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Florida residents wait hours for gas as hundreds of thousands lack power days after Hurricane Ian

Hundreds of thousands of people were stuck without power and other basic needs days after Hurricane Ian ripped through Florida, as recovery from the deadly storm was estimated to easily cost billions of dollars.

First responders were going door-to-door in search of survivors or bodies of people who perished from the Category 4 storm’s whipping winds that topped 150 mph and pounding rain that caused massive flooding.

The storm was believed to have killed at least 73 people in the Sunshine State, with another four deaths in North Carolina, according to an NBC count early Sunday.

Eerie post-apocalyptic scenes of the powerful storm’s aftermath included hours-long lines for gas, and thousands still stuck in shelters.

Rescue efforts also continued on Florida’s barrier islands with the US Coast Guard running evacuations by boat after road access was cut off.

Pine Island was akin to a war zone with many homes completely leveled and boats throw on roadways.

“I thought for sure we were all dying,” said Claire St. Leger, who had nine people in her home when the storm rolled in. “I just sat in an inside room with pillows, I crossed myself so many times, I thought for sure we were dying. Water kept rising.”

Hurricane Ian aftermath
AFP via Getty Images/ Ricardo Arduengo

Beach cottages and a motel on the shores of Sanibel Island with a population of 6,000 people were destroyed by the fierce storm with roof damage sustained to every home.

“It’s all just completely gone,” Sanibel’s city manager Dana Souza, said.

“Our electric system is pretty much destroyed, our sewer system has been damaged badly and our public water supply is under assessment.”

About 10,000 people were in stuck shelters in the state, the Miami Herald reported.

One Sarasota County man lost his small mobile home, but was opting not to stay in a shelter.

“It’s ruined. There’s nothing left,” Ed Madden, 60, told the Herald. “I really don’t know what I’m going to do right now. I don’t know where I’m going to go, to be honest. I haven’t thought that far ahead.”

Tensions ran high on long gas lines with one woman in Lee County even accused of pointing a gun at a car with two women inside she wrongly assumed were trying to cut in front.

One man told the New York Times Saturday he waited on a line for six hours to fill up four cans of gas.

“Where’s all the fuel?” said Gary Jaworski, who got on line at 7 a.m. Saturday.

“Every gas station or filling station was to have a generator prepared to go at all times.”

Another man waited in his truck for hours two different days, but left each time before ever pumping gas, according to the Times.

Mark Eidys ended up sitting in a lawn chair while waiting in the walk-up line with three gas can, the Times reported.

As of Sunday morning, 850,000 homes and businesses lacked electricity as Florida utilities raced to the turn the lights back on. That’s a sharp reduction though from the peak of 2.67 million homes and businesses that didn’t have power.

Insurers estimated the recovery from the storm would be between $28 billion and $47 billion in claims, which could be the highest in Florida’s history, according to US property data and the analytics company CoreLogic.

Damaged florida home
Riley Perkofski/U S Coast Guard/

In South Carolina, half of Pawleys Island had no power after the storm ran through the vacation spot that is 75 miles off the coast of Charleston.

“We watched it hit the pier and saw the pier disappear,” Eddie Wilder said. “We watched it crumble and and watched it float by with an American flag.”

President Biden and First Lady Jill Biden were expected to travel to Florida Wednesday after they stop in Puerto Rico Monday which is still recovering from Hurricane Fiona, the White House said late Saturday.

The downgraded storm went further north Sunday with forecasts predicting rain in parts of Virginia, West Virginia, Maryland southern Pennsylvania, the National Hurricane Center said with the possibility of flash flooding.

With Post wires