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Six months after Hurricane Milton, Fort Myers neighbors reflect on tornado damage

Six months after Hurricane Milton, Fort Myers neighbors reflect on tornado damage
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      >> WHAT MIGHT BE HARD TO BELIEVE, BUT THIS WEEK MARKS 6 MONTHS SINCE HURRICANE MILTON CHURNED ACROSS THE GULF AND SENT DANGEROUS WEATHER ACROSS OUR COAST. WHILE THE CENTER OF THE STORM MISSED US JUST TO THE NORTH, THE OUTER BANDS DROP TORNADOES ACROSS THE STATE. TAKE A LOOK AT THIS MAP. THIS EF 2 TWISTER TOUCHED DOWN IN FORT MYERS, IN EFFECT IN PARTS OF LEE COUNTY. THAT DAY AND EXPERIENCE THAT STILL HAUNTS PEOPLE WHO LIVED THROUGH IT. >> I STILL CAN ACUTELY DIG UP THAT FEELING OF OH, MY GOSH, THIS MIGHT YET THIS MIGHT BE THE END. >> IN TONIGHT'S COVER STORY, I'M TRACKING RECOVERY. 6 MONTHS AFTER THE STORM AS NEIGHBORS AND COMMUNITY LEADERS GET READY FOR THE NEXT HURRICANE SEASON. >> IN THE NEIGHBORHOODS BETWEEN MCGREGOR BOULEVARD AND US. 41 PROBABLY A WEEK AGO I STARTED HAVING NIGHTMARES ABOUT IT. THE MEMORY OF MILTON IS STILL FRESH. I REMEMBER THE FEELING IN THE PANIC. YOU MIGHT REMEMBER RACHEL BET CO WE INTERVIEWED HER LIVE TODAY. MILTON DROPPED A TORNADO IN HER PART OF FORT MYERS. A WHAT POINT DID YOU KNOW TO TAKE COVER? >> WE NEED TO TAKE COVER BECAUSE OF YOU GUYS. >> THE STORM DAMAGED THE SHED IN HER BACKYARD JUST 400 FEET AWAY. IT TORE THE ROOF OFF THIS APARTMENT BUILDING NEARLY 6 MONTHS LATER, A BLUE TARP COVERS THAT BUILDING. RACHEL SHED REBUILT STRONGER THAN BEFORE OUR FAMILY WAS OK. >> AND THEN LOOK AT EVERY DISASTER IS AN OPPORTUNITY TO REBUILD. >> SO-CALLED HURRICANE BIRDS ARE BACK IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD WHERE SO MUCH DEBRIS HAD TO BE CLEARED. PETER, BE NICK IS DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC WORKS FOR THE CITY OF FORT MYERS. THIS INCLUDES THE VEGETATIVE AND THE CONSTRUCTION DEBRIS. I ASKED HIM HOW MUCH DEBRIS HAD TO BE REMOVED FROM THE CITY LIMITS AFTER MILTON. SO 51,599 CUBIC YARDS OF MATERIAL EQUATES ABOUT 8 FOOTBALL FIELDS. >> FULL-LENGTH GOALPOST THE GOALPOST FULL WITH 3 FOOT. >> A FRACTION OF THE AMOUNT COLLECTED AFTER HURRICANE IAN. BUT MILTON PRESENTED ITS OWN UNIQUE CHALLENGES. SO YOU'RE IN THIS GOING. WITH THE TORNADOES. WHAT'S GOING ON WHEN A DRY TRACK FOR YOU PHOENIX TO REMEMBERS THE MOMENTS WE WERE TRACKING A TWISTER IN THE HEART OF HIS COMMUNITY IS GOING TO GO RIGHT TOWARDS DOWNTOWN FORT MYERS. >> THEN WHEN WE REALIZED ONE TOUCHED DOWN NEAR US, IT'S LIKE. >> WOW. >> THE TORNADIC WINDS STRUCK NEIGHBORHOODS ACROSS THE CALOOSAHATCHEE THAT DAY, TOO. I GATHERED MY FAMILY. WE'VE GOT IN THE LAUNDRY ROOM TOGETHER, WHICH WAS THE INTERIOR MOST ROOM OF OUR HOUSE. WE SHUT THE DOOR AND WE HEARD THE WINDS PICK UP. WE HEARD THIS LOUD RUSH PLANS GO OVER THE HOUSE. LEE COUNTY COMMISSIONER BRIAN HAMMAN ALSO FOUND HIMSELF TAKING SHELTER FROM THE STORM. YOU KNOW, I'VE LIVED HERE MY ENTIRE LIFE AND I'VE NEVER SEEN A HURRICANE SPAWNED THAT MANY TORNADOES, AND WIND FROM MILTON'S OUTER BANDS LED TO TONS OF DAMAGE ACROSS LEE COUNTY TO I THINK UNFORTUNATELY, WE'VE HAD WAY TOO MUCH PRACTICE WITH RESPONDING TO HURRICANES. I CHECKED WITH LEE COUNTY CREWS REMOVED MORE THAN 500,000 CUBIC YARDS OF DEBRIS FROM OUR NEIGHBORHOODS AFTER THE STORM. IT TOOK MORE THAN 15,000 LOADS TO GET THE JOB DONE. I THINK YOU CAN SEE OUR RESPONSE HAS BEEN VERY QUICK, BUT WE CAN'T DISCOUNT OUR NEIGHBORS WHO ARE STILL WORKING ON