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Slow Recovery From Charley Begins

POSTED: 6:01 am EDT August 14, 2004
UPDATED: 12:20 pm EDT August 15, 2004

Charley has left billions of dollars in damages behind, thousands of people homeless, and at least 13 dead.

Sunday, the Federal Emergency Management Agency expanded its disaster aid zone from four to 25 counties.

"Our worst fears have come true."
- Gov. Jeb Bush
Wayne Sallade, Charlotte County's director of emergency management, said Saturday that the initial assessment was 10 confirmed deaths in the county but an exact total was not available.

"Not hundreds. I would hope that it would be limited to dozens, if that," Sallade said. In the morning, Charlotte County deputies were standing guard over bodies because the area was inaccessible to ambulances.

There were five confirmed storm-related deaths elsewhere in the state. The federal government was sending a 25-member mortuary team to help process bodies. Earlier, the storm killed three people in Cuba and one in Jamaica.

Mike McHargue, director of investigations for the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, said two of the deaths were in Polk County and the others were in DeSoto, Lee, Sarasota counties.

"We are going through a very painstaking and deliberate process of trying to locate and report on any fatalities," said Mike McHargue, director of investigations for the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, adding that downed power lines and debris made their work "tedious and dangerous."

Gov. Jeb Bush toured the area by helicopter, declaring, "Our worst fears have come true." His brother, President Bush, said he would travel to Florida Sunday to assess damage while a federal mortuary team was arriving to help process bodies.

The eye of the worst hurricane to hit Florida in a dozen years passed directly over Punta Gorda, a town of 15,000, which took a devastating hit Friday.

Charley caused widespread damage to oceanfront homes and trailer parks and knocked out power to an estimated 1.3 million customers as it crossed from southwest Florida to Daytona Beach.

Hundreds of people were missing in Charlotte and thousands were left homeless, Sallade said. He compared the devastation with 1992's Hurricane Andrew, which the National Hurricane Center directly blamed for the deaths of 26 people, most in South Florida.

"It's Andrew all over again," he said. "We believe there's significant loss of life."

Sallade did not have an estimate on a specific number of fatalities. He said it may take days to get a final toll.

Bob Carpenter, a Charlotte County Sheriff's Office spokesman, said Saturday that there are 31 mobile home parks in the county that suffered major damage -- some with more than 1,000 units. He said teams have been sent to each park to search for bodies and survivors, but getting into them has been tough.

Residents survey the wreckage at a Port Charlotte area mobile home park.
"We just couldn't get the vehicles in -- there is so much debris," he said.

State emergency management director Craig Fugate said the priority now was trying to rescue people who may be trapped.

"If we're going to change the outcome for anybody that's been injured or trapped, we know time is of the essence," he said.

Extensive damage was also reported on exclusive Captiva Island, a narrow strip of sand west of Fort Myers.

Disaster Area

President Bush declared a major disaster area in Florida, making federal money available to Charlotte, Lee, Manatee and Sarasota counties. All of Hardee County and the entire city of Punta Gorda is without power.

The Category 4 storm was stronger than expected when the eye reached the mainland at Charlotte Harbor, pummeling the coast with winds reaching 145 mph and a surge of sea water of 13 to 15 feet.

Tracking Charley

Charley returned to land about 10:20 a.m. Saturday, hitting near the border of North and South Carolina. It was forecast to spread sustained winds of about 40 mph to 60 mph across inland portions of eastern North Carolina and to dump 3 to 6 inches of rain. Gov. Mike Easley declared a state of emergency.

  • Charley's Projected Path

  • Gulf Coast Radar Loop
  • In South Carolina, roads clogged Friday night as tourists and residents of the state's Grand Strand, beaches and high-dollar homes and hotels, heeded a mandatory evacuation order. Gov. Mark Sanford had urged voluntary evacuation earlier Friday.

    Damaged Hospital Can't Treat Patients

    In Florida, three hospitals in Charlotte County sustained significant damage, Sallade said, and officials at Charlotte Regional Medical Center in Punta Gorda said they were evacuating all patients Saturday.

    More than 200 ambulances, many from southeast Florida, were organized to transfer patients to other hospitals in Orlando, Sarasota, Tampa and Lee County.

    Ambulances and fire rescue trucks formed a parade in front of the hospital, loaded up patients in gurneys and wheelchairs, before taking off.

