Why Fema
wasn’t better prepared? The 15000 Fema employees all know the vulnerabilities
of the elderly during and after disasters. FEMA should have made sure that all
nursing homes and other elderly care facilities were evacuated during the week
or so before the storm hit. FEMA’S director Brock Long has a lengthy back ground
in emergency preparedness, especially when it comes to helpless older folks. Emergency
managers around the country wonder why Fema wasn’t more aggressive in evacuating
or at least insisting that their first responders evacuate venerable and
helpless elderly. All Six patients at a sweltering Hollywood nursing home died
in Hurricane Irma's aftermath, authorities said Wednesday, as people confronted
a multitude of known hazards in the storm's wake.
FEMA
trains and finances first responders across the country the very people who
should know. Fema either knew or should have known the dangers and should have
taken appropriate life saving action.
Hollywood
Police Chief Tom Sanchez said investigators believe the deaths at the
Rehabilitation Center at Hollywood Hills were heat-related, and added:
"The building has been sealed off and we are conducting a criminal
investigation." He did not elaborate.
Three
patients were found dead at the nursing home early Wednesday, and three more
died at the hospital after a total of more than 100 were evacuated, many of
them on stretchers or in wheelchairs, authorities said.
The air
conditioning was out, but Sanchez said it remained under investigation whether
power was entirely cut. He didn't answer questions regarding whether a
generator was running inside the place.
Also in
the Miami area, a Coral Gables apartment building was evacuated after
authorities determined a lack of power made it unsafe for elderly tenants,
while officers arrived at the huge Century Village retirement community in
Pembroke Pines to help people on upper floors without access to working
elevators. More than half the community of 15,000 residents lacked power.
In
addition, at least five people died and more than a dozen were treated after
breathing carbon monoxide fumes from generators in the Orlando, Miami and
Daytona Beach areas.
Not
counting the nursing home deaths and the more expected at least 13 people in
Florida have died under in Irma-related circumstances, many of them well after
the storm had passed. Many fear there will be more elderly fatalities
discovered and others thank God that the Hurricane was not larger. Next time it
maybe and many more elderly may parish.
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