CLEANING UP THEIR HOMES WHILE NEIGHBORS UP AND DOWN THE GULF COAST. WORK TO MOVE ON FROM MILTON THAT CO SAYS THAT STORM IS ULTIMATELY WHAT BROUGHT HER FORT MYERS NEIGHBORHOOD CLOSER TOGETHER, WE'VE BECOME. >> THIS RESILIENT COMMUNITY THAT CAN OVERCOME AN EXPECTED EXPONENTIALLY HARD TIMES AND WE EMERGE STRONGER AND BETTER AND KINDER TO ONE ANOTHER. AND THAT MAKES ME FEEL PROUD OF WHERE I LIVE. >> AND THE GOOD NEWS IS THERE WILL NEVER BE A HURRICANE. MILTON AGAIN, JUST LAST WEEK WE TOLD YOU HOW THE WORLD METEOROLOGICAL ORGANIZATION ANNOUNCED THAT BARREL. HELENE AND MILTON, ALL RETIRED AS ATLANTIC HURRICANE NAMES GULF COAST METEOROLOGIST ROB DUNS BROKE DOWN EXACTLY WHY THOSE DEEMED A RETIRED AND HAS TO DO WITH PAULA. JUST THE INTENSITY OF THE STORM DAMAGE. >> YOU KNOW, WITH THE WIND SYSTEMS COME THROUGH WITH A HUNDREDS 100'S OF LIVES IN SOME CASES COST BILLIONS OF DOLLARS OF DAMAGE OUT OF RESPECT TO THOSE WHO WERE SO SEVERELY IMPACTED. THE NAMES ARE RETIRED AND THEN REPLACED WITH WITH SUBSTITUTES LIKE YOU SAW THERE JUST A MOMENT AGO. AND REMEMBER, THE LIST REVOLVES EVERY 6 YEARS. SO YOU WON'T HEAR ABOUT THOSE NEW HURRICANE NAMES UNTIL HURRICANE SEASON O
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      Six months after Hurricane Milton, Fort Myers neighbors reflect on tornado damage
      This week marks six months since Hurricane Milton churned across the Gulf and sent dangerous weather across our coast. While the center of the storm missed us to the north, the outer bands dropped numerous tornadoes across Florida. An EF-2 tornado tore through parts of Fort Myers and Lee County on October 9, 2024. It’s an experience that still haunts the people who lived through it. Caption: Tornado track from Hurricane Milton’s outer band“I still can acutely dig up that feeling of, oh, my gosh, this might be it. This might be the end,” shared Fort Myers resident, Rachel Bepko. Now, we’re tracking recovery six months after the storm, as neighbors and community leaders get ready for the next hurricane season. Caption: Rachel BepkoIn the neighborhoods between McGregor Boulevard and U.S. 41, the memory of Milton is still fresh in neighbors’ minds.“Probably a week ago, I started having nightmares about it,” Bepko said. “I remember the feeling of panic.” You might remember Bepko. We interviewed her live the day Milton dropped a tornado in her part of Fort Myers near Orangewood Elementary School.“I only knew to take cover because of you guys,” Bepko told us the day of the storm. The tornado damaged a shed in her backyard. Just 400 feet away, it tore the roof off an apartment building. Caption: Apartment building damaged by tornado still has blue tarp on roof six months after stormNearly six months later, a blue tarp covers that apartment building. Bepko’s shed has been rebuilt stronger than before. “Our family was okay. Look at every disaster as an opportunity to rebuild,” Bepko added. Florida’s so-called “hurricane birds” are back in the neighborhood where so much debris had to be cleared.Peter Bieniek is the Fort Myers Director of Public Works. I asked him how much debris had to be removed from the city limits after Milton. “So 51,599 cubic yards of material equates to about eight football fields. (That’s) full-length goal post a goal post, full width three foot deep,” Bieniek explained. Caption: Peter Bieniek tells Channing Frampton how much debris was removed following Hurricane Milton in the City of Fort MyersThat’s a fraction of the amount collected after Hurricane Ian in 2022. Milton presented its own unique challenges because of the tornado damage. Bieniek, too, remembers the moments we were tracking a twister in the heart of his community. “When we realized one touched down near us, it's like, oh wow,” Bieniek added. Caption: Peter Bieniek is the Fort Myers Director of Public WorksThe tornadic winds struck neighborhoods across the Caloosahatchee that day too.