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- Path: sparky!uunet!wupost!uwm.edu!lll-winken!telecom-request
- From: bernhold@qtp.ufl.edu (David E. Bernholdt)
- Newsgroups: comp.dcom.telecom
- Subject: Hurricane Andrew Notes
- Message-ID: <telecom12.675.2@eecs.nwu.edu>
- Date: 31 Aug 92 19:13:23 GMT
- Sender: Telecom@eecs.nwu.edu
- Organization: TELECOM Digest
- Lines: 83
- Approved: Telecom@eecs.nwu.edu
- X-Submissions-To: telecom@eecs.nwu.edu
- X-Administrivia-To: telecom-request@eecs.nwu.edu
- X-Telecom-Digest: Volume 12, Issue 675, Message 2 of 12
-
- Not terribly telecom related, but since people have asked for info
- about South Florida, here's a second-hand account ...
-
- The secretary in our Project, Judy, has a sister in Homestead, in the
- center of the area devastated by Andrew. She and her husband left
- here Wednesday to go down there and help out; they returned Saturday
- morning -- they said they had to get some rest or they wouldn't be
- able to get to work today.
-
- Despite the fact that they are supposedly only allowing residents into
- the area, they arrived in Homestead unchallenged, though there were
- checks at a few offramps from the highway. (They were expecting checks
- and had prepared by contacting State Police, etc. in advance.)
-
- The place is (hardly suprisingly) a complete mess. She had pictures
- of her sister's block and in some places you couldn't even see the
- street for all the rubble. Though the TV reports are likely to show
- the places where the houses were of lesser construction and have
- totally collapsed, she says that many more houses were effectively
- just as bad because the roof had been ripped off, allowing wind and
- water to get inside the house. Pictures of her sister's block showed
- houses with the exterior walls remaining but no roof. There were four
- families, including Judy's sister, actually living in their houses in
- that neighborhood. Some other people would come in during the day and
- leave at night.
-
- They live close to Homestead Air Force Base. Despite reports that it
- was leveled, they did manage to clear some of the runways and are
- flying in and out frequently (lots of helicopters, apparently). What
- little they could see of the base (mostly housing) suggested it was in
- a similar condition to the houses in their neighboorhood -- windows
- blow out, many roofs blown off, exterior walls usually standing.
-
- They have no power. Water available, but the pressure was so low you
- had couldn't raise the hose more than three feet. Their telephone was
- working, but there were relatively few in the area that were (despite
- the fact that the area has underground cables). They foud the phone
- quite useful because it meant they didn't have to drive -- most cars
- were destroyed by the storm, including Judy's sister's. Newspapers are
- publishing, but they don't deliver. TV and radio are broadcasting,
- but you have to have batteries or a generator to run them. Generators
- are like gold -- Judy said she had heard of $500 units being sold for
- $1800-3000. I don't know about gasoline to run them. Fortunately,
- they brought a generator and some gas for her sister.
-
- As they were driving down Wednesday, and again heading up on Saturday,
- they saw convoys of ambulances, fire equipment, and semi tractors -- a
- dozen or so at a time -- barrelling down the highway behind a State
- Trooper using lights and sirens. Unfortunately, though, the aid does
- not seem to be disbursed very well. People have no way of finding out
- where it is being distributed, and if they did, most cars are
- inoperative or don't have gas. They only aid they saw was private
- citizens who had loaded up their cars and were cruising through
- neighborhoods offering it to people.
-
- The only law enforcement the came in contact with was 3.00 AM Friday
- They stopped to make sure Judy and company were armed. They said to
- be sure to shout "duck" to the neighbors before you shoot (it is a
- fairly densely packed area), and to choose you words carefully when
- the cops come back to investigate any shootings. The cops were a
- little bit miffed that they weren't allowed on the street earlier.
- Apparently, they had been held in a staging area waiting to respond to
- reports of looting. They'd rather just patrol.
-
- The insurance adjusters had also not yet been seen in her sister's
- neighboorhood, though Judy heard many were handing out initial ($2500)
- checks as soon as they had verified that you had an insurance policy
- with them.
-
- Judy said she slept about six hours in those three days, and they had
- two hot meals. The rest of the time, they just worked on cleaning up
- the mess. People were very helpful to each other. Judy said if it
- weren't for her job, she'd go back in a flash. They need lots of help
- down there, and it sounds like it will be quite a while before any
- sort of normalcy is restored.
-
-
- [Moderator's Note: This will go down in history as one of the worst
- natural tragedies ever to strike the USA. And help, in the form of
- practical household goods is still in short supply. Apparently they
- will not have electric service restored for *several months* if not a
- year or more as transmission lines are totally down. PAT]
-