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Lack of affordable housing has deadly consequences
Tornado strike kills 20 in Central Florida
By Ric Size
10 February 2007
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Three tornadoes lashed through central Florida in the early
morning hours on February 2, killing 20 people. Separate twisters
touched down between 3:00 and 4:00 a.m. local time, the first
in the rural community of Lady Lake, killing six people, and a
few minutes later a second one swept through the small town of
Paisley, claiming another 13 lives. Most of the victims were asleep
and unaware of any impending danger. It is estimated that over
1,500 homes were destroyed or heavily damaged and that the cost
of the storms will exceed $100 million.
Not surprisingly, the most severe devastation took place in
the mobile home parks, which have continued to thrive in Florida
due to the shortage of affordable housing combined with stagnating
wages for working families. While the central Florida median household
income has risen 16 percent since 2000, the median existing-home
sales price has increased 138 percent. Census data from the year
2000 showed that 10 percent of Floridians, over 1 million residents,
live in manufactured homes.
The recent housing boom has only accelerated this
trend as many prospective home buyers are being squeezed out of
the market by skyrocketing real estate prices. The median home
sale price in Orange County (Orlando area), just south of where
the tornadoes struck, was just under $260,000 in March 2006. According
to Florida Home Loans, a private mortgage lender that publishes
data on housing market trends, there was a more than 50 percent
increase in the average market sale price for all homes in the
state of Florida between June 2004 and June 2006.
It is in this context that the loss of 20 lives needs to be
understood, as mobile home living increasingly becomes the only
affordable option for working class families, the disabled, and
the elderly on fixed incomes. And it is these people who are most
vulnerable during a tornado or hurricane.
The Fujita Scale, which uses observed damage to determine a
tornados wind speed, considers an F-1 tornadowith
wind speeds from 73 to 112 mphas a moderate
twister. Nevertheless, an F-1 tornado will tear off roof surfaces
and overturn mobile homes. The tornadoes that whipped through
Lady Lake and Paisley were graded at F-3, with winds at 150-165
mph.
Most trailer parks in Florida are not equipped with storm cellars
or an equivalent form of storm shelter. Therefore those taken
by surprise had no chance to get to safety. Toothless building
codes for manufactured homes, enacted after the destruction wreaked
by Hurricane Andrew in 1994, were meant to ensure these structures
could withstand 100 mph winds, an absurdly low minimum as recent
storm seasons have proven. But even this modest starting point
hasnt been reached, evidenced by the fact that nearly three
out of every four existing mobile homes in Florida are of pre-Hurricane
Andrew vintage.
No warning for victims
The web site for the Florida Division of Emergency Management
warns that Florida, due to its unique geography, has two tornado
seasons: a summer season and a more deadly spring season beginning
in February and running through April. The dipping of the jet
stream into Florida meeting with warm tropical air from the Gulf
of Mexico can create a squall line of rapidly moving supercells,
which in turn can spawn violent tornadoes. These so-called mesocyclones
are just as likely to occur after midnight as they are in the
afternoon. In fact, nine years earlier this same scenario occurred
just south of Orlando when several twisters roared through Kissimmee
toward the Atlantic coast at about 11:00 p.m. on February 22,
1998, killing 42 people.
This loss of life is largely preventable with an adequate warning
system and available emergency shelters. Unbelievably, Florida
still does not have an emergency tornado siren system, a cost-effective
and proven solution that has been saving lives for decades in
tornado-alley states. The official discussion over such a relatively
inexpensive remedy quickly descends into what can be best described
as a quagmire of hypocrisy and impotence as local, state, and
federal bureaucrats pontificate over issues such as whether sirens
will actually be heard.
Volusia County Chairman Frank Bruno typified this approach
when he stated, in a blame-the-victim style worthy of a cabinet
position in the Bush administration, I really believe that
individuals have to take responsibility for themselves and their
families. He then went on to lobby in favor of tax credits
for at-home weather radios while not bothering to explain how
someone asleep in the middle of the night was supposed to take
responsibility for themselves when an F-3 tornado hits with
no warning.
FEMA response
The official reaction in the media to the Federal Emergency
Management Agencys response has been colored with a self-awareness
that everybody is watching after the agencys debacle in
the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. Florida Governor Charlie Crist
made all the requisite photo-ops, while stating, This isnt
Louisiana, were going in, and were going in hard,
and new FEMA director David Paulison has promised temporary housing
for the displaced. But early returns from the most devastated
areas tell of delays and frustration for storm victims as they
try to obtain federal disaster relief aid. FEMA spokesperson James
McIntyre outlined a two-week timetable before any
decision on relief would be given in order to manage expectations,
then further explaining we dont want people to get
their hopes up thinking the check is in the mail tomorrow.
A clear indicator that no check will be forthcoming for many
residents was given one week before the killer tornadoes, when
FEMA denied a request for aid for victims of a tornado strike
over a month earlier. On Christmas in Volusia County, 59 mobile
homes in three different parks were demolished and another 133
mobile homes, 22 houses, and three apartment buildings were badly
damaged. As of six weeks later, no FEMA housing trailers have
been dispatched for those left homeless.
The official explanation for the aid denial was because
assessed damage to uninsured property in Volusia [County] wasnt
high enough for the federal government to step in. Republican
Congressman John Mica added, Were not hanging our
hopes on the appeals; some of those homes were old and dont
qualify for assistance to repair them. To this reporters
knowledge, no one followed up by asking if there would be federal
assistance in the event of uninsured country clubs being wiped
out.
Noel Castro, a father of three who earns $9.50 an hour, lost
his mobile home in Deland on Christmas. He had been paying $300
a month in lot rent, and had to move his family into a house that
rents for $850 a month while waiting for FEMA aid that never arrived.
Thats the government for you, especially the politicians,
he said. When they want your vote they come around asking
for help, they kiss your babies, but when those babies are homeless
they dont care.
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