No vacancy: Housing crisis dogs Florida
Keys months after Irma
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[June 14, 2018]
By Zachary Fagenson
MARATHON, Fla. (Reuters) - For eight months
Terri Metter has made her home in a government trailer parked along a
debris-clogged canal in the Florida Keys and she considers herself lucky
since Hurricane Irma forced many of her former neighbors to move off the
once-idyllic archipelago.
Metter has been bunked down in temporary housing supplied by the Federal
Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) since November, after the Category 4
storm, with winds of up to 130 miles per hour (209 kph), strafed nearby
Cudjoe Key on Sept. 10, 2017.
"A few people are finding housing on boats or they're sleeping on
couches, but a lot of people who work here can't afford to stay and it's
a sad thing," said the 50-year-old bookkeeper and bartender in Marathon,
a city made up of 13 tiny islands about 50 miles east of Key West and
115 miles southwest of Miami.

Though much of mainland Florida escaped major damage, the Keys were
devastated. The resort islands, stretching southwest from the tip of the
Florida Peninsula into the Gulf of Mexico, are connected by a single,
narrow highway that runs along a series of bridges and causeways.
The hurricane destroyed almost 1,200 homes in Monroe County, which
includes the Keys and parts of the mainland that are almost entirely in
Everglades National Park. That figure excludes trailers, a popular form
of housing in the Keys, and homes damaged so severely that owners simply
abandoned them.
Overall, 84 people in Florida died as a result of Irma, and the region,
including other southeastern states, suffered an estimated $50 billion
worth of damage, according to the National Hurricane Center.
As the hurricane approached, Metter evacuated and stayed with family in
Michigan, but returned a month later to see the devastation in her
neighborhood, where only eight of 50 trailers and homes remained intact.
Rotting debris and seaweed filled her home, and she decided rebuilding
was the only option.
Others had no choice but to live elsewhere. A lack of affordable, safe
housing forced many of those who work in the Keys' numerous restaurants
and hotels to move to the mainland, officials said.
"Folks are living in unlawful spaces that don't meet code, unsafe
spaces, and they have been doing it because they want to be there and
it's the only way they can afford to be there," said Jaimie Ross,
president of the Florida Housing Coalition.
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A debris-filled canal is seen, almost a year after Hurricane Irma,
in Marathon, Florida, U.S., June 10, 2018. REUTERS/Zach Fagenson

Monroe County Commissioner George Neugent expects many who lost
their homes or suffered major damage to never come back. In 2016,
the county's population totaled about 79,000, almost all of them
residing in the Keys, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.
"I'm estimating between 15 and 25 percent of our population is going
to be lost and we lose more and more every day," he said.
To put a dent in the housing deficit, Monroe County has teamed with
private developers and donors on a plan to build homes capable of
withstanding 200 mile-per-hour winds that are affordable for
hospitality workers. Florida Governor Rick Scott and state lawmakers
are also weighing a proposal for 1,300 new housing units for workers
in the Keys.
The construction cannot come fast enough as the region braces for
what this year's hurricane season, which began June 1, will bring to
the region.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Climate
Prediction Center expects the season to be a near-normal to
above-normal season in terms of the number and intensity of storms.
The long recovery from Irma and the previous hurricane season has
raised doubts with many, said Neil Curran, 45, a contractor and
waiter who lost the 42-foot sailboat where he lived off Key West
during last year's storm.

While Curran is renting a new boat after bouncing around more than a
dozen FEMA-funded hotel rooms, he said he knew of at least two dozen
friends who have left the islands, and more on the cusp of leaving.
"Over the summer, we're going to see a pretty big mass exodus," he
said.
(Reporting by Zachary Fagenson; editing by Ben Klayman, Frank
McGurty and G Crosse)
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