Dozen left dead in Ian’s watery ruin

Damaged homes and debris are shown in the aftermath of Hurricane Ian on Thursday in Fort Myers, Fla. More photos at arkansasonline.com/930ian/.
(AP/Wilfredo Lee)
Damaged homes and debris are shown in the aftermath of Hurricane Ian on Thursday in Fort Myers, Fla. More photos at arkansasonline.com/930ian/. (AP/Wilfredo Lee)


FORT MYERS, Fla. -- Rescue crews piloted boats and waded through inundated streets Thursday to save thousands of Floridians trapped amid flooded homes and shattered buildings left by Hurricane Ian, which crossed into the Atlantic Ocean and churned toward South Carolina.

Hours after weakening to a tropical storm while crossing the Florida Peninsula, Ian regained hurricane strength Thursday evening over the Atlantic. The National Hurricane Center predicted it would hit South Carolina as a Category 1 hurricane today, with winds picking up to 80 mph near midnight Thursday.

The devastation inflicted on Florida came into focus a day after Ian struck as a monstrous Category 4 hurricane, one of the strongest storms ever to hit the U.S. It flooded homes on both the state's coasts, cut off the only road access to a barrier island, destroyed a historic waterfront pier and knocked out electricity to 2.67 million Florida homes and businesses -- nearly a quarter of utility customers.

PowerOutage.us, a website that compiles outage numbers, recorded 2.6 million customers without electricity out of about 11 million customers in total as of Thursday evening.

A total of 12 people were confirmed dead in Florida. They included two residents of hard-hit Sanibel Island along Florida's west coast, Sanibel city manager Dana Souza said late Thursday. Three other people were reported killed in Cuba after the hurricane struck there on Tuesday.

In the Fort Myers area, homes had been ripped from their slabs and deposited among shredded wreckage. Businesses near the beach were completely razed, leaving twisted debris. Broken docks floated at odd angles beside damaged boats and fires smoldered on lots where houses once stood.

"I don't know how anyone could have survived in there," William Goodison said amid the wreckage of the mobile home park in Fort Myers Beach where he'd lived for 11 years. Goodison rode out the storm at his son's house inland.

The hurricane tore through the park of about 60 homes, many of them destroyed or mangled beyond repair, including Goodison's single-wide home. Wading through waist-deep water, Goodison and his son wheeled two trash cans containing what little he could salvage -- a portable air conditioner, some tools and a baseball bat.

The road into Fort Myers was littered with broken trees, boat trailers and other debris. Cars were left abandoned in the road, having stalled when the storm surge flooded their engines.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis said at least 700 rescues, mostly by air, have been conducted so far and involving the U.S. Coast Guard, the National Guard and urban search-and-rescue teams.

After leaving Florida as a tropical storm Thursday and entering the Atlantic Ocean north of Cape Canaveral, Ian spun up into a hurricane again with winds of 75 mph.

A hurricane warning was issued for the South Carolina coast and extended to Cape Fear on the southeastern coast of North Carolina. With tropical-storm force winds reaching about 415 miles from its center, Ian was forecast to shove storm surge of 5 feet into coastal areas in Georgia and the Carolinas. Rainfall of up to 8 inches threatened flooding from South Carolina to Virginia.

National Guard troops were being positioned in South Carolina to help with the aftermath, including any water rescues. On Thursday afternoon, a steady stream of vehicles left Charleston, a 350-year-old city.

Sheriffs in southwest Florida said 911 centers were inundated by thousands of stranded callers, some with life-threatening emergencies. The U.S. Coast Guard began rescue efforts hours before daybreak on barrier islands near where Ian struck, DeSantis said. More than 800 federal urban search-and-rescuers were also in the area.

In the Orlando area, Orange County firefighters used boats to reach people in a flooded neighborhood. Patients from a nursing home were carried on stretchers across floodwaters to a bus.

In Fort Myers, Valerie Bartley's family spent desperate hours holding a dining room table against the patio door, fearing the storm "was tearing our house apart."

"I was terrified," Bartley said. "What we heard was the shingles and debris from everything in the neighborhood hitting our house."

The storm ripped away patio screens and snapped a palm tree in the yard, Bartley said, but left the roof intact and her family unharmed.

Long lines formed at gas stations in Fort Myers and a Home Depot hardware store opened, letting in a few customers at a time.

Frank Pino was near the back of the line, with about 100 people in front of him.

"I hope they leave something," Pino said, "because I need almost everything."

A 72-year-old man in Deltona died after falling into a canal while using a hose to drain his pool in the heavy rain, the Volusia County sheriff's office said. A 38-year-old man from Lake County died Wednesday in an accident after his vehicle hydroplaned, according to authorities.

Lee County Sheriff Carmine Marceno said his office was scrambling to respond to thousands of 911 calls in the Fort Myers area, but many roads and bridges were impassable.

Emergency crews sawed through toppled trees to reach stranded people. Many in the hardest-hit areas were unable to call for help because of electrical and cellular failures.

Power crews from Florida Power & Light, and other utility companies, were also streaming into Southwest Florida. In some cases, they'll be repairing damage. In the hardest-hit counties, the whole grid will have to be rebuilt.

