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Hurricane Ian: Behind the scenes of search and rescue on Fort Myers Beach

The destruction was stunning, even to seasoned veterans.
 
Anthony Prado, left, Bryan Bartlett and Angel Menendez, with the South Florida Urban Search and Rescue Team, work together Oct. 5 to search for people in an area of homes damaged by Hurricane Ian.
Anthony Prado, left, Bryan Bartlett and Angel Menendez, with the South Florida Urban Search and Rescue Team, work together Oct. 5 to search for people in an area of homes damaged by Hurricane Ian. [ DOUGLAS R. CLIFFORD | Times ]
Published Oct. 11, 2022|Updated Oct. 12, 2022

FORT MYERS BEACH — The members of the South Florida Urban Search and Rescue Team followed Hurricane Ian up the coast to Fort Myers Beach, where a raging storm surge destroyed homes and killed people who did not evacuate.

They set up a command post in the shadow of a Margaritaville Resort still under construction. They unfurled maps of the city divided into grids and split up areas to target next. They slept on cots, filling tents beside the Gulf of Mexico and close to the shattered fishing pier.

Related: How storm surge kills: Hurricane Ian showed Florida why we’re told to leave

Clad in navy jackets, pants and bucket hats, the searchers traded long shifts in the sun. Some of them had been working for a week and didn’t know when their stint would end.

On a recent afternoon, one team member walked around with a glass measuring cup full of Cuban coffee. He poured steaming shots into small paper cups for anyone not already out searching the dusty rubble.

A map details the search grid for Fort Myers Beach at the command post where members of the South Florida Urban Search and Rescue Team divided assignments on Oct. 4.
A map details the search grid for Fort Myers Beach at the command post where members of the South Florida Urban Search and Rescue Team divided assignments on Oct. 4. [ DOUGLAS R. CLIFFORD | Times ]
The command center for the South Florida Urban Search and Rescue Team sits around the corner from the base of the Matanzas Pass Bridge in Fort Myers Beach.
The command center for the South Florida Urban Search and Rescue Team sits around the corner from the base of the Matanzas Pass Bridge in Fort Myers Beach. [ DOUGLAS R. CLIFFORD | Times ]
A search and rescue worker stands in front of a home on Fort Myers Beach on Oct. 4. Some of the island's newer buildings were still upright after Hurricane Ian, but many older homes were ripped from their foundations or completely destroyed.
A search and rescue worker stands in front of a home on Fort Myers Beach on Oct. 4. Some of the island's newer buildings were still upright after Hurricane Ian, but many older homes were ripped from their foundations or completely destroyed. [ DOUGLAS R. CLIFFORD | Times ]

The search and rescue workers drove around the island in lifted pickups with bulky tires. They came from fire departments across South Florida, and all had passed hours of special training. The team also included police officers and some experts from other fields.

Many of the firefighters were a little over a year removed from working at the Surfside condo tower collapse.

Related: As Joe Biden speaks next door, a Fort Myers Beach man wonders what’s next

For some, like heavy equipment rigging specialist Bryan Bartlett, the job is like an inheritance. Their fathers were firefighters, too.

“It’s important to be able to come out and help these people,” Bartlett said. “These people in Fort Myers Beach, they lost everything.”

Members of the South Florida Urban Search and Rescue Team prepare to search an area of mangroves in Fort Myers Beach on Oct. 5, one week after Hurricane Ian made landfall and flooded the city with a fierce storm surge. At front is Peter Darley, a hazmat specialist.
Members of the South Florida Urban Search and Rescue Team prepare to search an area of mangroves in Fort Myers Beach on Oct. 5, one week after Hurricane Ian made landfall and flooded the city with a fierce storm surge. At front is Peter Darley, a hazmat specialist. [ DOUGLAS R. CLIFFORD | Times ]
Hurricane Ian ruined businesses and left the streets of Fort Myers Beach strewn with rubble.
Hurricane Ian ruined businesses and left the streets of Fort Myers Beach strewn with rubble. [ DOUGLAS R. CLIFFORD | Times ]
Homes across Fort Myers Beach collapsed in the storm. Hurricane Ian also flooded many cars, trucks and SUVs, which lay destroyed around the city.
Homes across Fort Myers Beach collapsed in the storm. Hurricane Ian also flooded many cars, trucks and SUVs, which lay destroyed around the city. [ DOUGLAS R. CLIFFORD | Times ]

More than 300 people joined the search and rescue mission on Fort Myers Beach, said Capt. Ignatius Carroll, a spokesperson for the South Florida team. Some traveled from other states.

The South Florida group was in charge, full of firefighters with years of experience working around disaster zones.

“We are finding human remains,” Carroll said almost a week after Hurricane Ian made landfall. He declined to say how many.

The official death toll from the storm reached 102 on Monday, according to state figures. That included multiple people on Fort Myers Beach. As of late last week, more than half of the victims had drowned.

