The National - News

THE WORST IS OVER BUT AUTHORITIE­S SAY DANGER NOT YET PAST

▶ Rob Crilly emerges from his Fort Lauderdale hotel to survey the damage wreaked by Hurricane Irma

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Hurricane Irma was at her dangerous worst, snapping trees like toothpicks and spinning tornadoes across land and sea, when Judy Johnson could take it no more.

A veteran of countless Florida hurricanes, she had chosen to ride out the storm in her 13-tonne trailer, but the battering had become too much even for her to bear.

Judy dived into her 4x4 and drove for the motorway, hoping she could find a safe spot at a truck stop. “It was terrifying but I didn’t know what else to do,” she said a day later.

She made the 5 kilometres to the motorway. But then disaster struck. As the road took her to exposed ground, the 150kph gusts were simply too much. The bonnet of her car slammed open, smashing into the windscreen.

“The police saw me driving along at about 10mph [16kph] and told me someone was going to crash into me,” Judy said.

They turned her back. She had no option but to return to the vehicle she had fled. “It was going from side to side. And I have a big rig,” she said. “I don’t know how anyone else managed.”

Judy stayed inside for a terrifying 12 hours, not knowing if one of the trailer park’s 20-metre trees would come smashing down on her home or one of the lighter trailers would be tossed by a tornado.

A handful of residents stayed at the park on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale. They had no family to turn to and the local hotels were either full or shut because of mandatory evacuation orders.

Huddled at the back of her vehicle, away from the glass windows in the sitting room, Ms Johnson, a retired postal worker, contemplat­ed her own mortality. “Even if you’re used to it, sometimes you still remember you can die,” she said.

A day later she surveyed her trailer for damage. Part of its refrigerat­or unit, mounted on the roof, had been lifted off. Her battered 4x4 would need a new windscreen. Branches littered the ground along with thin roofing shingles.

But otherwise her life and her home were remarkably intact.

“If it had been a little bit closer,” she said.“I don’t know how we would have survived.”

As the people of Fort Lauderdale came out yesterday morning, that sentiment was widespread. It was a case of what might have been.

Irma had taken a last minute tack to the west before hitting the Florida mainland. The big cities of Miami and Fort Lauderdale missed the very worst of her fury. Instead her 250kph winds battered the empty Everglades before moving north into Naples and Fort Myers.

But her 600-kilometre width meant the damage spread from coast to coast.

Fort Lauderdale, on the north-east fringe of Irma’s counter-clockwise winds, was hit by at least three tornadoes as storms spiralled off its front. Two cranes were brought down in Miami and one in Fort Lauderdale. Rain flooded roads and low-lying buildings.

Almost six million people were without power by yesterday morning and five deaths had been reported, including one in Key West, which bore the brunt of the storm a day earlier. Irma continued to push north but it was downgraded to a tropical storm with winds of about 100kph as it headed for Georgia.

On Florida’s west coast, cities suffered flooding from a storm surge. The national weather service said Jacksonvil­le had suffered a surge that exceeded the 1964 record set by Hurricane Dora.

Bob Buckhorn, the mayor of Tampa Bay, said the situation was not as bad as it could have been, but warned residents that the danger from storm surges continued.

“What we feared the most was the surge,” he said. “The surge is yet to be finished.”

President Donald Trump approved a major disaster declaratio­n and emergency aid for Florida, describing the hurricane as a “big monster”.

“These are storms of catastroph­ic severity and we are marshallin­g the full resources of the federal government to help our fellow Americans,” he said during a 9/11 remembranc­e ceremony at the Pentagon. “When Americans are in need, Americans pull together and we are one country.”

Rick Scott, the governor of Florida, was due to travel to the Florida Keys to assess damage there. Irma made land at Cudjoe Key as a Category 4 hurricane with sustained winds as high as 215kph.

Authoritie­s on the island chain must check the integrity of 42 bridges linking the islands to each other and to the mainland.

The Cuban government reported that 10 people were killed when Irma battered the island’s north coast with 11m waves over the weekend, putting the overall death toll for the hurricane’s path through the Caribbean at 38.

Officials in Miami admitted that the toll farther south showed how the east coast of the mainland dodged the worst of the storm fury. Ken Russell, a Miami city commission­er, said: “It’s a story of resilience and luck. Our heart goes out to the islands to the south of us.”

Fort Lauderdale, which had been under curfew for almost 48 hours, gradually came back to life as the storm clouds lifted and the sun appeared for the first time in two days.

Business owners began removing boards from their premises, residents cleared branches from their driveways and floodwater­s drained away.

But authoritie­s were keen to remind residents that dangers remained. Sheriff’s deputies shut down one of the main crossings to the city’s barrier island, which serves as flood defence and site of some of the area’s most desirable homes.

“There are power lines down there. We don’t want anyone lighting up,” one officer said

Traffic lights had also failed across the city, raising the risk of road accidents, he said. “We are asking everyone to treat these junctions as if they were four-way stops, but plenty of people are driving like idiots.”

And then there are the looters. Even before the winds subsided, a gang was caught on camera smashing their way into a sportswear shop and emerging with handfuls of clothing and shoes. They were spotted at two more shops before police caught up with them, arresting six adults and three teenagers.

“Going to prison over a pair of sneakers is a fairly bad life choice,” said Rick Maglione, Fort Lauderdale chief of police. “Stay home and look after your loved ones and be thankful they are all safe.”

Elsewhere in the county, a teenager was shot by a police officer and a second was arrested after they were caught burgling an empty home. Police were alerted by the owners who were sheltering inland but saw the intruders on their home security cameras.

More than two dozen suspected looters have been caught in Fort Lauderdale and Miami.

We ask everyone to treat these junctions like four-way stops, but plenty of people are driving like idiots POLICE OFFICER Fort Lauderdale

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