Panama City, FL – No Cellphones, No Gas: No End To Misery In Hurricane Zone

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    A damaged home stands in the background as soldiers with Florida National Guard's Bravo Company, 2nd Battalion, 124th Infantry Regiment, load food and water for the public at an aid distribution point in the wake of Hurricane Michael in Panama City, Fla., Monday, Oct. 15, 2018. (AP Photo/David Goldman)Panama City, FL – Residents of hurricane-ravaged communities in Florida’s Panhandle turned to volunteers and each other for help Monday, the fifth day without cell service, electricity or, in many cases, shelter.

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    Trevor Lewis, a member of a six-person search-and-rescue unit, said he watched storm victims “cry out in joy” when his team let them use its cellphones to contact loved ones for the first time in days.

    “The amount of stress that people are in, not just from losing everything, but not having phones, power, food, water, puts a huge toll on the emotional factor of people stuck in these houses,” Lewis said. “And it really ups the ante a whole lot more.”

    As President Donald Trump visited the devastated zone, the death toll from Michael’s march from Florida to Virginia stood at 17, with just one confirmed death so far in Mexico Beach, a town of about 1,000 people that was nearly wiped off the map in a direct hit from the hurricane and its 155 mph (250 kph) winds last week.

    City Clerk Adrian Welle told local media that 46 people in Mexico Beach were still unaccounted for. That number had previously been 285, but officials think many left right before the storm hit.

    Trump took a helicopter tour over Mexico Beach and also saw the badly damaged Tyndall Air Force base. After landing in Panama City, he visited Lynn Haven, another hard-hit city. Trump walked up to a house where a massive pine tree lay on the front yard. The owner, Michael Rollins, told Trump he rode out the storm.

    “I knew I had made my commitment to stay with my animals. I have two dogs and a parrot,” Rollins told the president.

    Some in the affected area were lukewarm about the president’s visit.

    “He’s doing this, I believe, to project a different image of himself because of all the bad publicity he’s had. He’s not going into get into the sewage water with other people and start digging,” said 68-year-old Nanya Thompson of Lynn Haven. “If this is just going to be another reality show, I don’t think he should come.”
    Handout image released by the U.S. Customs and Border Protection showing a CBP Air and Marine Operations UH-60 Black Hawk flight crew conducting search and rescue operations in the aftermath of Hurricane Michael among damaged homes and flooding in Panama City, Florida, USA, 11 October 2018. EPA
    Trump praised Republican Gov. Rick Scott for an “incredible” response to the disaster and said: “You’re a great governor.” Scott, who is running for the U.S. Senate, returned the praise, saying, “Every time I’ve called, he’s come through.”

    Across the stricken Panhandle, nerves were frayed as storm victims confronted shortages of gas and other supplies.

    Limon Wilson sat for an hour with his car parked at a gas pump with no fuel outside hard-hit Panama City. His home in the city was badly damaged, with a tree through the roof. He was trying to find shelter for his four children and other family members.

    “We’ve been trying to rough it at home for the last few days. But it’s hot,” Wilson said as his 8-month-old daughter sat on his knee.

    As of Sunday, more than 190,000 homes and businesses in Florida were without electricity, along with about 120,000 in Georgia.

    It was unclear how many people were missing. Because of widespread cellphone outages, authorities said some people who are safe may not be able to let friends or loved ones know.

    A Houston-based organization called CrowdSource that takes calls from worried family members and sends the details to rescue crews on the ground said it has helped find nearly 1,500 people since Michael struck. But co-founder Matthew Marchetti said it was still looking for more than 1,350 in the hurricane-affected area.

    Lewis was part of a team that spent days doing more than 100 wellness checks on people reported missing by family members in Lynn Haven.

    “Just the desperation in the family members’ voices that hadn’t contacted their loved one for a few days was bad,” he said. “Then we get on scene and find their family members and they have no food, no water, no power.”

    Lewis’ crew, Salty Water Rescue Services, which is made up of local law enforcement and fire rescue officials from Cocoa Beach, found a woman in her 80s who had no food and just a few bottles of water left. They evacuated her and put her on the phone with a family member.

    They also evacuated 50 to 100 people in a Lynn Haven neighborhood after discovering a gas leak while searching for victims.

    Florida officials have begun criticizing the time it is taking Verizon to restore cellphone service on the Panhandle. Verizon responded on Twitter that it was working “urgently.”


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    5 years ago

    I can’t understand why the Army and the Coast Guard, has not dropped supplies by helicopter, to people in rural areas? During the Asian Tsunami of 2004, Bush sent in helicopters, off ships to remote areas of Indonesia, and other countries, to bring desperately needed supplies.