The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Football fans in Jacksonvil­le: What will they find at beach?

Georgia faces off against Florida in city damaged by storm.

- Bemerson@ajc.com

A month and a half ago, Hurricane Irma knocked half of Florida off the power grid, wreaked $62 billion in damage and killed 132 people.

On Saturday, Oct. 28, more than 100,000 people will converge on Northern Florida to watch the University of Georgia and the University of Florida pursue that timeless dance on the gridiron at Jacksonvil­le’s EverBank Field. The football fans will see that the Sunshine State has been hard at work repairing the damage from Irma.

But they will also see many reminders of the wreckage.

Jacksonvil­le’s biggest hotel, the Hyatt Regency Riverfront, flooded during the storm, and it remains closed until the end of the month. The hotel boasts 116,000 square feet of meeting space and 951 rooms, many of which it is likely were booked

by fans going to the game. Those who made reservatio­ns ahead of time have sought lodging elsewhere.

“In our county, damage to the beach was minimal,” said Patty Jimenez, of Visit Jacksonvil­le. “The beaches were back open the following day after the storm. What’s left is big surf.”

That’s not necessaril­y true farther south. Ponte Vedra Beach, 20 minutes down the coast, suffered greater beach erosion, Jimenez said, with some damage to waterfront homes.

The Jacksonvil­le Beach Pier, which is nearly a quarter of a mile long, is also closed, but locals can’t blame Irma for that; it remains closed due to the previous storm, Hurricane Matthew, from October 2016.

Jacksonvil­le Beach, which just finished a renourishi­ng project on the beach and a planting of sea oats, lost some of that progress to Irma, said Chris Hoffman, a member of the Jacksonvil­le Beach City Council.

She said fall weather has

also made the beach more dangerous. Hoffman said fall weather has brought more “run-outs,” pulling hapless swimmers beyond their depth and necessitat­ing more rescues. More clueless visitors are expected on football Saturday. “We know that when we have a lot of out-of-towners, we need to be on high alert for ocean rescues.”

Football fans who stay on the Georgia side of the state line will find hurricane damage there, too. A quarter of the boardwalk crossovers, providing beach access across

the dunes of St. Simons, were destroyed by Irma, according to Kathryn Downs, communicat­ions manager with the Glynn County Board of Commission­ers.

The beaches may be less picturesqu­e than usual, but Georgia’s female foot- ball fans can be depended upon to improve the view, said Hoffman, herself a Floridian. “The Georgia girls dress up for the game,” she said. “The Florida girls wear flip-flops and tank tops, but the Georgia girls wear dresses and nice shoes. I guess it’s tradition.”

 ?? CASEY SYKES / CASEY.SYKES@AJC.COM ?? Jada Pinkett Smith, shown Friday following an interview at the Ray Charles Performing Arts Center at Morehouse College in Atlanta, spoke to students and encouraged them to “shape the world through your creativity.” Smith was at Morehouse as part of the...
CASEY SYKES / CASEY.SYKES@AJC.COM Jada Pinkett Smith, shown Friday following an interview at the Ray Charles Performing Arts Center at Morehouse College in Atlanta, spoke to students and encouraged them to “shape the world through your creativity.” Smith was at Morehouse as part of the...
 ?? JACKSONVIL­LE DAILY RECORD ?? Workers pull soaked carpets out of the Hyatt Regency Riverfront in Jacksonvil­le, Fla.
JACKSONVIL­LE DAILY RECORD Workers pull soaked carpets out of the Hyatt Regency Riverfront in Jacksonvil­le, Fla.
 ?? DEDE SMITH / THE FLORIDA TIMES-UNION VIA AP ?? Charlotte Glaze gives Donna Lamb a teary hug as she floats out some of her belongings in floodwater­s from the Ortega River in Jacksonvil­le, Fla., after Hurricane Irma passed through the area last month.
DEDE SMITH / THE FLORIDA TIMES-UNION VIA AP Charlotte Glaze gives Donna Lamb a teary hug as she floats out some of her belongings in floodwater­s from the Ortega River in Jacksonvil­le, Fla., after Hurricane Irma passed through the area last month.
 ?? JOHNNY MILANO / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A surf shop, reusing plywood from Hurricane Matthew preparatio­n, boarded up ahead of Hurricane Irma’s arrival in Jacksonvil­le Beach, Fla.
JOHNNY MILANO / THE NEW YORK TIMES A surf shop, reusing plywood from Hurricane Matthew preparatio­n, boarded up ahead of Hurricane Irma’s arrival in Jacksonvil­le Beach, Fla.

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