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 Post subject: Hurricane Ian
PostPosted: 09/28/22 6:05 pm • # 1 
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Sure seems to be making a mess of things in FL. Tampa Bay is nearly empty!


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 Post subject: Re: Hurricane Ian
PostPosted: 09/29/22 10:00 am • # 2 
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He's borrowed the magic Sharpie

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 Post subject: Re: Hurricane Ian
PostPosted: 09/29/22 12:31 pm • # 3 
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Aerial image shows scale of damage in Fort Myers, Florida, in the aftermath of Cat 4 Hurricane Ian

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Tropical storm Ian live updates: Biden warns of ‘substantial loss of life,’ says it may be deadliest storm in Florida history
More than 2.5 million customers across Florida were without power Thursday morning as many grappled with flooding and damaged homes.


President Joe Biden on Thursday said Hurricane Ian may have been responsible for "substantial loss of life" and could end up being the deadliest storm in Florida history.

More than 2.5 million customers across Florida were without power Thursday morning after Ian, now a tropical storm, walloped the state as one of the most powerful storms to ever hit the United States, causing widespread devastation and flooding that trapped residents in their homes.

Ian was downgraded to a tropical storm Thursday morning after slamming into Florida’s southwest coast as a major Category 4 hurricane Wednesday afternoon, bringing winds of 150 mph and life-threatening storm surge.

Maximum sustained winds dropped to near 65 mph with higher gusts early Thursday, but the storm has continued to cause destruction as it moves northeast. Its center is expected to move off the east-central coast of Florida later Thursday before approaching the coast of South Carolina on Friday.

Biden on Thursday declared a major disaster in Florida over the devastation caused by Ian. The president ordered federal aid to ...

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/li ... -rcna49927

And things are only going to get worse in the future as sea levels rise and storms become more intense.


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 Post subject: Re: Hurricane Ian
PostPosted: 09/29/22 1:42 pm • # 4 
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Any number or excellent (and depressing) vids here

https://www.youtube.com/results?search_ ... l+Causeway


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 Post subject: Re: Hurricane Ian
PostPosted: 09/29/22 1:52 pm • # 5 
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Hurricane Ian’s Toll Is Severe. Lack of Insurance Will Make It Worse.
Christopher Flavelle

Most of the Florida homes in the path of Hurricane Ian lack flood insurance, posing a major challenge to rebuilding efforts, new data show.

In the counties whose residents were told to evacuate, just 18.5 percent of homes have coverage through the National Flood Insurance Program, according to Milliman, an actuarial firm that works with the program.

Within those counties, homes inside the government-designated floodplain, the area most exposed to flooding, 47.3 percent of homes have flood insurance, Milliman found. In areas outside the floodplain — many of which are still likely to have been damaged by rain or storm surge from Ian — only an estimated 9.4 percent of homes have flood coverage.

Ian’s TollFollow the latest updates on Hurricane Ian, which is causing widespread flooding and power outages.
The small share of households with flood insurance demonstrates the challenges posed by the country’s approach to rebuilding after disasters — a mix of public and private funding that is under strain as climate change makes those disasters more frequent and severe.

If people can’t pay to rebuild their homes after disasters, the financial toll of climate change for households and communities could become ruinous.

Regular homeowners’ insurance policies typically don’t pay for ...

https://www.nytimes.com/2022/09/29/clim ... rance.html


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 Post subject: Re: Hurricane Ian
PostPosted: 09/29/22 6:49 pm • # 6 
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Any deaths reported?


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 Post subject: Re: Hurricane Ian
PostPosted: 09/30/22 4:11 am • # 7 
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oskar576 wrote:
Any deaths reported?

Quote:
At least 12 confirmed dead as the scope of Hurricane Ian’s devastation comes into focus
Most of the deaths have been in Charlotte County, an area near the stretch of southwest coast where Ian made landfall Wednesday afternoon.


https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/hu ... -rcna49924


And that's already outdated -

Quote:
Hurricane Ian death toll rises to 15 in Florida
It was the start of what officials say will be a long process of identifying the dead.


https://www.tampabay.com/hurricane/2022 ... ta-county/


And it's not over - it's a hurricane again as it heads to South Carolina

Quote:
Storm re-intensifies as it aims for South Carolina after ‘historic’ damage to Florida

https://www.washingtonpost.com/weather/ ... e-updates/


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 Post subject: Re: Hurricane Ian
PostPosted: 09/30/22 5:14 am • # 8 
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Jeebus guys, stay safe.


