The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

DANGERS PERSIST

Florida recovery picks up momentum, but there are tragedies in the storm’s aftermath

- By Jennifer Kay and Tim Reynolds

Florida’s post-Irma recovery picked up momentum Friday as power outages dropped and schools made plans to reopen. But two new cases of carbon monoxide poisoning from temporary generators made clear that dangers remained nearly a week after the powerful storm hit.

In Palm Beach County, a woman died and three men were in critical condition after authoritie­s said carbon monoxide fumes seeped in from a generator positioned just outside a home’s garage on Thursday. A family of four was also being treated Friday near Miami for exposure to fumes from a generator outside of their apartment.

The state has also made urgent efforts to protect its vulnerable elderly residents after a string of nursing home deaths. Several nursing homes have been evacuated because of a lack of power or air conditioni­ng, while utility workers raced to help facilities still lacking electricit­y. Homebound seniors found help from charities, churches and authoritie­s.

Older people can be more susceptibl­e to heat because their bodies do not adjust to temperatur­es as well as young

people. They don’t sweat as much, they are more likely to have medical conditions that change how the body responds to heat, and they are more likely to take medication that affects body temperatur­e.

“They’re more susceptibl­e to the heat,” said Broward County Commission­er Nan Rich. “The thing that hits them first is dehydratio­n and then their temperatur­e increases and then respirator­y issues kick in. Then there’s medication that needs to be refrigerat­ed.”

On Thursday, 57 residents were moved from a suburban Fort Lauderdale assisted-living facility without power to two nearby centers where electricit­y was just restored. Owner Ralph Marrinson said all five of his Florida facilities lost power after Irma. Workers scrambled to keep patients cool with emergency stocks of ice and Popsicles.

Still, progress was being made. Statewide, 64 nursing homes were still waiting for full power Thursday, a number that had dropped by nearly 20 from the previous day, according to the Florida Health Care Associatio­n.

Homebound seniors were also a concern. The Greater Miami Jewish Federation encouraged people to evacuate before the storm if they could, but the group has shifted its focus to checking on them and bringing supplies to their homes, said CEO Jacob Solomon.

“At this point we’re better off taking care of them where they are. They didn’t leave then. They’re not going to leave now. What are you going to do? You go, you check on them, you make sure they have water and food and that’s it,” he said. “You’re not going to convince a 95-year-old Holocaust survivor to do something that she doesn’t want to do.”

By Friday morning, most Floridians who lost their electricit­y after the storm had gotten it back. State emergency managers said the number of outages dropped to 1.9 million homes and businesses.

Schools in some hardhit areas were also able to start making plans to welcome back students. Lee

“Someone’s got to answer for this. Someone let the ball drop very, very far. Whoever was in charge, whoever was responsibl­e, needs to be called onto the carpet for it.” — Kenneth Nova, ex-husband of 71-year-old victim Gail Nova

County schools Superinten­dent Greg Adkins announced classes will begin Sept. 25 after most of the district’s buildings received at least minor damage. Three needed extensive roof repair.

At least 33 people have died in the U.S. under Irmarelate­d circumstan­ces, the vast majority in Florida. The death toll across the Caribbean stood at 38.

On Thursday, detectives were at the Rehabilita­tion Center at Hollywood Hills after receiving a search warrant to investigat­e the eight patients’ deaths, which police believed were heat-related.

The ex-husband of 71-year-old victim Gail Nova said her devastated family believes the facility should lose its license.

“Someone’s got to answer for this. Someone let the ball drop very, very far,” Kenneth Nova said by phone from his home in Winter Haven. “Whoever was in charge, whoever was responsibl­e, needs to be called onto the carpet for it.”

The center said the hurricane knocked out a transforme­r that powered the air conditioni­ng. Broward County said the home alerted officials about the situation Tuesday, but when asked if it had any medical needs or emergencie­s, it did not request help.

But by early Wednesday, the center had placed three calls to report patients in distress, prompting firefighte­rs to search the facility. They found three people dead and evacuated 145 people to hospitals, many on stretchers or in wheelchair­s, authoritie­s said. By that afternoon, five more had died.

Florida Gov. Rick Scott announced Thursday night that he directed the Agency for Health Care Administra­tion to terminate the center as a provider for Medicaid, which provides health care for low-income individual­s and families.

“It is clear that this facility cannot be responsibl­e for Florida’s vulnerable patients, and therefore the State will stop them from providing care,” Scott said in a news release.

 ?? PEDRO PORTAL — MIAMI HERALD VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Messages left on the sidewalk of the Rehabilita­tion Center of Hollywood Hills nursing home a day after eight people died and a criminal investigat­ion by local agencies continued into how the rehab center allowed patients to stay without a working air...
PEDRO PORTAL — MIAMI HERALD VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Messages left on the sidewalk of the Rehabilita­tion Center of Hollywood Hills nursing home a day after eight people died and a criminal investigat­ion by local agencies continued into how the rehab center allowed patients to stay without a working air...
 ?? PEDRO PORTAL — MIAMI HERALD VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Vendetta Craig, who had left her 87-year-old mother, Edna Jefferson, in the care of the Rehabilita­tion Center of Hollywood Hills, speaks during a news conference flanked by, from left, Dr. Randy Katz, medical director, emergency services, Memorial...
PEDRO PORTAL — MIAMI HERALD VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Vendetta Craig, who had left her 87-year-old mother, Edna Jefferson, in the care of the Rehabilita­tion Center of Hollywood Hills, speaks during a news conference flanked by, from left, Dr. Randy Katz, medical director, emergency services, Memorial...
 ?? CARLINE JEAN — SOUTH FLORIDA SUN-SENTINEL VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Janice Connelly of Hollywood, Florida, sets up a makeshift memorial in memory of the senior citizens who died in the heat at The Rehabilita­tion Center at Hollywood Hills, Fla.
CARLINE JEAN — SOUTH FLORIDA SUN-SENTINEL VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS Janice Connelly of Hollywood, Florida, sets up a makeshift memorial in memory of the senior citizens who died in the heat at The Rehabilita­tion Center at Hollywood Hills, Fla.
 ?? EMILY MICHOT — MIAMI HERALD VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Marie Saint Surin, originally from Haiti but living in Key West, makes up a set of cots for her family after they arrived at the E. Darwin Fuchs Pavilion at the Miami-Dade County Fairground­s on Thursday. The shelter is the only shelter remaining in...
EMILY MICHOT — MIAMI HERALD VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS Marie Saint Surin, originally from Haiti but living in Key West, makes up a set of cots for her family after they arrived at the E. Darwin Fuchs Pavilion at the Miami-Dade County Fairground­s on Thursday. The shelter is the only shelter remaining in...
 ?? JIM DAMASKE — THE TAMPA BAY TIMES VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A sunken houseboat lies at a small marina behind a hotel on Clearwater Beach, Fla., Thursday, after the passing of Hurricane Irma.
JIM DAMASKE — THE TAMPA BAY TIMES VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS A sunken houseboat lies at a small marina behind a hotel on Clearwater Beach, Fla., Thursday, after the passing of Hurricane Irma.

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