Las Vegas Review-Journal

Frustratio­ns mount as Ian’s effects linger along mid-atlantic

- By Bobby Caina Calvan and Mike Schneider

FORT MYERS, Fla. — Days after the skies cleared and the winds died down in Florida, Hurricane Ian’s effects persisted Monday, as people faced another week without power and others were being rescued from homes inundated with lingering floodwater­s.

Frustratio­ns mounted in the path the storm cut through Florida, and the hurricane’s remnants, now a nor’easter, weren’t done with the U.S.

The mid-atlantic and Northeast coasts were getting flooding rains. Forecaster­s said the storm’s onshore winds could pile even more water into an already inundated Chesapeake Bay and threatened to cause the most significan­t tidal flooding event in Virginia’s Hampton Roads region in more than a decade.

Norfolk and Virginia Beach declared states of emergency as they watched to see how bad Monday’s high tides would be. Coastal flooding was possible from North Carolina’s Outer Banks to Long Island, the National Weather Service said.

At least 68 people have been confirmed dead: 61 in Florida, four in North Carolina and three in Cuba since Ian made its first landfall on the Caribbean island on Sept. 27 and in Florida a day later. Some media reports have placed the unofficial death toll as high as 100 late Monday afternoon.

Search and rescue efforts were still ongoing Monday in Florida. More than 1,600 people have been rescued statewide, according to Florida’s emergency management agency.

Fort Myers Beach Mayor Ray Murphy told NBC’S “Today Show” that residents who evacuated were largely being kept away from their homes because of searches likely to last a few more days.

Washed-out bridges to barrier islands, flooded roadways, isolated cellphone service and a lack of water, electricit­y or the internet left hundreds of thousands still isolated. The situation in many areas wasn’t expected to improve for several days because waterways were overflowin­g, leaving the rain that fell with nowhere to go.

In Desoto County, northeast of Fort Myers, the Peace River and tributarie­s reached record high levels.

Many residents in the rural county of about 37,000 people could only be reached by boat. What roads remained above water were blocked, according to the Nassau County Sheriff’s Office, which was assisting with the efforts.

“Right now we working on creating teams to help find stranded residents and we are dispatchin­g ATVS to help get rid of debris on roadways that were impossible to travel over,” deputies wrote in a Facebook post.

Joe Gunn said the first two days without power at his Punta Gorda home weren’t bad because he, his wife and 4-year-old daughter like to camp.

But then they ran out of gas, Gunn said as he waited for an hour for $20 worth of premium fuel from a Bonita Springs station, one of the few open in the area. The family then drove to get supplies and a hot meal.

Gunn was preparing for another stressful night, worried someone might try to steal his supplies. “I am constantly listening to the generator. It’s pitch black outside of the house,” he said.

About 600,000 homes and businesses in Florida were still without electricit­y on Monday morning, down from a peak of 2.6 million. But hat is still nearly the same amount of customers in all of Rhode Island.

The current goal is to restore power by Sunday to customers whose power lines and other electric infrastruc­ture is still intact, Florida Division of Emergency Management Director Kevin Guthrie said Monday. It does not include homes or areas where infrastruc­ture needs to be rebuilt.

President Joe Biden and first lady Jill Biden plan to visit the state on Wednesday.

Ian’s remnants are bringing rains and causing some flooding up the mid-atlantic coast and into New England. The National Weather Service issued coastal flooding warnings through late today from Virgnia to New Jersey

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