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 Post subject: Re: Hurricane Ian
PostPosted: 09/30/22 12:29 pm • # 9 
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Jabra was living in the target area last we heard from him.


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 Post subject: Re: Hurricane Ian
PostPosted: 10/01/22 7:00 am • # 10 
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Hurricane Ian blamed for at least 34 deaths in Florida
The true death toll from the powerful Category 4 storm that devastated parts of the state could be higher.
https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/hurricane-ian-death-toll-grows-rcna50294


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 Post subject: Re: Hurricane Ian
PostPosted: 10/03/22 4:38 am • # 11 
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Strictly speaking this isn't Ian but ....

Flood advisory issued for parts of Long Island, NWS says

https://www.newsday.com/news/weather/lo ... y-wdjltw1y


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 Post subject: Re: Hurricane Ian
PostPosted: 10/03/22 10:43 am • # 12 
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Just to reinforce things - the estimates of losses here are only for insurance losses and do not include estimates for uninsured losses. And speaking from experience I think it's safe to say that those estimates will only grow as time passes. (And I don't think they include any allowances for insured business interruption losses.)

Hurricane Ian Damage Toll In The Billions, Will Slow US Growth

By Juliette MICHEL

With homes and infrastructure wrecked by wind or flooding and businesses shut down, the destruction left in the wake of Hurricane Ian is expected to cost Florida tens of billions of dollars and hit the broader US economy.

The devastation will weigh on insurance companies in the southern US state, and poses a danger to uninsured homeowners as well.

After making landfall on the southwest coast of Florida on Wednesday, Ian brought strong winds and torrential rains, sometimes turning streets into rivers.

The damage estimates remain very preliminary, but it is clear "the hurricane is expected to severely disrupt economic activity over 10 days, with power cuts, flight cancellations, suspension of energy production, impact on farms agricultural crops, in particular oranges," Gregory Daco, economist at EY-Parthenon, told AFP.

He predicted that Ian will slow Florida's economic activity by six percentage points in the third quarter, and shave three-tenths off US GDP.

As with all natural disasters, this economic impact will gradually lessen over time, especially when reconstruction efforts get underway, he said.

CoreLogic, a firm that specializes in property analysis, said wind-related losses from residential and commercial properties could cost insurers up to $32 billion while losses related to flooding could go as high as $15 billion.

"This is the costliest Florida storm since ....

https://www.barrons.com/news/hurricane- ... 1664567707


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 Post subject: Re: Hurricane Ian
PostPosted: 10/04/22 7:46 am • # 13 
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And now we're up to $63 billion (and don't forget that's only insured losses)

Karen Clark pegs Hurricane Ian losses at $63 billion


https://www.businessinsurance.com/artic ... 63-billion


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 Post subject: Re: Hurricane Ian
PostPosted: 10/04/22 7:51 am • # 14 
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Climate Change Added 10% More Rain To Hurricane Ian, Study Finds

https://time.com/6218567/hurricane-ian- ... e-science/


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 Post subject: Re: Hurricane Ian
PostPosted: 10/06/22 7:01 am • # 15 
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What happens now Florida’s insurance capital stack is decimated?

https://www.artemis.bm/news/florida-ins ... icane-ian/


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 Post subject: Re: Hurricane Ian
PostPosted: 10/12/22 2:39 am • # 16 
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Estimates are up to $74 billion (and this is only for insured losses) - and this sort of estimate always creeps up over time

Quote:
Hurricane Ian losses could hit $74 billion – RMS
Total private-market insured losses from Hurricane Ian could total between $53 billion and $74 billion, according to an estimate by risk modeling company RMS. The company also estimated that the National Flood Insurance Program could see an additional $10 billion in losses from storm surge and inland flooding caused by the storm.


https://www.insurancebusinessmag.com/us ... 23367.aspx


and the death toll is currently at 76

Quote:
Death toll soars to 76 in Florida after Hurricane Ian demolished entire communities

https://edition.cnn.com/2022/10/02/us/h ... index.html


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 Post subject: Re: Hurricane Ian
PostPosted: 10/12/22 7:00 pm • # 17 
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Canada had 1 death... we think.


