Georgia islanders rushed to rescue survivors after dock walkway collapse
that killed 7
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[October 21, 2024]
By RUSS BYNUM and EMILY WAGSTER PETTUS
SAVANNAH, Ga. (AP) — Orange life jackets bobbed in the water, where
bystanders rushed to form a human chain for passing survivors to safety.
Others shouldered the task of wrapping bodies in blankets and carrying
them to shore.
The frantic scene after an aluminum gangway collapsed Saturday at a boat
dock on a Georgia barrier island capped what was supposed to have been a
day of celebration, an annual festival spotlighting the culture and
history of Sapelo Island's tiny Gullah-Geechee community of Black slave
descendants.
The collapse occurred as visitors were boarding a ferry back to the
mainland. Officials say up to 40 people were standing on the gangway
when it gave out. At least 20 plunged into the Atlantic waters, where a
strong tidal current threatened to pull them out to sea.
“It was chaotic. It was horrible,” said island resident Reginald Hall,
who charged into the water and was handed a young child to pass along to
others forming a human chain 60 yards (55 meters) to the shore.
Seven people died and three others remained hospitalized Sunday, said
Walter Rabon, commissioner of the Georgia Department of Natural
Resources.
He said an accident reconstruction team, working with the Georgia Bureau
of Investigation, was working to determine what caused a “catastrophic
failure” at the state-operated dock, which had been rebuilt in 2021.
“There should be very, very little maintenance to an aluminum gangway
like that,” Rabon said.
A fall celebration of an island's culture and history turns tragic
Saturday was one of the busiest days of the year on largely unspoiled
Sapelo Island, about 60 miles (100 kilometers) south of Savannah. An
estimated 700 people traveled to the island for the Cultural Day
festival organized by the few dozen residents of Hogg Hummock. The
enclave of dirt roads and modest homes was founded after the Civil War
by freed slaves from an island plantation.
Hog Hummock is among a shrinking cluster of small Southern communities
descended from enslaved island populations known as Gullah, or Geechee
in Georgia. Scholars say residents retain much of their African heritage
— including a unique dialect and skills such as cast-net fishing and
basket weaving — because of their separation from the mainland.
No bridge links the island to the mainland, and most rely on
state-operated ferries for the 7-mile (11-kilometer) trip.
Ed Grovner works on one of those ferries. As it pulled up to the dock
Saturday afternoon, the crew noticed life jackets tossed to the victims
in the water, which can be 36 feet (11 meters) deep at high tide.
Grover said his crew reached a man and a woman, but they were already
dead.
“I couldn’t sleep last night,” Grovner told The Associated Press. “My
wife said I was sleeping, I was hollering in my sleep, saying, ‘I’m
going to save you. I’m going to save you. I’m going to get you.’”
Island residents rushed into the water, scrambling to save lives
Hogg Hummock resident Jazz Watts was with visitors as they sampled
island foods like smoked mullet and gumbo and took in demonstrations on
crafting fishing nets and quilts. That's when word spread of the
unfolding disaster.
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A portion of the gangway which collapsed Saturday afternoon remains
visible on Sapelo Island in McIntosh county, Ga., Sunday, Oct. 20,
2024. (AP Photo/Lewis Levine)
Watts said he arrived at the dock to find emergency responders and
civilians pulling people from the water and trying to administer CPR
and first aid.
“It’s devastating,” Watts said. “When you see people being carried
that are wrapped in blankets and they have died.”
JR Grovner loaded an injured woman into a pickup truck and drove her
to an overgrown field pocked with holes dug by wild hogs that was
being used for helicopter evacuations.
Residents cited the island's lack of emergency resources in a
prior lawsuit
Sapelo Island residents sued McIntosh County and the state of
Georgia in federal court in 2015, arguing they lacked basic services
including resources for handling medical emergencies. In a 2022
settlement, county officials agreed to build a helicopter pad on the
island — something Grovner, Hall and Watts all say still hasn’t
happened.
Watts said that a private healthcare provider had planned to open a
clinic in a county-owned building long used as a community center.
But the deal fell through when commissioners opted to lease the
space for a restaurant.
“It’s obvious that the local officials aren’t doing everything they
need to be doing,” Watts said. “Those things would have absolutely
helped because every second matters.”
Patrick Zoucks, the county manager, did not immediately respond to
an email message seeking comment.
The dock was rebuilt following a legal settlement with Sapelo
residents
The ferry dock was rebuilt three years ago after Georgia officials
settled the same 2015 lawsuit by island residents, who complained
that state-operated ferry boats and docks failed to meet federal
accessibility standards for the disabled.
Grovner said he complained to a ferry captain months ago that the
gangway didn’t seem sturdy enough, but nothing happened.
Rabon said he wasn’t aware of any prior complaints.
After the collapse, the U.S. Coast Guard and local sheriff's and
fire departments rushed to the island, using boats and helicopters.
Rabon said none of those killed were island residents. He identified
only one, Charles Houston Jr., a chaplain for the Natural Resources
agency.
Hogg Hummock, also known as Hog Hammock, was placed on the National
Register of Historic Places in 1996.
But the community’s population has been shrinking for decades, and
some families have sold their land to outsiders for vacation homes.
Last year, county commissioners approved zoning changes that doubled
the size of homes allowed in Hogg Hummock. That raised fears among
residents that larger homes could spur tax increases that could
force them to sell land their families have held for generations.
___
Wagster Pettus reported from Jackson, Mississippi.
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