Skip to main content

Wreckage Left By Hurricane Michael Slows Relief Efforts

caption: A bridge damaged by Hurricane Michael can be seen Friday in Mexico Beach, Fla. The most powerful hurricane ever known to have hit the Florida Panhandle has left transportation and communication infrastructure in shambles, slowing relief efforts.
Enlarge Icon
A bridge damaged by Hurricane Michael can be seen Friday in Mexico Beach, Fla. The most powerful hurricane ever known to have hit the Florida Panhandle has left transportation and communication infrastructure in shambles, slowing relief efforts.
AP

Relief supplies and critical life-saving equipment and personnel are heading into areas of Florida's panhandle ravaged by Hurricane Michael, but officials say the severity of the storm's devastation is limiting their ability to get into the most heavily damaged areas.

Search and rescue teams Friday painstakingly worked their way through trees knocked down by 155 mph winds and the mounds of debris left behind after a wall of water up to 14 feet high slammed into several communities along the Gulf Coast. As the storm sped across Florida, Georgia, the Carolinas and Virginia, at least 12 people were killed.

"Unfortunately, I think you're going to see that number climb," FEMA Administrator Brock Long said in a news conference Friday afternoon. "We still haven't gotten into some of the hardest-hit areas."

Flooding caused by the category 4 hurricane washed out some roads and bridges, while others are impassible due to high standing water, downed power lines and massive amounts of debris, hampering search and rescue operations and delaying the delivery of vital supplies to stranded residents.

Long says Hurricane Michael inflicted a lot of damage on the Florida panhandle's infrastructure. "Communications, transportation and hazardous materials, that's where we're focused right now."

FEMA works ahead to time with the National Guard, states' governments, utility companies, the private sector and nonprofit relief organizations to set up transportation and distribution networks — but those involved in the relief and recovery efforts say this storm came in quick and packed a wallop that is complicating the response.

The American Logistics Aid Network (ALAN) was created after Hurricane Katrina to better coordinate logistics between public, private and humanitarian organizations. Its executive director, Kathy Fulton, says that "in order to get supplies into a disaster area, you have to have some form of logistics support, whether that's ground transportation, air transportation, whatever that may be."

But Fulton says Hurricane Michael knocked out a lot of the infrastructure that's needed to get the supply chain moving and get life-saving resources into devastated communities.

"Stuff like power, water, communications and the road infrastructure ... in order to operate modern supply chains, we rely on all of those things," she says. But "there's significant, not just disruption to those infrastructure, but destruction."

Fulton says those logistical (and literal) road blocks can change the priorities of what kinds or supplies and equipment need to go in first.

For example, she says, food and water are critical, especially when grocery stores and food banks have been destroyed and drinking water systems damaged or contaminated — but crews with chainsaws and bulldozers need to go first to clear roads so the trucks with food and water can get through.

"Obviously, life-saving commodities are going to be the things that get the biggest priority right now," says Fulton. "It doesn't do any good to provide power and air conditioning or light if people don't have food in their stomachs."

But when search and rescue and medical teams are needed, the ability for those emergency responders to communicate might be paramount.

Fulton says studies of the response to Hurricane Maria in Puerto Rico last year suggest that "we were pushing in food and water, when really what we should have been pushing in was communications equipment."

Further complicating the response to Michael is that it comes so closely on the heels of another devastating hurricane in the region, Hurricane Florence last month.

"Organizations do get stretched," Fulton says, "and there were still things happening from last fall's events (hurricanes Maria, Irma and Harvey) that all of our organizations have been working on. Without good volunteer support, without the business community stepping up ... that work would not get done."

Commercial shippers in the region also are being stretched thin by the hurricane, and many shipments are delayed because of storm damage.

And on land, some highways are closed or open only to essential traffic, says Randy Olfiara, a vice president of Orlando-based BlueGrace Logistics, which helps companies manage their supply chains.

In addition, "shipping terminals are shut down and carriers place embargoes," meaning shipments may not move through storm-affected areas for some time: "For example, if I pick up a shipment in California that's bound for Tallahassee, that carrier may say, 'Hey, I will move this as close as I can, but I'm not going to deliver it until it's free and clear to deliver into Tallahassee once we know — once we get the green light from all the rescue efforts that are going on and the businesses start reopening'."

Olfiara says that can affect a huge range of businesses, such as Midwestern manufacturers waiting parts deliveries or grocers in the Northeast that need fresh oranges.

"If you're waiting on a product that maybe is coming through the Port of Miami, it's not going to be able to get up through the Panhandle right now and get up into the Midwest and Chicago and then be distributed," he says. "So you will see delays."

Consumer prices may be affected, too, as shipping goods into and out of the region is becoming more expensive. Olfiara says his costumers are already seeing a 50 percent spike in costs for moving shipments out of or through Florida.

"That means if you're a grower and planning on a per-truck shipment of oranges costing $500, today's rate is now $750," he says.

That's partly because of the hurricane response efforts, he adds: There is already a shortage of truck drivers around the country, and "when FEMA moves in with recovery efforts, they will pull from the same commercial market, the available capacity in the marketplace for trucks, to move the medical supplies and relief supplies into those regions."

"FEMA typically pays a premium to move supplies on trucks," Olfiara says. "So you have this this tightening of capacity that happens, which in turn drives rates up."

With this being harvest time for pecans, peanuts and cotton in the southeast and holiday shipping to stocks stores and e-commerce distribution centers approaching, Olfiara says it's not a great time for a further tightening of shipping capacity. But he doesn't expect shipping delays and price increases to last long. [Copyright 2018 NPR]

Why you can trust KUOW