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 Post subject: Re: Hurricane Ian
PostPosted: 10/12/22 7:01 pm • # 18 
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Canada had 1 death... we think.


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 Post subject: Re: Hurricane Ian
PostPosted: 10/13/22 8:09 am • # 19 
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Quote:
Ian Claims in Florida Topping 449,000 So Far, But Many More Expected

The number of claims filed from Hurricane Ian continues to rise, topping 449,000 as of Monday, and estimated insured losses stand at more than $4.2 billion, the Florida Office of Insurance Regulation reported.

Some 322,268 claims – almost three quarters of the total – have been from residential property owners. Commercial property claims have come to 12,362 so far, and private flood insurance claims have amounted to less than 1,440, the OIR reported on its website.

About 8.5% of claims have been closed.

The number of claims is expected to rise many-fold and has already far outpaced the 158,991 claims filed after Hurricane Michael, which struck the Florida Panhandle in 2018 and resulted in more than $9 billion in estimated insured losses, the office said. Hurricane Irma, which tracked across a large part of Florida in 2017, led to 1.1 million claims, mostly from residential properties, and triggered $20.7 billion in estimated insured losses.

Hurricane Ian, which made landfall near Fort Myers, Florida on Sept. 28, is projected to cause more than ....

https://www.insurancejournal.com/news/s ... 689201.htm


Quote:
Florida's property insurance market was already under stress. Ian could make it worse
Becky Sullivan

Even before Hurricane Ian made landfall in Florida last week, the state's property insurance market was already in its own state of disaster.

Homeowners in Florida pay the highest premiums in the country: nearly three times the national average, according to the Insurance Information Institute, an industry group. And Floridians' premiums are rising much faster — about 33% each year — than the typical American's annual increase of 9%.

But in Florida, hurricanes aren't the only factor driving up costs. Rampant litigation and soaring reinsurance costs are other components, experts say.

Six insurance carriers have declared insolvency this year alone. Others have dropped customers or stopped writing new policies. As a result, the number of policyholders on the state-backed insurer of last resort, Citizens Property Insurance, has ballooned.

Now, as Floridians look to recover from an estimated tens of billions of dollars in damage caused by the Category 4 storm, some have worried that Ian could be the final straw for even more private insurers, driving up costs and sending Florida's precarious insurance market closer to catastrophe.

"The simple truth is you can't be the most hurricane-prone state and the most litigious state, and expect lower property insurance rates," said state Sen. Jeff Brandes, whose district covers part of Pinellas County in the Tampa Bay region, which avoided the worst of Ian.

Even though no hurricane made landfall on Florida in 2020 or 2021, the state's insurance industry reported net underwriting losses exceeding $1 billion each year. Even before Ian, 2022 was already projected to be the same.

The average premium for homeowners has topped ...

https://www.npr.org/2022/10/06/11270838 ... -insurance

(Emphasis added)


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 Post subject: Re: Hurricane Ian
PostPosted: 10/14/22 8:22 am • # 20 
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In wake of Ian, Florida homeowners could receive up to $10K for home hardening
Applications could go live before the end of the month.


https://www.tampabay.com/news/real-esta ... hardening/


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 Post subject: Re: Hurricane Ian
PostPosted: 10/20/22 8:58 am • # 21 
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Hurricane Ian Is Blamed for Deadly Bacterial Infections in Florida
An estimated seven people have died from Vibrio vulnificus. The infection can lead to necrotizing fasciitis, when the tissue around a wound dies, sometimes referred to as “flesh-eating bacteria.”

Christine Chung

When Hurricane Ian made landfall in southwestern Florida late last month, officials urged residents to avoid wading in storm waters, which they warned could be contaminated with dangerous chemicals and bacteria.

But avoiding the water proved to be a challenge, as streets were inundated and cars engulfed, and the floodwater made it into homes and countless other structures in the hurricane’s path.

In the storm’s aftermath, there has been a rise in reported cases of Vibrio vulnificus, a rare and potentially deadly bacterial infection that can cause tissue around open wounds to die. There are 28 cases of it in Florida, state data shows. At least seven people have died, according to a spokesman for the state Health Department.

These infections, while rare, can occur when ...

https://www.nytimes.com/2022/10/19/us/f ... tions.html


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