Deal: State Will Pay Local Share For Irma Cleanup On Coast

Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal speaks during a press conference to announce he has vetoed legislation allowing clergy to refuse performing gay marriage and protecting people who refuse to attend the ceremonies Monday, March 28, 2016, in Atlanta. The Republican rejected the bill on Monday, saying, “I do not think that we have to discriminate against … Continued

David Goldman / Associated Press

Describing Hurricane Irma as a “catastrophic event” after viewing its destruction from the air, Gov. Nathan Deal promised Thursday that the state will pay local governments’ share for cleaning up storm debris along the Georgia coast.

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Deal got a firsthand look at the damage inflicted in Glynn County, where hundreds of homes flooded on St. Simons Island as Irma crossed southwest Georgia on Monday as a weakened tropical storm more than 100 miles inland.

Uprooted trees and shattered limbs still littered roads and yards Thursday, both on the island and the port city of Brunswick on the mainland. Like other communities in coastal Georgia, Glynn County not long ago finished cleanup efforts after Hurricane Matthew raked the area last October.

“You had two hurricanes in such a short time, I’m sure these local officials will tell you they can use that money very well to do other things,” Deal told reporters during a news conference at the Brunswick airport.

Typically the state and local governments would split roughly 25 percent of the cost for removing storm debris, Deal said, with the federal government paying the rest. He said after Irma, state funds would be used to cover the entire non-federal share in Georgia’s six coastal counties.

Alan Ours, county manager for Glynn County, said debris cleanup countywide cost roughly $10 million total after Matthew last year.

“It is huge,” Ours said of the governor’s decision to spare Glynn County and others a second round of debris-removal costs. “Every dollar for Glynn County is crucial.”

Deal also toured Habersham County in northeast Georgia, where he described extensive tree damage from Irma. The storm toppled trees and limbs across nearly the entire state, leaving at least 1.5 million without electricity Monday.

By Thursday afternoon, about 204,000 customers of Georgia Power and Georgia Electric Membership Corp. still had no lights.

There were no cost estimates Thursday for how much damage Irma inflicted across Georgia. But Jay Florence, deputy commissioner of the Georgia Department of Insurance, said roughly 50,000 claims had been filed statewide as a result of the storm. He said that number would likely increase.

In Glynn County, Ours estimated Irma caused flooding in 500 to 700 homes, many of them on St. Simons island. Thousands of residents who evacuated ahead of the storm began returning Thursday. For three days after Irma passed, police and National Guard soldiers kept people from re-entering.

With power out across the county, traffic lights weren’t working and water and sewer service was limited, making it unsafe for residents to return sooner, said Jay Wiggins, Glynn County’s emergency management director.

Marion McEachern got at least a foot of water inside his St. Simons Island home. On Thursday, he started a list of repairs that includes the removal of drywall and insulation soaked by floodwaters, and the replacement of his floor and much of his furniture. He said he was angry about the prolonged evacuation order, which local officials decided to maintain even after Deal lifted the state’s evacuation order for the coast Tuesday.

McEachern said he doesn’t plan on evacuating the next time a storm threatens coastal Georgia.

“I will stay,” he said. “I could have been cleaning up my house. And I maybe could have prevented it from flooding.”