense Department said damage to the Keys was so extensive that it might be necessary to evacuate the 10,000 residents who rode out the storm on the islands.

Three other states — Georgia, South Carolina and Alabama — issued storm and tornado warnings as they prepared for their own brush with Irma, which was downgraded to a tropical storm Monday as its winds slowed. The Georgia Emergency Management Agency alerted residents to “historic levels of flooding” on the Atlantic Coast and urged people to take shelter, if they had not already evacuated. By Monday afternoon, about 1 million people in Georgia and South Carolina had lost power.

Insurance experts began offering projection­s Monday for the total cost of the storm’s damage, with initial estimates running in the range of $20 billion to $50 billion.

Throughout Florida, local officials implored residents to be cautious about returning to their homes. Conjuring images of surprise floods and electrocut­ion by downed power lines, they asked residents not to misinterpr­et their state’s less-severe-thanexpect­ed ordeal as a sign that life could quickly and easily snap back to normalcy.

In harder-hit areas of the state, emergency responders were still in rescue mode, fielding calls from people stranded in cars or in houses with structural damage. In Jacksonvil­le, Mayor Lenny Curry said neighborho­ods could be flooded throughout the week. “We will be moving to a recovery stage soon,” he said, “but we are in a rescue stage at this point.”

“We need you to heed our warnings,” Curry pleaded. “This is potentiall­y a weeklong event, with water and the tides coming and going.”

Jacksonvil­le found itself caught between three water threats, city officials said: High tides, the storm surge driven by Irma’s winds and the torrential rains over the weekend that have swollen rivers and streams.

While much of Central Florida was spared Irma’s fury, a low-slung pocket of Orange County, which includes Orlando, woke up to furious flooding. Before dawn, National Guard troops and Orange County Fire Rescue crews worked to rescue nearly 150 people and an unknown number of family pets, in some cases from water that had reached 3-6 feet.

Urgent calls for help began coming just before 2 a.m. Monday as streets in the area turned to streams. Robert Jenkins and his family were rescued around 9 a.m.

“We woke up to a lake outside in my yard, and 3 feet of floodwater­s inside my man-cave,” said Jenkins, a doughnut maker. “Everywhere you looked, there was water.”

On Marco Island, near Naples, where the eye of the storm came ashore Sunday afternoon, Capt. Dave Baer of the island’s police department said rescuers had pivoted Monday to what he called “well-being checks” as people who were off the island during the storm inquired about friends and relatives who had not been heard from or who needed assistance.

Some Florida communitie­s that had braced for a severe pummeling escaped with extensive but temporary disruption­s, as the storm tracked to the west, avoiding a direct and lingering strike on Miami and largely sparing Tampa and some other cities along the Gulf of Mexico. In Miami Beach, a city of some 90,000 that was under an evacuation order, Mayor Philip Levine said there was a pervasive sense of relief.

“We didn’t dodge a bullet, we dodged a cannon,” Levine said Monday. “And we’re very happy about that.”

Power losses appeared to be the state’s most widespread affliction. In news conference­s up and down the state, mayors and utility executives delivered the dispiritin­g statistics: In densely populated Pinellas County west of Tampa, about 70 percent of Duke Energy’s customers, or 395,000 people, were without electricit­y, with no immediate restoratio­n in sight. Mayor Tomas Regalado of Miami said a similar fraction of his city was dark, with roads left impassable and traffic lights not working. In Orlando, about half the city’s utility customers had no service.

At the White House, Thomas P. Bossert, the president’s Homeland Security adviser, said repairing the electrical system would require “the largest-ever mobilizati­on of line restoratio­n workers in this country, period.”

Medical facilities and nursing homes reported struggles with power supplies. Though utility companies make restoring service to hospitals a priority, some were still lacking normal service Monday. As of Monday night, 36 Florida hospitals were closed, and 54 were operating on backup generators, according to data from the Florida Department of Health.

 ?? FLORIDA TIMES-UNION] [DEDE SMITH/THE ?? Tommy Nevitt carries Miranda Abbott, 6, through floodwater left by Hurricane Irma on Monday on the west side of Jacksonvil­le, Fla.
FLORIDA TIMES-UNION] [DEDE SMITH/THE Tommy Nevitt carries Miranda Abbott, 6, through floodwater left by Hurricane Irma on Monday on the west side of Jacksonvil­le, Fla.

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