Progress report. I've got water mitigation people in the house, ripping up carpet, packing up the kitchen getting ready to demo it. They say I have category 3 water damage, which is apparently as bad as it gets. They're even going to rip up the sheet flooring, which I would probably not have done if I were DYI-ing this. (This is why you don't DIY this kind of recovery!) House got hot today because the A/C coil froze over, indicative of a loose or missing filter allowing dust to coat the intake side. (It's happened before, and I know how to clean it, but you have to shut it off and wait for the ice to melt. Sometimes I light the gas to the heater and run that for a half hour or so, but the flue pipe is broken off at the roof, and the attic vent pipe fell in with the ceiling of the HVAC closet, so I'm thinking that lighting the gas is not a Good Idea.) Anyway, will be cleaning the coil and checking the filter condition first thing in the morning. It probably got soaked and ruined, and I can't believe I didn't examine it already.
I have a mold assessor coming Friday, first available schedule. I have mold in several rooms already, all along the west wall of the ktichen/dining area (the back of the house and the worst roof damage,) both bathrooms, and the laundry room. What visible mold I had already, some so heavy it was fuzzy at the surface, we sprayed with vinegar/hydrogen peroxide solution to try to mitigate. That seems to have helped, those areas are not any worse than they were, and they're not fuzzy any more, either.
I have loss of use coverage, and the desk adjuster in St. Petersburg tried to tell me that "unlivable" meant no running water and unable to cook. I'm not sure how being unable to breathe safely doesn't fit that criteria, so that's where the mold guy comes in.
Power is back on, as is water, although I have no hot water. Same issue, water heater is gas, and the flue for the heater is in the back yard. the part above the roof broke off, and the part below the roof came down with the garage ceiling, so I threw it out, after photographing the wreckage. Again, lighting the gas seems a Bad Idea...
The boil-water requirement was lifted today, so a few minutes of running the taps should have safe water entering the house. Not gonna turn on the icemaker because I'm not sure where the fridge is going to end up as the kitchen demo begins and progresses.
Still camping at work. We are not open in the office, although those of us still in town are supporting customers as best we can. We have no Internet at the office, nor do most of our customers have Internet. We are using our phones for Internet access, and the networks here are saturated; I'm seeing LTE speeds between 750 kbit/s to 1.7 mbit/s, when we're used to at least 45 mbit/s on the phones.
As you may have seen in the news, Verizon was wiped out here. AT&T stayed up, and even gave away free prepaids to Verizon customers, or SIMM cards to those with compatible phones. May be something there about buried fiber vs strung-on-poles fiber... Verizon has been back up and reliable for 2 or 3 days, now, but BOTH networks are experiencing the speeds I mentioned just now. I'm not sure Verizon isn't up by simply buying bandwidth from AT&T. I know that Verizon towers are down, I've seen the pictures, and they've brought in several of those truck/generator towers, but I don't know how those connect to anything.
Verizon is tossing the "access charge" portion of their bill for all customers for three months. I assume that means the service is free, but you're still paying for your phone's financing during that time. There was also an announcement today on the local newspaper's website that Verizon has stated that since they have to rebuild from scratch here, they are going to build it 5G. (No sense building it 4G and having a do-ever in the next year or so... Panama City is now the 5th announced 5G city for Verizon. There was Los Angeles, Houston, Indianapolis, and Sacramento. Now add Panama City. Woot woot! We gon' need new fones, y'all!
I went by the house today, and the crew got the bedroom cleaned out and the furniture moved into other rooms. The furniture is not holding up well, with venner damage and some swollen drawer-fronts. The contents, however, are fine!! I was able to grab some socks, underwear, t-shirts, etc. My desk drawers were OK, too. The desk may fair just fine... it's an antique solid oak teacher's desk that my dad refinished with polyurethane when I was in high school. The drawer contents of that were OK, too, and I retrieved my passport along with some other items from that. My closet seems OK. I grabbed some shirts, jackets, and stuff there. The shelves got wet, from water following the electrical wires into the lamps on the closet ceilings. That happened pretty much all over the house, with lamp globes ending up fuul of water. Only one ceiling fan so fare has turned out unsalvagable, and the range hood fan doesn't work although the lights work. (The range hood wat a water pipe into the kitchen, for sure.) The vent fans in both bathrooms just simply dumped water in to the bathrooms, and the master bath vent is directly over the toilet, so my nice comfy oak toilet seat is all green and fuzzy, now.
