Florida Seeks to Help Charley’s Most Vulnerable Victims – The Elderly

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The New York Sun

SARASOTA, Fla. – The devastation brought on by Hurricane Charley has been especially painful for an elderly population that is among the largest in the nation.


State officials fear that many frail and aging residents have been left susceptible to illness and are going without important medication because of the hurricane, while others have been too stubborn to leave their damaged homes.


The situation has government and private agencies scrambling to get the elderly to air-conditioned places where they can receive their medicine, oxygen, and even entertainment.


The state has processed more than 250 people through a temporary shelter for older people at Robarts Arena at the Sarasota County Fairgrounds. They came from nursing homes, assisted-living facilities, and private homes in the affected counties.


“We’ve responded to a lot of hurricanes,” said Jennifer Bencie Fairburn, a doctor with the Florida Department of Health. “But this is really a unique situation because of the population in Charlotte County.”


Charlotte County has the nation’s largest percentage of people older than 65, and the county was especially hard-hit by last week’s hurricane. The storm killed 20 people in Florida, and more than 400,000 people remained without power yesterday.


At the Gulf Breeze federal housing project in Punta Gorda, housing authority director Jean Farino has been trying all week to persuade Mary Foster to leave her roof-damaged apartment.


“I’m not leaving unless the law comes and hogties and takes me,” the 62-year-old disabled woman gasped as her cat, Tom, cowered beneath the coffee table.


“What if the ceiling caves in?” Ms. Farino protested. “You could be killed.”


“That’s the chance I’ve got to take,” Ms. Foster said. “I’m not leaving.”


With thousands of residents still displaced by the hurricane, the exclusive island city of Sanibel was reopened to permanent residents yesterday for the first time since it was evacuated before the hurricane. Roads had been cleared of debris, but there was no power or drinkable water on the barrier island of about 6,000 residents.


Sanibel Mayor Marty Harrity said most of the damage to the island’s homes was cosmetic, involving missing shingles and shutters.


Federal aid continued to pour into the state, and Governor Bush announced the creation of a disaster relief fund to help victims. He said the fund has received $1.1 million in donations so far.


The state’s financial obstacles are considerable. Insurers are likely to pay an estimated $7.4 billion in claims for damage to homes, businesses, and personal possession such as cars, Insurance Information Institute chief economist Bob Hartwig said yesterday. The estimate doesn’t include uninsured property and flood damage or huge agricultural losses. The hurricane likely will cause a 20% loss for the state’s citrus industry this year.


Charley will likely go down as the second most expensive American hurricane after Andrew, which caused $15.5 billion in insured losses, he said. State officials had estimated earlier that damage to insured homes alone could be as much as $11 billion.


Officials are worried because many of the elderly insist on living in what is left of their homes, to wait for insurance adjusters and ward off looters.


But for those who don’t want to face the elements, volunteers at the arena/shelter in Sarasota County have brought in everything from board games to clowns. Some people have even brought by animals for “pet therapy.”


“I’m telling you, the people have been absolutely fantastic,” said Dorothy McKeone, a Port Charlotte widow, who has been hospitalized six times since last year with a racing heart and anemia. “I mean, you sneeze and they run over wanting to give you a tissue.”


The New York Sun

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