The Maui News

After Michael’s rampage on the Florida Panhandle: ‘Nothing left’

Only slabs of concrete in the sand remain of beachfront homes

- By JAY REEVES and BRENDAN FARRINGTON

PANAMA CITY, Fla. — Linda Marquardt rode out Hurricane Michael with her husband at their home in Mexico Beach. When their house filled with surging ocean water, they fled upstairs. Now their home is full of mud and everywhere they look there’s utter devastatio­n in their Florida Panhandle community: fishing boats tossed like toys, roofs lifted off of buildings and pine trees snapped like matchstick­s in 155 mph winds.

Row after row of beachfront homes were so obliterate­d by Michael’s surging seas and howling winds that only slabs of concrete in the sand remain, a testament that this was ground zero when the epic Category 4 hurricane slammed ashore at midweek. The destructio­n in this and other communitie­s dotting the white-sand beaches is being called catastroph­ic — and it will need billions of dollars to rebuild.

“All of my furniture was floating,” said Marquardt, 67. “A river just started coming down the road. It was awful, and now there’s just nothing left.”

At least three deaths were blamed on Michael, the most powerful hurricane to hit the continenta­l U.S. in over 50 years, and by early today it wasn’t over yet: a tropical storm long after Wednesday’s landfall, Michael stubbornly kept up its punch while barreling up the Southeast, dumping heavy rains and

spreading flash-flooding misery as far away as Virginia.

High winds, downed trees, streets inundated by rising waters and multiple rescues of motorists from waterlogge­d cars played out in spots around Virginia and neighborin­g North Carolina. And while forecaster­s said Michael was gradually losing its tropical traits, it was a new chapter would begin as an extratropi­cal storm predicted to intensify with gale force winds once it starts cross out into the Atlantic.

In North Carolina’s mountains, motorists had to be rescued Thursday from cars trapped by high water. High winds toppled trees and power lines, leaving hundreds of thousands without power. Flash flooding also was reported in the big North Carolina cities of Charlotte and Raleigh. Similar scenes played out in parts of Virginia as the storm raced seaward.

All told, more than 900,000 homes and businesses in Florida, Alabama, Georgia and the Carolinas were without power.

Meanwhile, thousands of National Guard troops, law enforcemen­t officers and rescue teams still had much to do in the hardest hit area: Florida’s Panhandle. Families living along the Panhandle are now faced with a struggle to survive in a perilous landscape of shattered homes and shopping centers, the storm debris spread far and wide.

In one community, Panama City, most homes were still standing, but no property was left undamaged. Downed power lines and twisted street signs lay all around. Aluminum siding was shredded and homes were split by fallen trees. Hundreds of cars had broken windows. The hurricane damaged hospitals and nursing homes and officials worked to evacuate hundreds of patients.

“So many lives have been changed forever. So many families have lost everything,” said Florida Gov. Rick Scott, calling it “unimaginab­le destructio­n.”

An insurance company that produces models for catastroph­es estimated Michael caused about $8 billion in damage. Boston-based Karen Clark & Company released that estimate Thursday, which includes privately insured wind and storm surge damage to residentia­l, commercial and industrial properties and vehicles. It doesn’t include losses covered by the National Flood Insurance Program.

And Michael also was deadly, both in Florida and beyond.

A man outside Tallahasse­e, Fla., was killed by a falling tree, and an 11-year-old girl in Georgia died when Michael’s winds picked up a carport and dropped it on her home. A driver in North Carolina also was killed when a tree fell on his car.

Some fear the toll can only rise as rescue teams get around storm debris blocking roads and reach isolated areas.

More than 375,000 people up and down the Gulf Coast were ordered or urged to clear out as Michael closed in. But emergency authoritie­s lamented that many ignored the warnings.

The Coast Guard said it rescued at least 27 people before and after the hurricane’s landfall, mostly from coastal homes.

Mishelle McPherson and her ex-husband searched for the elderly mother of a friend. The woman lived in a small cinderbloc­k house about 150 yards from the Gulf and thought she would be OK. The home was found smashed, with no sign of the woman.

“Do you think her body would be here? Do you think it would have floated away?” McPherson asked.

 ?? AP photo ?? Mishelle McPherson climbs over the rubble of the home of the elderly mother of a friend as she searches for the woman Thursday in Mexico Beach, Fla. The woman stayed behind in her cinderbloc­k home, thinking she would be safe, during Hurricane Michael.
AP photo Mishelle McPherson climbs over the rubble of the home of the elderly mother of a friend as she searches for the woman Thursday in Mexico Beach, Fla. The woman stayed behind in her cinderbloc­k home, thinking she would be safe, during Hurricane Michael.
 ?? SevereStud­ios.com photo via AP ?? Damage from Hurricane Michael is seen in Mexico Beach, Fla. on Thursday. Searchand-rescue teams fanned out to reach trapped people in Michael’s wake.
SevereStud­ios.com photo via AP Damage from Hurricane Michael is seen in Mexico Beach, Fla. on Thursday. Searchand-rescue teams fanned out to reach trapped people in Michael’s wake.

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