Florida official: Death toll rises to 12 in state
CNN)As night fell Tuesday, many people from South Carolina to Florida were staying in darkened homes, dealing with fallen trees and blocked roadways, and hoping they could find gas.
The situation in the Sunshine State was trying the patience of people who rode out the storm and those who came home after evacuating Hurricane Irma's path to find widespread devastation and access to their neighborhoods limited at times.
Power outages in Florida affected almost 5 million homes, organizations and businesses, among them gas stations, which need the electricity to keep pumps working.
Two days after Irma made landfall on Cudjoe Key, authorities and a few residents were finally able to reach some of the Florida Keys on Tuesday.
What they found was devastating: Based on initial estimates, 25% of the houses on the chain of islands have been destroyed, the Federal Emergency Management Agency said Tuesday. Another 65% suffered major damage.
"Basically, every house in the Keys was impacted some way," FEMA Administrator Brock Long said.
But Key West City Manager Jim Scholl told CNN that FEMA's estimates might be high. The damage in his city and in his neighborhood on Cudjoe Key didn't match those dire numbers, he said.
The biggest challenge in Key West is moving debris out of the roadways. Scholl said he felt sympathy for the people who want to come home, but aren't being allowed this far south because of issues with the water infrastructure. The area is under a boil water advisory.
"That's why we don't want people to, en masse, return down here to the Keys. And we certainly understand the frustration," he said. "Everyone wants to get down here and check out their homes."
It's a long wait for those sifting through what's left of their homes throughout Florida in the oppressive heat and high humidity -- doing so while they wait for the power, and thus the air conditioning, to come back on.
All customers who lost electricity on the eastern side of the state will likely have power restored by the end of this weekend, because fewer electrical poles came down in the storm, Florida Power & Light said Tuesday.
An FPL official told reporters at a Broward County news conference that of the 790,000 customers in that county who lost power, 330,000 had their electricity restored Tuesday.
The company is focusing its efforts first on schools, hospitals and other critical infrastructure. Gas stations and restaurants are next on the plan, the official said.
Customers on the west coast of Florida, where Hurricane Irma made its final landfall, will likely have power restored by September 22, the company has said.
But residents like William Rose have bigger concerns. Rose still can't reach his family on the Florida Keys, where about a quarter of the islands' houses are annihilated.
NOAA helping Key West residents check on their property
He's not sure whether his mother, stepdad, grandmother and aunt survived Irma's wrath.
"I have no idea, but I'm trying to stay positive," Rose said.
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Before the Keys lost cellphone service, Rose received a text from his mother, who chose not to evacuate.
"This is terrible. I will never do this again," the text read. "I'm so glad you got out."
Roadwork in the Keys
The Florida Department of Transportation said Tuesday night it has determined the bridges between the islands are structurally sound.
Widespread destruction in the Florida Keys 01:19
Transportation officials said two sections of US 1 that were washed away by Irma, one at mile marker 37 and the other at mile marker 75, have been repaired.
Darwin Tabacco, who stayed on Big Pine Key during Irma, is one of the fortunate residents. Both he and his house survived.
"A lot of people lost everything," he said Tuesday morning. "There's homes blown off the stilts. There's power lines down all over the place. Trees completely uprooted. People's businesses flooded. Septic fields flooding. It's just terrible."
Millions without power
Photos: Hurricane Irma slams Florida
Hotel guests navigate a dark stairwell after they lost power in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.
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People in Cape Coral, Florida, tend to a car that flipped over during Hurricane Irma on Sunday, September 10.
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A manatee lies stranded September 10 after waters receded during Irma's approach in Manatee County, Florida.
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High winds split this large tree in half in Fort Lauderdale.
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An American flag is torn as Irma passes through Naples, Florida, on September 10.
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A sheriff's deputy walks through a shelter in Naples after the power went out on September 10.
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A police officer walks over debris after a tornado touched down in Palm Bay, Florida, on September 10.
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Yaya Lopez holds her fiance, Howard Lopez, while they sleep in a middle-school hallway in St. Petersburg on September 10.
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Geoff Rutland, a local volunteer from Crossing Jordan Church, helps other residents get ice from a vending machine in Tampa, Florida, on September 10.
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PJ Pike checks on his boat and one belonging to a friend in Fort Myers. Both were sitting in mud at their moorings due to an unusually low tide on September 10.
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People walk past a building in Miami where the roof was blown off by Hurricane Irma on September 10.
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An abandoned car sits in floodwaters during a storm surge in Fort Lauderdale on September 10.
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Fallen trees block a parking lot in Fort Lauderdale on September 10.
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Sailboats moored near Watson Island ride out the winds and waves on September 10.
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Members of the Blinckman family use their personal devices in a stairwell utility closet as Hurricane Irma went over Key West, Florida, on September 10.
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Evacuees watch the weather from a shelter in Naples on September 10.
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Heavy winds and rain blow through Miami on September 10.
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Weather Channel meteorologist Mike Seidel fights fierce winds and flooded streets while reporting in Miami on September 10.
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A man records the gusty winds going through downtown Miami on September 10.
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A tree lies on a pickup truck after being knocked down by the high winds in Miami on September 10.
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Hotel guests eat breakfast by lamplight after the Courtyard Marriott was left without power in Fort Lauderdale on September 10.
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Part of this crane tower collapsed in Miami on September 10.
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People sit in the Miami-Dade County Fair Expo Center as Irma approached Miami on Saturday, September 9. See Hurricane Irma's impact on the Caribbean
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In the aftermath of Hurricane Irma, a house slides into the Atlantic Ocean in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida, on Monday, September 11. Hurricane Irma has been downgraded to a tropical depression, but the deadly storm has left a trail of destruction throughout the Southeast.
News Courtesy: www.cnn.com