    "We really have to get the patients out of here. This place just isn't safe," said Peggy Greene, chief nursing officer. She said windows were blown out, part of the roof was blown off, and there was no power or phone service.

    Among those seeking treatment at Charlotte Regional was Marty Rietveld, showered with broken glass when the sliding glass door at his home was smashed by a neighbor's roof that blew off. Rietveld broke his leg, and his future son-in-law suffered a punctured leg artery.

    "We are moving," said Rietveld's daughter, Stephanie Rioux. "We are going out of state."

    Other Deaths, Injuries, Damage

    At least 20 patients with storm injuries were reported at a hospital in Fort Myers.

  • County-By-County List Of Damage

    A woman in Daytona Beach died of apparent electrocution, police said. Her body was found early Saturday lying at the base of a power pole in a residential area. A downed power line was touching the victim's foot. No other details were immediately available.

    A Lake Wales man died after his Chevy truck drove into a washed-out section of road and flipped over, sending the vehicle about 35 feet down an embankment, Polk County sheriff's spokeswoman Michal Shanley said. The truck was found partially submerged in pooled water early Saturday, she said.

    A crash on Interstate 75 in Sarasota County killed one person, and a wind gust caused a truck to collide with a car in Orange County, killing a young girl. A man who stepped outside his house to smoke a cigarette died when a banyan tree fell on him in Fort Myers, authorities said.

    At the Charlotte County Airport, wind tore apart small planes, and one flew down the runway as if it were taking off. The storm spun a parked pickup truck 180 degrees, blew the windows out of a sheriff's deputy's car and ripped the roof off an 80-foot-by 100-foot building.

    Martin said he saw homes ripped apart at two trailer parks.

    "There were four or five overturned semi trucks, 18-wheelers, on the side of the road," he said.

    In DeSoto County outside Arcadia, several dead cows, wrapped in barbed wire, littered the roadside.

    The hurricane rapidly gained strength in the Gulf of Mexico after crossing Cuba and swinging around the Florida Keys as a more moderate Category 2 storm Friday morning. An estimated 1.4 million people evacuated in anticipation of the strongest hurricane to strike Florida since Andrew in 1992.

    Charley reached landfall at 3:45 p.m. EDT, when the eye passed over barrier islands off Fort Myers and Punta Gorda, some 110 miles southeast of the Tampa Bay area.

    Video
    Charley hit the mainland 30 minutes later, with storm surge flooding of 10 to 15 feet, the hurricane center said. Nearly 1 million people live within 30 miles of the landfall.

    The state put 5,000 National Guard soldiers and airmen on alert to help deal with the storm, but only 1,300 had been deployed by Friday night, a state emergency management spokeswoman said.

    At a nursing center in Port Charlotte, Charley broke windows and ripped off portions of the roof, but none of the more than 100 residents or staff was injured, administrator Joyce Cuffe said.

    "The doors were being sucked open," Cuffe said. "A lot of us were holding the doors, trying to keep them shut, using ropes, anything we could to hold the doors shut. There was such a vacuum, our ears and head were hurting."

    Dan Strong, 51, returned to his home Saturday in Biehls Mobile Home Park in Punta Gorda to find it destroyed. He dug through the rubble trying to salvage photographs, clothes, some paintings and a stereo system he hoped would still work.

    "Maybe I can save them," he said.

    He picked through broken tables and chairs, a tipped over stove, and soaking wet sofas. "What I really need is a big broom," Strong said.

    Tale Of The Storm

    At 11 a.m. EDT, the center of the storm was in the Carolinas, about 35 miles south of Myrtle Beach, S.C., and moving north-northeast at 28 mph. Forecasters expected Charley to increase in speed. Maximum sustained winds were near 85 mph with higher gusts.

    A hurricane warning was issued from the South Santee River in South Carolina to the Merrimack River in Massachusetts.

    Spared the worst of the storm was the Tampa Bay area, where about a million people had been told to leave their homes. Some drove east, only to find themselves in the path of the Charley.

    "I feel like the biggest fool," said Robert Angel of Tarpon Springs, who sought safety in a motel. "I spent hundreds of dollars to be in the center of a hurricane. Our home is safe, but now I'm in danger."

    The fourth named storm of the Atlantic hurricane season, Danielle, formed Friday but posed no immediate concern to land. The fifth may form as early as Saturday and threaten islands in the southeastern Caribbean Sea.

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