“I gathered my family. We got in the laundry room together, which was the interior most room of our house. We shut the door and we heard the winds pick up,” Lee County Commissioner Brian Hamman said. “We heard this loud rush of winds go over the house.”WATCH THE RAW SECURITY VIDEO BELOW: Commissioner Hamman also found himself taking shelter from the storm. “You know, I've lived here my entire life, and I'd never seen a hurricane spawn that many tornadoes,” Hamman added. His home security camera captured the dangerous winds whipping by his home.Water and wind from Milton’s outer bands led to tons of damage across Lee County too. “I think, unfortunately, we've had way too much practice with responding to hurricanes,” Hamman said. Caption: Commissioner Brian Hamman speaks with Channing Frampton about Hurricane MiltonI checked with Lee County. Cleanup crews removed 577,201 cubic yards of debris from our neighborhoods after the storm. The county also said it took 15,805 loads to get the job done.Lee County also confirmed 274 intersections in the county sustained damage under $5,000. All signal repairs have been made to the 274 intersections. The county is awaiting the delivery of about a dozen overhead street name signs. On top of that, the county said ten intersections sustained damages more than $5,000. Three are repaired. Three are waiting for delivery of overhead street name signs. Three are scheduled for permanent repairs by the first week in May. Temporary repairs are in place at the remaining intersection awaiting state and federal funding to replace the signal cabinet. GULF COAST METEOROLOGIST ROB DUNS EXPLAINS THE FINAL REPORT ON MILTON: “I think you can see our response has been very quick, but we can't discount our neighbors who are still working on cleaning up their homes out,” Hamman said. While neighbors up and down the Gulf Coast work to move on from Milton, Bepko says that storm is ultimately what brought her Fort Myers neighborhood closer together. “We've become this resilient community that can overcome unexpected, exponentially hard, times. And we emerge stronger and better and kinder to one another. And that makes me feel proud of where I live,” Bepko concluded. Credit: Rachel Bepko speaks with Channing FramptonThe good news is there will never be a Hurricane Milton in the Atlantic Basin again. The World Meteorological Organization announced Beryl, Helene and Milton are retired as hurricane names.Follow the Gulf Coast Storm Team on social mediaChief Meteorologist Allyson Rae on Facebook and XMeteorologist Jim Dickey on Facebook and XMeteorologist Jason Dunning on Facebook and XMeteorologist Rob Duns on Facebook and XMeteorologist Jesslyn Ferentz on Facebook and XMeteorologist Lauren Hope on Facebook and XMeteorologist Raphael Tavernier on Facebook and XWatch your Gulf Coast Weather forecasts on TV or onlineHere's where to find our latest video forecastYou can also watch our newscasts live or on-demand hereDOWNLOAD the free Gulf Coast News app for your latest breaking news and weather alerts.

