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Ivan left much of Pensacola Beach in rubble. It wrecked a coastal span of Interstate 10
-- just as Katrina would do outside New Orleans -- and hit Alabama's Orange Beach hard enough to collapse condominium buildings. Some empty beachfront lots are still littered with storm debris; a few beachfront homes have yet to be fixed. The cleanup went on for years, leaving debris piles more than three-quarters of a mile long and 70 feet high around Pensacola. "We've just gotten our last 30 properties cleaned up here this year," said Tony Kennon, mayor of Orange Beach. Thousands of brown, broken trees still stand in public areas that were covered by saltwater for days, and Alabama's state park on the coast has yet to be rebuilt. The rubble of the park's old hotel and convention center lay on the beach like skeletal remains for months. It was only this summer that the state opened a new park fishing pier to replace the one Ivan destroyed. Veterinarian Gus Mueller worked at The Zoo of Northwest Florida for 17 years until it shut down recently, a late casualty he lays at Ivan's feet. The zoo was heavily damaged by the storm and never got back on its feet completely, he said. "It was a big tourist attraction, certainly an educational thing," Mueller said of the small facility. "We're not going to have that anymore." Reminders of the hurricane extend miles off the coast into places like the south Alabama town of Atmore, which was without power for about two weeks after Ivan brought down a storm of limbs on residential lots. The little town that relies on lumber and jobs at a state prison still has empty slabs where homes used to be. "Probably the most noticeable thing is the number of trees that are no longer here," said Mayor Howard Shell. "It will take years and years for those to recover." It will take longer still for people to the west of Ivan's path to recover from Katrina, blamed for more than 1,600 deaths in Louisiana and Mississippi and for $81 billion in damage, making it the nation's costliest hurricane. Remarkably though, they've been getting help from their neighbors since the earliest days of their Katrina troubles. The Pensacola area had healed enough in the year after Ivan, said Ed Schroeder of the Pensacola Bay Area Convention and Visitors Bureau, to house 2,500 families displaced by Katrina.
[Associated
Press;
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