FORT MYERS, Fla. (AP) — With the dying toll from Hurricane Ian rising and a whole bunch of 1000’s of individuals with out energy in Florida and the Carolinas, U.S. officers vowed Sunday to unleash an enormous quantity of federal catastrophe help as crews scrambled to rescue folks stranded by the storm.
Days after Ian tore via central Florida, carving a lethal path of destruction into the Carolinas, water ranges continued rising in some flooded areas, inundating properties and streets that had been satisfactory only a day or two earlier.
With branches strewn throughout the grounds of St. Hillary’s Episcopal Church in Ft. Myers, the Rev. Charles Cannon acknowledged the immense loss throughout his Sunday sermon but additionally gave thanks for what remained. That included the church’s stained-glass home windows and steeple.
“Folks assume they’ve misplaced every part, however you haven’t misplaced every part in the event you haven’t misplaced your self,” he mentioned.
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis was in Arcadia on Sunday afternoon, about 30 miles inland from the place Ian made landfall. The agricultural space didn’t get the storm surge skilled by coastal communities, however standing water from floods remained 4 days after the storm.
“That is such a giant storm, introduced a lot water, that you simply’re having mainly what’s been a 500-year flood occasion,” DeSantis mentioned.
At the least 68 folks have been confirmed lifeless: 61 in Florida, 4 in North Carolina and three in Cuba.
About 750,000 properties and companies in Florida had been nonetheless with out electrical energy Sunday, down from a peak of two.6 million.
The weakened storm continued to wreak havoc because it drifted north, with the remnants forming a nor’easter that’s anticipated to dump rain on components of Virginia, West Virginia, Maryland and southern Pennsylvania, climate officers mentioned.
In Virginia, rainfall on the already inundated Chesapeake Bay may result in essentially the most vital tidal flooding occasion within the Hampton Roads area within the final 10 to fifteen years, mentioned Cody Poche, a Nationwide Climate Service meteorologist. A handful of coastal Virginia college districts canceled lessons Monday, and native officers urged residents to arrange.
Deanne Criswell, administrator of the Federal Emergency Administration Company, mentioned the federal authorities is focusing first on victims in Florida, which took the brunt of one of many strongest storms to make landfall in the US. President Joe Biden and first woman Jill Biden plan to go to Florida on Wednesday.
Flooded roadways and washed-out bridges to barrier islands left many individuals remoted amid restricted cellphone service and a scarcity of primary facilities reminiscent of water, electrical energy and the web. Officers warned that the scenario in lots of areas isn’t anticipated to enhance for a number of days as a result of the rain that fell has nowhere to go.
Criswell advised “Fox Information Sunday” that the federal authorities, together with the Coast Guard and Division of Protection, had moved into place “the most important quantity of search and rescue property that I believe we’ve ever put in place earlier than.”
Nonetheless, she cautioned that risks stay.
“We see so many extra accidents and typically extra fatalities after the storm,” Criswell mentioned. “Standing water brings with it every kind of hazards — it has particles, it may have energy traces.”
Greater than 1,600 folks have been rescued statewide, based on Florida’s emergency administration company.
In rural Seminole County, north of Orlando, residents donned waders, boots and bug spray to paddle to their flooded properties Sunday.
Ben Bertat discovered 4 inches (10 centimeters) of water in his home by Lake Harney after kayaking there.
“I believe it’s going to worsen as a result of all of this water has to get to the lake” mentioned Bertat, pointing to the water flooding a close-by highway. “With floor saturation, all this swamp is full and it simply can’t take any extra water. It doesn’t seem like it’s getting any decrease.”
Gabriel Madling kayaked via a number of toes of water on his road, delivering sandbags to stave off water that had crept to his doorstep.
“My house is near underwater,” Madling mentioned. “Proper now, I’m simply going to sandbag as a lot as I can and hope and pray.”
The Nationwide Guard and the Coast Guard had been flying in helicopters to Florida’s barrier islands to rescue folks. On Sanibel Island, the lone bridge to the crescent-shaped island collapsed, chopping off entry by automobile for its 6,300 residents.
An aerial picture of the Mad Hatter Restaurant on Sanibel posted on social media exhibits a largely vacant patch of sand the place the restaurant was.
“The Mad Hatter Restaurant, sadly, is out at sea proper now,” the restaurant’s Fb web page reads, including that the employees are all secure. “The perfect information from this devastating scene is that there’s nonetheless land for us to rebuild.”
DeSantis mentioned the state will begin constructing a short lived construction this week to revive car entry to Pine Island, the most important of southwestern Florida’s barrier islands devastated by the storm.
“It’s not going to be a full bridge, you’re going to must go over it in all probability at 5 miles an hour or one thing, however it’ll a minimum of let folks get in and off the island with their automobiles,” DeSantis mentioned.
Fort Myers Mayor Kevin Anderson on Sunday defended Lee County officers from accusations that they’d been sluggish in ordering evacuations Tuesday forward of the storm, a day later than another counties within the space did.
“Warnings for hurricane season begin in June. So there’s a level of non-public duty right here. I believe the county acted appropriately. The factor is, a sure proportion of individuals is not going to heed the warnings regardless,” Anderson mentioned on the CBS present “Face the Nation.”
In North Carolina, the storm downed bushes and energy traces. Two of the 4 deaths within the state had been from storm-related car crashes, and the others concerned a person who drowned when his truck plunged right into a swamp and one other killed by carbon monoxide poisoning from a generator in a storage.
Related Press reporters Rebecca Santana in Ft. Myers; Brendan Farrington and Anthony Izaguirre in Tallahassee; David Fischer in Miami; Sarah Rankin in Richmond, Va.; and Richard Lardner in Washington contributed to this report.
For extra AP protection of Hurricane Ian: https://apnews.com/hub/hurricanes