      This week marks six months since Hurricane Milton churned across the Gulf and sent dangerous weather across our coast. While the center of the storm missed us to the north, the outer bands dropped numerous tornadoes across Florida.

      An EF-2 tornado tore through parts of Fort Myers and Lee County on October 9, 2024. It’s an experience that still haunts the people who lived through it.

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      Caption: Tornado track from Hurricane Milton’s outer band

      “I still can acutely dig up that feeling of, oh, my gosh, this might be it. This might be the end,” shared Fort Myers resident, Rachel Bepko. Now, we’re tracking recovery six months after the storm, as neighbors and community leaders get ready for the next hurricane season.

      Caption: Rachel Bepko

      In the neighborhoods between McGregor Boulevard and U.S. 41, the memory of Milton is still fresh in neighbors’ minds.

      “Probably a week ago, I started having nightmares about it,” Bepko said. “I remember the feeling of panic.” You might remember Bepko. We interviewed her live the day Milton dropped a tornado in her part of Fort Myers near Orangewood Elementary School.

      “I only knew to take cover because of you guys,” Bepko told us the day of the storm. The tornado damaged a shed in her backyard. Just 400 feet away, it tore the roof off an apartment building.

      Caption: Apartment building damaged by tornado still has blue tarp on roof six months after storm

      Nearly six months later, a blue tarp covers that apartment building. Bepko’s shed has been rebuilt stronger than before. “Our family was okay. Look at every disaster as an opportunity to rebuild,” Bepko added.

      Florida’s so-called “hurricane birds” are back in the neighborhood where so much debris had to be cleared.

      “We've become this resilient community that can overcome unexpected." - Rachel Bepko

      Peter Bieniek is the Fort Myers Director of Public Works. I asked him how much debris had to be removed from the city limits after Milton. “So 51,599 cubic yards of material equates to about eight football fields. (That’s) full-length goal post a goal post, full width three foot deep,” Bieniek explained.

      Caption: Peter Bieniek tells Channing Frampton how much debris was removed following Hurricane Milton in the City of Fort Myers

      That’s a fraction of the amount collected after Hurricane Ian in 2022. Milton presented its own unique challenges because of the tornado damage. Bieniek, too, remembers the moments we were tracking a twister in the heart of his community. “When we realized one touched down near us, it's like, oh wow,” Bieniek added.

      Caption: Peter Bieniek is the Fort Myers Director of Public Works

      The tornadic winds struck neighborhoods across the Caloosahatchee that day too.

      “I gathered my family. We got in the laundry room together, which was the interior most room of our house. We shut the door and we heard the winds pick up,” Lee County Commissioner Brian Hamman said. “We heard this loud rush of winds go over the house.”

      WATCH THE RAW SECURITY VIDEO BELOW:

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          Commissioner Hamman also found himself taking shelter from the storm. “You know, I've lived here my entire life, and I'd never seen a hurricane spawn that many tornadoes,” Hamman added. His home security camera captured the dangerous winds whipping by his home.

          Water and wind from Milton’s outer bands led to tons of damage across Lee County too. “I think, unfortunately, we've had way too much practice with responding to hurricanes,” Hamman said.

          Caption: Commissioner Brian Hamman speaks with Channing Frampton about Hurricane Milton

          I checked with Lee County. Cleanup crews removed 577,201 cubic yards of debris from our neighborhoods after the storm. The county also said it took 15,805 loads to get the job done.

          Lee County also confirmed 274 intersections in the county sustained damage under $5,000. All signal repairs have been made to the 274 intersections. The county is awaiting the delivery of about a dozen overhead street name signs. On top of that, the county said ten intersections sustained damages more than $5,000. Three are repaired. Three are waiting for delivery of overhead street name signs. Three are scheduled for permanent repairs by the first week in May. Temporary repairs are in place at the remaining intersection awaiting state and federal funding to replace the signal cabinet.

          GULF COAST METEOROLOGIST ROB DUNS EXPLAINS THE FINAL REPORT ON MILTON:

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              “I think you can see our response has been very quick, but we can't discount our neighbors who are still working on cleaning up their homes out,” Hamman said.

              While neighbors up and down the Gulf Coast work to move on from Milton, Bepko says that storm is ultimately what brought her Fort Myers neighborhood closer together. “We've become this resilient community that can overcome unexpected, exponentially hard, times. And we emerge stronger and better and kinder to one another. And that makes me feel proud of where I live,” Bepko concluded.

              Credit: Rachel Bepko speaks with Channing Frampton

              The good news is there will never be a Hurricane Milton in the Atlantic Basin again. The World Meteorological Organization announced Beryl, Helene and Milton are retired as hurricane names.


              Follow the Gulf Coast Storm Team on social media

              • Chief Meteorologist Allyson Rae on Facebook and X
              • Meteorologist Jim Dickey on Facebook and X
              • Meteorologist Jason Dunning on Facebook and X
              • Meteorologist Rob Duns on Facebook and X
              • Meteorologist Jesslyn Ferentz on Facebook and X
              • Meteorologist Lauren Hope on Facebook and X
              • Meteorologist Raphael Tavernier on Facebook and X

              Watch your Gulf Coast Weather forecasts on TV or online

              DOWNLOAD the free Gulf Coast News app for your latest breaking news and weather alerts.