Ian death toll climbs to 54; almost 1 million still without power in Florida: Live updates – USA TODAY

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South Carolina feeling the effects of Hurricane Ian

Clear blue skies hover over Charleston, South Carolina, with eerily calm weather just a day after Hurricane Ian swept through the area with drenching rain, storm surge and flooding on Oct. 1.

Accuweather, Accuweather

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The death toll from Hurricane Ian rose to 54 and power remained out to more than 800,000 homes and businesses across Florida on Sunday, four days after the Category 4 beast slammed ashore along the state’s Gulf Coast.

Confirmed fatalities included 47 in Florida, four in North Carolina and three in Cuba, where Ian made its first landfall Tuesday. The count remained fluid Sunday. 

Over 4,000 people have been rescued in Florida by local, state and federal authorities, FEMA and U.S. Coast Guard officials said. Most rode out the storm on barrier islands — and Sanibel and Pine islands remained essentially inaccessible Sunday.

Parts of the causeway to Sanibel collapsed, and the bridge to Pine, the largest barrier island off Florida’s Gulf Coast, was destroyed by the storm. Some residents were evacuated by helicopter. 

“The water just kept pounding the house and we watched boats, houses – we watched everything just go flying by,” resident Joe Conforti said. “When the water’s at your door, and it’s splashing on the door and you’re seeing how fast it’s moving, there’s no way you’re going to survive that.”

Florida Power & Light, the state’s largest power company, said it had restored electricity to more than 1.5 million customers, including all hospitals in its service area. More than 20,000 workers were involved in the restoration effort.

“Even given the unprecedented devastation caused by the storm, I can now confidently say that our restoration will be completed in a matter of days, not weeks,” company CEO Eric Silagy said.

The weakened storm was meandering up the East Coast on Sunday, continuing to bring rain as far north as Washington, D.C.

►BEFORE AND AFTER: A look at Ian’s damage.

► ‘IT’S LIKE A WAR ZONE’: Residents start to rebuild.

SHATTERED HOPES: Ian, Fiona wake up a quiet hurricane season. What’s next?

Battling rising floodwaters on boat and horseback, rescuers plucked stranded residents from their homes and herded cattle to higher ground as the Myakka River in Florida  overflowed its banks near Venice on Saturday. Locals and rescuers, long familiar with how hurricanes push water into their neighborhoods, said Ian drove unusually high flooding, which came three days after the storm’s passage.

The heavy storm surge was exacerbated by hours of pounding rainfall in Central Florida – leading to deep inland flooding. Several longtime residents blamed new developments for destroying historic floodplains able to soak up the water.

“We’re used to flooding, but we’ve never seen anything like this,” said Jennifer Stringer, 50, a high school teacher who has lived alongside the river since 2011. “All that water has no place to go.”

Trevor Hughes

RIVERS OVERWHELMED BY IAN’S PUSH: After Hurricane Ian came the floods. These people rallied to rescue residents, horses, cows

Residents of Dunbar, a historically Black area of storm-battered Fort Myers, said the aftermath of Hurricane Ian will mean the city’s wealthier, majority-white neighborhoods will get power back sooner since they typically having better power grids. Those in Dunbar, which now also features a growing Latino population, have grown accustomed to relying on themselves and looking out for each other, some residents say.

“Anything where it’s majority people of color, it’s going to be last,” said Shannon Tolbert, a dental assistant, adding, “We can survive off anything.”

Nada Hassanein, USA TODAY

BLACK NEIGHBORHOODS AFTER A STORM: After Hurricane Ian hits Fort Myers, Black neighborhood residents say they aren’t counting on much help

In North Carolina, the storm downed trees and power lines. Three of the four deaths in the state were from storm-related vehicle tragedies, one was carbon monoxide poisoning from a generator in a garage. Gov. Roy Cooper said Sunday that dozens of roads remained closed. Still, he said “we have avoided the worst of it,” and help is already being offered to Florida.

“We sympathize with the people in Florida,” Cooper said. “And since the storm has passed North Carolina, we are already in discussions with Florida officials to try to make sure that we help them. This is a time when we all have to pull together to make sure that people are safe.”

Historic Boca Grande, an exclusive vacation destination for presidents, movie stars and old money elite, suffered extensive damage from Hurricane Ian and communications were down. But the island’s infrastructure, along with most buildings and landmarks, largely is intact and should be able to recover, according to those surveying the storm’s aftermath.

Historic buildings such as the Port Boca Grande Lighthouse built in 1890 and the Gasparilla Inn & Club – which was built in 1911 and has hosted President George H.W. Bush, President George W. Bush, Henry Ford, Thomas Edison, Katherine Hepburn and many other famous people – survived Hurricane Ian.

“Basically we’re not in contact with the rest of the world,” Boca Grande Fire Lieutenant Lee Cooper said.

–Zac Anderson, Sarasota Herald-Tribune 

Gov. Ron DeSantis continued Saturday to defend the timing of evacuation orders by Southwest Florida officials amid lingering questions about whether they came too late for many residents. DeSantis recounted the shifting path of Hurricane Ian, which was seen as likely targeting Tampa Bay shortly before an eastward turn brought it further south along the Gulf Coast. Lee County emergency managers ordered evacuations Tuesday morning, a day before the deadly storm made landfall in the county with what DeSantis described as “biblical storm surge.” 

“They were following the data,” DeSantis said. “When we went to bed Monday night, people were saying this is a direct hit on Tampa Bay.”

John Kennedy, USA TODAY Network Florida

IAN DEATH TOLL RISES: More than 1,000 rescued in Florida: Updates

President Joe Biden and first lady Jill Biden will travel to Florida this week, according to the White House, to see firsthand the widespread damage caused by Hurricane Ian, one of the most powerful storms to strike the nation, and the recovery being carried out by tens of thousands of local, state and federal workers and volunteers.

The Bidens will travel to Puerto Rico on Monday and then head to Florida on Wednesday, White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre tweeted Saturday night. Hurricane Fiona slammed Puerto Rico as a Category 1 storm on Sept. 18.

“It’s not just a crisis for Florida,” Biden said Friday from the White House. “This is an American crisis. We’re all in this together.”

Sergio Bustos, USA TODAY Network Florida

Contributing: The Associated Press



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