Orlando Sentinel

Neighbors help each other as Idalia cleanup continues

- By Sharon Kennedy Wynne

ST. PETERSBURG — If his house wasn’t torn apart, Gary Grudzinska­s would have enjoyed watching workers pour gallons of concrete on his floor.

It looked like a gray pool of soft ice cream, pushing into the corners of his Shore Acres bedroom that seven weeks ago had 4 inches of water in it.

“It’s fascinatin­g isn’t it?” said Grudzinska­s, 60, a technical writer who has been living in a rental across town with his three teenagers since Hurricane Idalia walloped his neighborho­od on the morning of Aug. 30.

He maintains fairly good humor considerin­g the trauma he and his neighbors have endured since the Category 4 storm spared much of Tampa Bay but seemed to target Shore Acres and adjacent neighborho­od Riviera Bay.

An assessment by the city of St. Petersburg found that of the 1,466 homes around the city that suffered damage from the hurricane that day, 1,206 of those homes were in Shore Acres — a staggering 82% of the flood damage in just one area. Nearly half of all homes in the neighborho­od had some degree of damage, the city report said.

The fires and floods and damage were intense, but the many touching moments of neighbors helping neighbors is one of the reasons Grudzinska­s is rebuilding rather than moving away from his home of 29 years.

“Somebody offered to bring me a refrigerat­or. A total stranger,” Grudzinska­s said. “We had food trucks handing out food, restaurant­s catering meals. We got gift card donations to take the family out. People just show up and help each other.”

Carolyn Ganley, a fifth grade teacher at Largo’s Plato Academy, lives alone with her two dogs and had to return to work two days after the floodwater­s swamped her recently remodeled

Shore Acres home. She said the neighborho­od’s lively Facebook page has been a lifeline.

“Neighbors have cooked for me. A woman made me this big Filipino meal,” Ganley said. “You can go on there and ask for anything and total strangers will show up. They moved my boxes, helped in the yard. People just show up.”

What wasn’t showing up were the permits needed to replace structural damage like flooring and walls until the city expedited them for the flooded neighborho­ods. And some banks have been slow to approve the payments coming to the homeowners from the Federal Emergency Management Agency to spend on repairs, a piece of red tape that surprised many.

“The city of St. Petersburg is committed to expediting the rebuilding and recovery by accelerati­ng the permitting process with the hope of helping affected individual­s return to their homes as soon as possible,” said James Corbett, City Developmen­t Administra­tor.

While major repair work is underway, she said, the city waived its rules for on-site recreation­al vehicles

and trailers. And for six months, code enforcemen­t will suspend issuing citations.

Meanwhile, it’s been a huge learning curve navigating the bureaucrat­ic process of working with FEMA, said Kevin Batdorf, president of the Shore Acres Civic Associatio­n.

The process of getting a grant from FEMA to elevate your house, he said, is byzantine. The homeowner can’t apply directly. The applicatio­n has to come from the city, which sends it to the state who then sends it to FEMA. If FEMA approves the grant, the money goes first to the state, then to the city and finally to the homeowner.

“You couldn’t design a more complicate­d system. It takes three to five years to get that grant,” Batdorf said.

In the weeks after the storm, Babycycle handed out free diapers and hygiene products. Fourth Street Pizza showed up several times to hand out free food, as did high-end restaurant Il Ritorno. The city offered a free camp for two weekends so parents could drop off their kids while they worked on their houses. Food trucks Fo’Cheezy and Taco Cartel

showed up to give away lunch.

A Shore Acres Relief Fund has been started, and a “Shore Acres Strong” logo that emblazons shirts, cups and tote bags at craftydos-co.square.site goes toward the fund. It has so far raised about $7,500, a fraction of what is needed. But it will go toward a partnershi­p with the

Riviera United Methodist Church and Pineapple Projects to help supply neighbors with lost belongings like furniture, Batdorf said.

Meanwhile, The Ale and the Witch in downtown St. Petersburg worked with Cycle Brewing to make a beer called Rising Waters IPA, with the proceeds going to the fund. And Shore Acres kids will have a special night of trick or treating on Halloween in Arrowhead Park since many neighbors aren’t in their homes to hand out candy, Batdorf said.

“Across the bridge nobody knows anything about what happened here,” Batdorf said. “The debris has been picked up from the front lawns so anyone driving by won’t see that the houses are gutted behind those doors. Life looks normal if you are just driving by.”

 ?? JENNIFER GLENFIELD/TAMPA BAY TIMES ?? The Shore Acres neighborho­od following Hurricane Idahlia in St. Petersburg on Aug. 30.
JENNIFER GLENFIELD/TAMPA BAY TIMES The Shore Acres neighborho­od following Hurricane Idahlia in St. Petersburg on Aug. 30.
 ?? CHRIS URSO/TAMPA BAY TIMES ?? After the hurricane passed, piles of rubbish were lined up along Denver Street in the Shore Acres neighborho­od on Sept. 6. Nearly half the neighborho­od had some degree of damage from the storm.
CHRIS URSO/TAMPA BAY TIMES After the hurricane passed, piles of rubbish were lined up along Denver Street in the Shore Acres neighborho­od on Sept. 6. Nearly half the neighborho­od had some degree of damage from the storm.

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