"Lee and Charlotte are basically off the grid at this point," DeSantis said during a Thursday morning briefing.

Even though many roads are open in Southwest Florida, officials urged people to refrain from sightseeing.

"Do not come in and tour the area for damage," said Kevin Guthrie, the director of Florida's Division of Emergency Management. "We have 20,000 [or] 30,000 responders coming into [the] area that need access to those roads. Stay at home."

Some 100 engineers were also deployed to inspect bridges such as the causeway connecting the mainland to Sanibel Island, which collapsed at five sections, making passage possible only by boat and cutting off access to the barrier island where 6,300 people live.

Exactly how many people remained stranded on the barrier islands was unclear. The mainland road leading to the causeway was folded up like an accordion and covered by debris, including a stray spiral staircase deposited by the winds into the brush next to a pickup.

"Our community looks like it's been hit by a very large tornado," Lee County manager Roger Desjarlais said at a Thursday afternoon news conference. "We have a lot of residents who have lost their homes."

The road to Pine Island, another barrier island that was wrecked by Ian, was also destroyed.

"Right now you cannot get to Pine Island by vehicle," Desjarlais said, adding: "I would never have thought that those bridges would fail the way they have."

South of Sanibel Island, the historic beachfront pier in Naples was destroyed, with even the pilings torn out. "Right now, there is no pier," said Collier County Commissioner Penny Taylor.

In Port Charlotte, a hospital's emergency room flooded and fierce winds ripped away part of the roof, sending water gushing into the intensive care unit. The sickest patients -- some on ventilators -- were crowded into the middle two floors as the staff prepared for storm victims to arrive, said Dr. Birgit Bodine of HCA Florida Fawcett Hospital.

Ian struck Florida with 150 mph winds that tied it for the fifth-strongest hurricane ever to hit the U.S.

While scientists generally avoid blaming climate change for specific storms without detailed analysis, Ian's watery destruction fits what scientists have predicted for a warmer world: stronger and wetter hurricanes, though not necessarily more of them.

"This business about very, very heavy rain is something we've expected to see because of climate change," said MIT atmospheric scientist Kerry Emanuel. "We'll see more storms like Ian."

Information for this article was contributed by Terry Spencer, Adriana Gomez Licon, Tim Reynolds, Cody Jackson, Freida Frisaro, Mick Schneider, Seth Borenstein and Bobby Caina Calvan of The Associated Press; by Linda Robertson, Joey Flechas, Nicholas Nehamas, David Ovalle, Alex Harris and Rebecca San Juan of The Miami Herald; and by Zachary T. Sampson of The Tampa Bay Times.

  photo  Damaged boats lie on the land and water in the aftermath of Hurricane Ian, Thursday, Sept. 29, 2022, in Fort Myers, Fla. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)
 
 
  photo  Boats and a damged home are seen in the aftermath of Hurricane Ian, Thursday, Sept. 29, 2022, in Fort Myers Beach, Fla. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)
 
 
  photo  Damaged homes are seen in the aftermath of Hurricane Ian, Thursday, Sept. 29, 2022, in Fort Myers Beach, Fla. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)
 
 
  photo  People walk along The Battery alongside Charleston Harbor as winds from Hurricane Ian begin to roll in to the Charleston, S.C., area on Thursday, Sept. 29, 2022. (AP Photo/Meg Kinnard)
 
 
  photo  Rescue personnel load a four wheeler onto a barge for transport to Sanibel Island Thursday, Sept. 29, 2022, in Fort Myers, Fla. (AP Photo/Steve Helber)
 
 
  photo  Residents in an Orlando, Fla., neighborhood are rescued due to floodwaters from Hurricane Ian, Thursday, Sept. 29, 2022. (AP Photo/John Raoux)
 
 
  photo  Displaced boats rest lie strewn along the San Carlos Boulevard, one day of the passage of Hurricane Ian, in Fort Myers Beach, Fla., Thursday, Sept. 29, 2022. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)
 
 
  photo  A section of the Sanibel Causeway was lost due to the effects of Hurricane Ian Thursday, Sept. 29, 2022, in Fort Myers, Fla. (AP Photo/Steve Helber)
 
 
  photo  Residents walk through a neighborhood with fallen branches and leaves in the aftermath of Hurricane Ian, Thursday, Sept. 29, 2022, in Orlando, Fla. (AP Photo/Phelan M. Ebenhack)
 
 


  photo  Residents are rescued from floodwaters in the aftermath of Hurricane Ian Thursday in Orlando, Fla. (AP/John Raoux)
 
 


  photo  James Grey looks for his house boat along the Caloosahatchee River in downtown Fort Myers, Fla. (The New York Times/Kinfay Moroti)
 
 


  photo  Jake Moses (left), 19, and Heather Jones, 18, of Fort Myers, explore a section of destroyed businesses at Fort Myers Beach, Fla., on Thursday following Hurricane Ian. (AP/Tamp Bay Times/Douglas R. Clifford)
 
 



 Gallery: Ian heads north after Florida



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