The Mack Attack

Thought-provoking clap-trap for the skeptic-minded

Thursday, February 22, 2007

Who says FEMA is slow?

An elderly woman, who had been living without power in her home due to hurricane damage sustained 15-years ago, finally saw the light on Friday when power to her home was restored.

What makes her story amazing is that the hurricane which put her in the dark was not Katrina or Rita -- but rather it was Andrew, which struck August 24, 1992.

No heat when the winter chill settled over South Florida.
No air conditioning when the mercury climbed into the 90's and the humidity clung to 100% . Not one hot shower at home in nearly 15 years. Every morning started with an icy blast.

Norena, who didn't want her full name used because she is embarrassed by her situation, lives in Cutler Bay, Florida and her home was severely damaged when Hurricane Andrew slammed South
Miami-Dade in August, 1992.

Like many people after that horrific storm, she had a problem with an unscrupulous contractor, and when the money from the insurance settlement ran out, the contractor did too, leaving her home half-repaired and not up to code, which meant it would not have the electricity connected.

She didn't have the money to complete the work, and she didn't have anyplace else to go."It just never got done, and the money was gone, so I couldn't do a lot of things to allow me with Dade county to get my power back on," she said.So she lived with it. She celebrated the new millennium with one tiny lamp and a single burner. On the 10th anniversary of Andrew in 2002, while her neighbors celebrated their recovery, she was still living in the disaster.

Electrical contractor Kent Crook was amazed when he saw how she managed to get a tiny amount of electricity into the house for a Spartan existence."She has extension cords running into her house, plugged into a tiny little refrigerator and a cook top, and a lap or two in front of her house," he marveled.

Somehow, her situation fell through the cracks. Her neighbors never noticed her near-pioneer lifestyle, and County code inspectors never caught the violations which prevented her from connecting up the power.

A tip got the city and Miami-Dade Mayor Carlos Alvarez involved, along with a visit from Crook's company. A few hours of work and an inspection was all it took to get the power flowing again to her home. When darkness fell Friday night, she no longer had to huddle in a single dimly lit room.Something as simple as getting light by flicking a wall switch, something most people do a dozen times a day without thinking, almost overwhelmed Norena.

"It's hard to describe having it come on, to switch on. It's overwhelming," she said.Now, her house is flooded with light, and the hot water is flowing through the pipes for the first time since that terrible night in August, 1992 when the wind shook her home to its foundations and set her life on end.Her plan is to let the water get hot, really hot, and then take her first bubble bath, in her own bathtub, in a decade and a half.While the power is back on, and Norena is again living in the 21st century, many problems remain.

Her home still needs repair, and her overgrown yard is a danger in future hurricanes.Volunteers say they'll be back to help clean up the yard and assist with repairs, but for now Norena is happy for one thing.

She can say "Let there be light", and there will be.

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