
A SPECIAL EDITION OF CONSUMER eVIEWS
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Catholic Charities USA: Call 1-800-919-9338 or visit www.catholiccharitiesusa.org. | Last week I traveled to Mississippi's Gulf Coast to meet with Florida’s law enforcement officers who are assisting in recovery efforts after Hurricane Katrina. Although the media focus has been on New Orleans, the damage is equally severe in Mississippi. The destruction on the Gulf Coast is comparable to the damage we saw in South Florida after Hurricane Andrew. As Florida's state fire marshal and insurance commissioner in 1992 when Andrew struck, I will never forget the destruction I witnessed. While Andrew’s fury was 30 miles wide, Katrina’s assault covered an area over 100 miles wide and left it destroyed. I met with our Division of State Fire Marshal officers and Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission personnel in Diamondhead, Miss., at a yacht-club-turned-meeting place. Surrounding the former yacht club, there had been hundreds of condominium apartments on cement pilings. Now the only structures remaining are the cement pilings. Every single condo was blown away, and the high water mark was at least 35-feet up in the surrounding trees. Nothing man-made remained intact. In Biloxi Beach, Florida officers from the Office of Agriculture Law Enforcement, Division of Forestry, Division of State Fire Marshal and Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission are living in the shadow of the demolished Mississippi Coast Coliseum. Firefighters from Volusia, Hillsborough, and Palm Beach County are bunking with them. For those of you who have seen the damage on television, their camp is about 500 yards from where the Grand Casino washed ashore about a half mile from its original location. I was impressed and humbled to see our officers working 12-14 hour shifts assisting with search and rescue efforts and law enforcement duties. As a Floridian, I was proud to see the support our law enforcement communities have been giving to the people of Mississippi. Since Andrew, Florida has been preparing for disasters like this, and we have had six storms in 14 months to test those plans and put them to use. The expertise our first responders are now offering has been crucial in helping restore order to the community and ensuring that food, water, and ice are distributed quickly to those in need. As we traveled to Biloxi, we passed a strip shopping center with nothing left but a Waffle House sign. We saw whole Our Forward State Law Enforcement Mutual Aid Command Post (MAC) sits north of Biloxi. From this location Florida’s law enforcement efforts on the ground are being coordinated. All of our Florida officers - FDLE, FHP, DOT, DEP, Division of State Fire Marshal, Division of Insurance Fraud, As State Fire Marshal, I know the importance of being prepared for catastrophes. We personally know the damage these storms can cause, and we have planned, practiced and put aside resources to make sure we can respond quickly and effectively. Please join me in thanking Florida’s law enforcement and firefighter community for the professionalism, leadership, and compassion they are showing in helping our neighbors in this time of need. It was an honor and a privilege to see them in action.
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The cement pilings are all that are left of the condominiums at the yacht club in Diamondhead.
State Fire Marshal officers on scene with SFM Gallagher and Molly, part of an SFM K-9 team.
A floating casino in Gulfport sits on dry land.
Not much left of a casino on the water in Biloxi.
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The highway along the beach is washed away.
The star-spangled banner survives intact. |
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