The Record (Troy, NY)

Tears flow as Mexico Beach residents come home after Hurricane Michael

Residents return on Wednesday for first time in about a week

- By Jay Reeves Associated Press

MEXICO BEACH, FLA. >> With stunned faces and tears, residents of hard-hit Mexico Beach returned home for the first time Wednesday about a week after Hurricane Michael hit to find pieces of their lives scattered across the sand and a community altered.

Nancy Register sobbed uncontroll­ably after finding no trace of the large camper where she’d lived with her husband. She was particular­ly distraught over the loss of an old, black-and-white photo of her mother, who died of cancer.

Husband Taylor Register said he found nothing but a stool that uses for cutting his hair, a hose and a keepsake rock that was given to him by a friend 40 years ago.

“That’s my belongings,” he said, pointing to a small pile beside his red pickup truck. Choking up, he said: “I appreciate God humbling

me. Everybody needs it.”

Just up the road, tears ran down Lanie Eden’s face as she and husband Ron Eden sifted through sand in search of items they left before evacuating from the small beach house they’ve rented each October for years. They didn’t find much - just a large pack of toilet paper that somehow stayed dry and a son’s camp chair.

The Edens, who are from Fort Knox, Kentucky, and are temporaril­y staying in Alabama, were stunned to see mountains of debris and countless destroyed buildings as they drove into town for the first time. In a state of condominiu­m towers, Mexico Beach was one of the few remaining places with small houses and a 1950s feel.

“Basically, we lost ‘ old Florida.’ It’s all gone,” said Lanie Eden.

Residents among the community of about 1,200 people who rode out the storm at home have been

in Mexico Beach since Michael hit. But officials used the city’s Facebook page to tell others to stay away for a week after the Category 4 storm ravaged the beach town with 155 mph (250 kph) winds and a strong storm surge.

State emergency management officials said some 124,500 customers across the Panhandle were still without power Wednesday morning and 1,157 remained in shelters.

In Bay County, home to Mexico Beach and Panama City, more than half of the households and businesses remained without electricit­y. Inland, in Calhoun County, 98 percent of the customers didn’t have power Wednesday morning, according to the emergency management website. And in Jackson County, which borders Alabama and Georgia, about 83 percent were without power.

In the meantime, in many areas devastated by the hurricane, law enforcemen­t officials are battling looting of homes and businesses.

Bay County Sheriff’s Maj.

Jimmy Stanford said deputies have arrested about 10 looters each night since the storm hit. In some parts of the county, residents have spray-painted signs warning that “looters will be shot.”

Panama City resident Wes Allen said looters have been a constant problem at the badly damaged motel where he is staying with his wife and three children. Residents have formed a nighttime patrol to keep an eye out for thieves.

“We’ve got looters breaking in and stealing whatever they can,” he said. Allen said he hasn’t reported the thefts to police because authoritie­s seem so busy with other things.

Often the looters have been armed, Stanford said.

“Most of our officers lost their homes, have been working 16- to 18- hour shifts with no sleep, no shower, and now they’re encounteri­ng armed individual­s,” he said. “It’s a stressful time for everyone in Bay County.”

The storm killed at least 16 people in Florida, most of them in the coastal county that took a direct hit from the storm, state emergency authoritie­s announced Tuesday. That’s in addition to at least 10 deaths in Georgia, North Carolina and Virginia. The state’s tally did not provide details of how the victims’ deaths were stormrelat­ed, and The Associated Press was not immediatel­y able to confirm those details for all of them. The AP’s tally of deaths, in which authoritie­s have confirmed details of how people died, stood at eight in Florida, and 18 overall including other states. In Mexico Beach, what had been a town of about 1,200, residents don’t expect power or anything else anytime soon. Carlton Hundley, 25, returned to the house he rented with his girlfriend Connie Huff to find nothing but a long pile of shattered wood. What few possession­s they found, including one of his shoes, were scattered across the ground.

“I knew it was bad, I’d already seen the pictures. But it’s a lot more than I thought,” he said.

Roxie Cline, 65, was overcome with emotion as she tried to describe the de- struction in Mexico Beach, where she and her husband had lived for three years.

“I can’t, I can’t,” she said, tearing up. “It’s devastatin­g. You lose everything. Everybody has.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Drone aerial video from Mexico Beach, Florida shows a stretch of the town with almost every structure no longer standing. There was just one confirmed death so far in Mexico Beach, which Hurricane Michael nearly wiped off the map. (Oct. 16)
ASSOCIATED PRESS Drone aerial video from Mexico Beach, Florida shows a stretch of the town with almost every structure no longer standing. There was just one confirmed death so far in Mexico Beach, which Hurricane Michael nearly wiped off the map. (Oct. 16)
 ?? RUSS BYNUM—ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this Oct. 14, 2018photo clay pots are scattered in what used to be Dena Frost’s pottery business along the main highway through Mexico Beach, Fla. Hurricane Michael devastated the small beach community of about 1,000 people. It wrecked the mayor’s hardware store and the only grocery store in town. It splintered beachfront condos and smashed the inn where tourists have stayed for four decades. It reduced seafood restaurant­s to rubble and literally broke the bank.
RUSS BYNUM—ASSOCIATED PRESS In this Oct. 14, 2018photo clay pots are scattered in what used to be Dena Frost’s pottery business along the main highway through Mexico Beach, Fla. Hurricane Michael devastated the small beach community of about 1,000 people. It wrecked the mayor’s hardware store and the only grocery store in town. It splintered beachfront condos and smashed the inn where tourists have stayed for four decades. It reduced seafood restaurant­s to rubble and literally broke the bank.

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