Gotten a lot of packing done, kinda just like moving. Just about all of the electronics were OK, and all are packed. Unfortunately, when I buy a piece of electronics, it's original box goes into the attic for use if the component needs to be shipped, or for moving day, should such a day occur again. Amazingly, only ONE of those boxes was unusable! Some needed an awful lot of tape to hold them safely, and I wouldn't trust most of them to UPS, but for my own packing and storage, I'm OK. I will need to keep them dry, though, and the cardboard did get wet, and I don't want to open them up in a few weeks and find all my stuff fuzzy. To that end, they are stacked in the same room one of the big dryers is running in right now.
I'm having to spend more time at work instead of at the house than I would like, but we have a couple of large customers who are major health service providers, including the largest radiology firm in the area. Their business office and radiologist reading rooms are uninhabitable, so today was spent moving radiology reading stations to unused space in their admin building. Even that building may need to be evacuated, as there is visible ceiling damage in all the rooms. We got a large generator hooked up to them the day after, though, so that building has had power and air conditioning (and working landlines!) the entire time. One of the cooling units for the server room was blown away, and the other seems less capable than it was, so we found the server room hovering at about 95 degrees two days after the storm. We went through a huge shutdown, 30+ servers in a particular order, which dropped both the heat output in that room, and the draw on the generator. (Generator output dropped over 40%!!) Over the past few days, we've brought up servers as needed for specific tasks, one of which was payroll. With no Internet, we tethered phones to a server and two computers so the ladies could do their stuff and upload checks to the banks.
So recovery is begun. The beaches areas are practically back to normal. What a difference ten miles makes! In town, One of the Publix stores has been open and is getting pretty much normal service now. It's the ONLY grocery store this side of the bridge over St. Andrews Bay, though. The Home Depot is open, and the Lowe's is working out of a tent in the parking lot. Their storefront is gone, and what they could salvage, and what they've been trucking in, is in the tent. Also, Walmart is open, but almost always at maximum occupancy, with a line outside waiting to get in. Did you even know that there was a maximum occupancy number for WalMart?!?! Gas stations are opening up and lines at the stations are shorter. Again, across the bridge on the beaches side, it's almost back to normal, just drive up to a pump, but gas looks to be a little over a dime a gallon higher over there. Most restaurants are still closed, other than some fast food places with partial menus and no fountain drinks. That should change with the boil-water notice lifting, although they have some flushing and filter-changing to do, I'm sure.
Weather has been amazing. Of course, the two days immediately following were absolutely gorgeous, other than not being able to get anywhere for trees and lines blocking the roads, and the incessant noise of chain saws running. Big storms like this take everything weather-wise with them! It got hot for a couple of days, though, up into the 90s again, and that was before power came back, so no A/C except while you were driving somewhere. Then we had a mild cold front (no weather with it) and it cooled of again. It's only rained once, and that for only about 10 or 15 minutes. This morning it sprinkled, but not enough to even wet the pavement, much less flow into the gutters.
I will say that whatever these out-of-town guys use to get around where they need to be to do their work, it's amazing. No data on the cell phones, so Google Maps and GPS just shows a blank screen unless you had the forethought to download the maps prior to arrival. Street signs are missing, and after dark, there are NO landmarks ANYWHERE! You can see what your headlights show, and you have NO IDEA where you are, even on the biggest main streets of town! You're passing the mall, but you can't see the mall. You don't know how many traffic lights you've been through, because there aren't any traffic lights, just a series of giant, confusing, 4-way stops, which work so well with four lanes on each side! All of that is improving now, as they get lights working (almost 100% now, at least the western side of town,) and power comes back so the buildings along the street are visible.