Anthony Prado, with the South Florida Urban Search and Rescue Team, ducks under the eave of a collapsed roof while searching for people on Oct. 5 in Fort Myers Beach.
Anthony Prado, with the South Florida Urban Search and Rescue Team, ducks under the eave of a collapsed roof while searching for people on Oct. 5 in Fort Myers Beach. [ DOUGLAS R. CLIFFORD | Times ]
Angel Menendez, with the South Florida Urban Search and Rescue Team, scans a stretch of shoreline in Fort Myers Beach on Oct. 5.
Angel Menendez, with the South Florida Urban Search and Rescue Team, scans a stretch of shoreline in Fort Myers Beach on Oct. 5. [ DOUGLAS R. CLIFFORD | Times ]
Members of a Texas urban search and rescue team inspect a collapsed home in Fort Myers Beach on Oct. 4.
Members of a Texas urban search and rescue team inspect a collapsed home in Fort Myers Beach on Oct. 4. [ DOUGLAS R. CLIFFORD | Times ]

The search and rescue crews were methodical. They scanned the city in phases, Carroll said:

First came the hasty search when firefighters walked around and called out to people. They noted residents still on the island and alive.

Then came a closer look through at least two more searches.

The crews embarked on property-by-property surveys. They checked behind doors, peered into cars and eventually circled back to areas that were especially hard to reach. Sometimes, they called for dogs trained to detect human remains. They ticked off locations using a map on their phones.

Related: Stunning aerial photos show Hurricane Ian’s path along Florida’s west coast

Searchers attempted to decipher where chunks of homes, ripped from their foundations, had stood before the flood pushed wreckage inland. They picked apart piles of debris by hand and with heavy machinery. They looked for residents sheltering in attics or in raised houses with no staircases left to go down.

Even days after the hurricane, Carroll said, the crews found people alive who needed help. One couple in their 80s, he said, at first chose to stay but later needed firefighters to cut away their storm shutters when they wanted to leave.

A handler follows a search dog down Estero Boulevard in Fort Myers Beach on Oct. 4.
A handler follows a search dog down Estero Boulevard in Fort Myers Beach on Oct. 4. [ DOUGLAS R. CLIFFORD | Times ]
Members of a Texas urban search and rescue team work to clear a collapsed home of survivors or victims of Hurricane Ian in Fort Myers Beach on Oct. 4.
Members of a Texas urban search and rescue team work to clear a collapsed home of survivors or victims of Hurricane Ian in Fort Myers Beach on Oct. 4. [ DOUGLAS R. CLIFFORD | Times ]
A member of a Texas urban search and rescue team works around a collapsed home in Fort Myers Beach on Oct. 4.
A member of a Texas urban search and rescue team works around a collapsed home in Fort Myers Beach on Oct. 4. [ DOUGLAS R. CLIFFORD | Times ]

The damage on Fort Myers Beach was stunning, even to seasoned veterans.

Hazmat Specialist Peter Darley thought of the storm as a combination of Hurricane Michael (intense destruction) and Hurricane Irma (broad in its sweep).

Related: ‘Absolute devastation’: Hurricane Ian decimates Fort Myers Beach

Exactly one week after Ian’s landfall, Darley and a handful of other searchers stepped into a thick patch of brush off Mango Street on Fort Myers Beach. Their blue uniforms and white helmets disappeared into the green, sticks and dead leaves crunching under their boots.

The flood could have washed a person into the scrub, but they found nothing.

Angel Menendez, with the South Florida Urban Search and Rescue Team, searches a patch of brush in Fort Myers Beach on Oct. 5.
Angel Menendez, with the South Florida Urban Search and Rescue Team, searches a patch of brush in Fort Myers Beach on Oct. 5. [ DOUGLAS R. CLIFFORD | Times ]

The team moved down the road, climbing over piles of broken wood and metal, peering into empty windows and under collapsed roofs. In one house, still standing, a clear water line dirtied the wall above the highest kitchen cabinet.

Someone had smelled something bad in this area, perhaps a body hidden from view.

Related: Ian turned, Southwest Florida scrambled. Was there enough time to leave?

The firefighters stepped past pieces of walls, a deck and cinderblock columns. They passed a calculator, a skim board, an unbroken glass bottle of Corona. Tree branches, a wicker chair, metal poles.

All of them had tripped or fallen at some point. They picked up trash — broom handles, a golf club — to steady themselves.

Related: How to cope with Hurricane Ian trauma, stress and anxiety

No survivors here, either. The smell was nothing to worry about.

“North side!” Darley yelled to a teammate. “Open fridge.”

It was their last stop of the day. The team hopped back into a truck and headed to the command post at the edge of town.

Anthony Prado, of the South Florida Urban Search and Rescue Team, moves a door to peek inside a damaged home in Fort Myers Beach.
Anthony Prado, of the South Florida Urban Search and Rescue Team, moves a door to peek inside a damaged home in Fort Myers Beach. [ DOUGLAS R. CLIFFORD | Times ]

• • •

Tampa Bay Times Hurricane Ian coverage

HOW TO HELP: Where to donate or volunteer to help Hurricane Ian victims.

FEMA: Floridians hurt by Ian can now apply for FEMA assistance. Here’s how.

THE STORM HAS PASSED: Now what? Safety tips for returning home.

POST-STORM QUESTIONS: After Hurricane Ian, how to get help with fallen trees, food, damaged shelter.

WEATHER EFFECTS: Hurricane Ian was supposed to slam Tampa Bay head on. What happened?

MORE STORM COVERAGE: Get ready and stay informed at tampabay.com/hurricane.