Florida communities hit three times by hurricanes grapple with how and
whether to rebuild
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[October 03, 2024]
By KATE PAYNE and DAVID R. MARTIN
HORSESHOE BEACH, Fla. (AP) — It was just a month ago that Brooke Hiers
left the state-issued emergency trailer where her family had lived since
Hurricane Idalia slammed into her Gulf Coast fishing village of
Horseshoe Beach in August 2023.
Hiers and her husband Clint were still finishing the electrical work in
the home they painstakingly rebuilt themselves, wiping out Clint’s
savings to do so. They never will finish that wiring job.
Hurricane Helene blew their newly renovated home off its four foot-high
pilings, sending it floating into the neighbor’s yard next door.
“You always think, ‘Oh, there’s no way it can happen again’,” Hiers
said. “I don’t know if anybody’s ever experienced this in the history of
hurricanes.”
For the third time in 13 months, this windswept stretch of Florida’s Big
Bend took a direct hit from a hurricane — a one-two-three punch to a
50-mile (80-kilometer) sliver of the state’s more than 8,400 miles
(13,500 kilometers) of coastline, first by Idalia, then Category 1
Hurricane Debby in August 2024 and now Helene.
Hiers, who sits on Horseshoe Beach’s town council, said words like
“unbelievable” are beginning to lose their meaning.
“I’ve tried to use them all. Catastrophic. Devastating. Heartbreaking …
none of that explains what happened here,” Hiers said.
The back-to-back hits to Florida’s Big Bend are forcing residents to
reckon with the true costs of living in an area under siege by storms
that researchers say are becoming stronger because of climate change.
The Hiers, like many others here, can’t afford homeowner’s insurance on
their flood-prone houses, even if it was available. Residents who have
watched their life savings get washed away multiple times are left with
few choices — leave the communities where their families have lived for
generations, pay tens of thousands of dollars to rebuild their houses on
stilts as building codes require, or move into a recreational vehicle
they can drive out of harm’s way.
That’s if they can afford any of those things. The storm left many
residents bunking with family or friends, sleeping in their cars, or
sheltering in what’s left of their collapsing homes.
Janalea England wasn't waiting for outside organizations to get aid to
her friends and neighbors, turning her commercial fish market in the
river town of Steinhatchee into a pop-up donation distribution center,
just like she did after Hurricane Idalia. A row of folding tables was
stacked with water, canned food, diapers, soap, clothes and shoes, a
steady stream of residents coming and going.
“I’ve never seen so many people homeless as what I have right now. Not
in my community,” England said. “They have nowhere to go.”
‘It’s just gone'
The sparsely populated Big Bend is known for its towering pine forests
and pristine salt marshes that disappear into the horizon, a remote
stretch of largely undeveloped coastline that’s mostly dodged the crush
of condos, golf courses and souvenir strip malls that has carved up so
much of the Sunshine State.
This is a place where teachers, mill workers and housekeepers could
still afford to live within walking distance of the Gulf’s white sand
beaches. Or at least they used to, until a third successive hurricane
blew their homes apart.
Helene was so destructive, many residents don’t have a home left to
clean up, escaping the storm with little more than the clothes on their
backs, even losing their shoes to the surging tides.
“People didn’t even have a Christmas ornament to pick up or a plate from
their kitchen,” Hiers said. “It was just gone.”
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Laurie Lilliott stands amid the wreckage of her destroyed home in
Dekle Beach in rural Taylor County, Fla., Friday, Sept. 27, 2024, in
the aftermath of Hurricane Helene. (AP Photo/Kate Payne)
In a place where people are trying to get away from what they see as
government interference, England, who organized her own donation
site, isn’t putting her faith in government agencies and insurance
companies.
“FEMA didn’t do much,” she said. “They lost everything with Idalia
and they were told, ‘here, you can have a loan.’ I mean, where’s our
tax money going then?”
England’s sister, Lorraine Davis, got a letter in the mail just days
before Helene hit declaring that her insurance company was dropping
her, with no explanation other than her home “fails to meet
underwriting”.
Living on a fixed income, Davis has no idea how she’ll repair the
long cracks that opened up in the ceiling of her trailer after the
last storm.
“We'll all be on our own,” England said. “We're used to it.”
‘This could be the end of your town'
In the surreal aftermath of this third hurricane, some residents
don’t have the strength to clean up their homes again, not with
other storms still brewing in the Gulf.
With marinas washed away, restaurants collapsed and vacation homes
blown apart, many commercial fishermen, servers and housecleaners
lost their homes and their jobs on the same day.
Those who worked at the local sawmill and paper mill, two bedrock
employers in the area, were laid off in the past year too. Now a
convoy of semi-trucks full of hurricane relief supplies have set up
camp at the shuttered mill in the city of Perry.
Hud Lilliott was a mill worker for 28 years, before losing his job
and now his canal-front home in Dekle Beach, just down the street
from the house where he grew up.
Lilliott and his wife Laurie hope to rebuild their house there, but
they don’t know how they’ll pay for it. And they’re worried the
school in Steinhatchee where Laurie teaches first grade could become
another casualty of the storm, as the county watches its tax base
float away.
“We've worked our whole lives and we're so close to where they say
the ‘golden years’," Laurie said. "It's like you can see the light
and it all goes dark.”
Dave Beamer rebuilt his home in Steinhatchee after it was “totaled”
by Hurricane Idalia, only to see it washed into the marsh a year
later.
“I don’t think I can do that again,” Beamer said. “Everybody’s
changing their mind about how we’re going to live here.”
A waterlogged clock in a shed nearby shows the moment when time
stopped, marking before Helene and after.
Beamer plans to stay in this river town, but put his home on wheels
— buying a camper and building a pole barn to park it under.
In Horseshoe Beach, Hiers is waiting for a makeshift town hall to be
delivered in the coming days, a double-wide trailer where they’ll
offer what services they can for as long as they can. She and her
husband are staying with their daughter, a 45-minute drive away.
“You feel like this could be the end of things as you knew it. Of
your town. Of your community,” Hiers said. “We just don't even know
how to recover at this point.”
Hiers said she and her husband will probably buy an RV and park it
where their home once stood. But they won't be moving back to
Horseshoe Beach for good until this year's storms are done.
They can't bear to do this again.
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