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Hurricane Irma storm-debris efforts picking up, but many communities still have a long way to go

Hurricane Irma storm-debris efforts picking up, but many communities still have a long way to go

by DeVore Design, October 18, 2017

It’s been more than a month since Hurricane Irma blasted through Central Florida but some streets look like she just left.

“It stinks that it’s still here,” said Andy Gillis, 41, who lives on West Williams Avenue in northwest Orange County and has a mountain of logs and limbs at the side of his driveway. “Pulling out on the road you have to kind of stick your head out around the debris.”

Most local governments say they’re slowly chipping away at curbside heaps, but Altamonte Springs, Edgewood, Lady Lake and Winter Garden all say they are done with pick-up.

Orlando officials estimate they have picked up about half of the 300,000 cubic yards of debris Irma left behind in the City Beautiful, while a project manager in Orange County estimated about 845,000 cubic yards — about 35 percent of Irma’s storm debris in unincorporated Orange — remains on the ground.

Some citizens understand the challenge created by the hurricane, but others are fuming.

Carol Crawford, 69, fired off an email Sunday morning to Orange County Commissioner Pete Clarke and Orange County Mayor Teresa Jacobs because of debris piled in front of her Machette Road home in unincorporated Orange.

The other side of Machette, located in Belle Isle, is debris-free, having been cleaned up over a week ago.

A reply from the mayor’s office, while sympathizing with Crawford, asked for her patience and understanding and provided the retired lawyer an internet link to drop-off sites where county residents can dump debris for free.

“So free drop-off points is your solution for a senior citizen who would have to go buy a truck and trailer, load it and then unload it,” Crawford wrote back. “Your response is nothing but governmental manure.”

Records show Orange’s 311 information line has received nearly 400 requests for special debris pickup and 125 others reporting debris blocking roads, a high-priority call.

But help may be on the way.

“We’ve gotten quite a few crews that have come in recently to help,” said Frank Yokiel, project manager for Orange County Public Works’ engineering division.

Debris-removal crews who finished jobs in Texas and other Florida cities are now digging in here.

Site Solutions of Central Florida, for instance, wrapped up work Thursday in Winter Garden after collecting debris shoved onto city streets by residents in county enclaves.

“We felt we needed to do it because the county’s behind right now and debris might sit out on our major roads for quite some time,” said Mike Bollhoefer, Winter Garden city manager.

Apopka has added more trucks and more crews recently, but turned away other available contractors over pay demands, Mayor Joe Kilsheimer said.

“We’re now working in more neighborhoods simultaneously than we were able to do before. But we still have a lot to pick up,” he said.

Kilsheimer said the city decided not to pay new crews more than those who have been on the job since the cleanup began in Orange County’s second-largest city.

“It wouldn’t be fair,” he said.

Apopka also parted with AshBritt Environmental rather than renegotiate an existing contract with the debris-removal company, one of three firms served with investigative subpoenas Oct. 2 by Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi. She said she was looking into complaints that debris-removal contractors failed to live up to terms of contracts signed before the 2017 hurricane season.

Officials of AshBritt said Wednesday they would perform debris-removal services at pre-Irma contract prices rather than higher fees renegotiated after the storm. Like Apopka, Orange County didn’t renegotiate its deal with AshBritt, which has 67 active contracts in Florida.

Contractors working in Altamonte Springs removed about 46,000 cubic yards of debris from city curbs and rights-of-way. The relatively quick cleanup made residents in neighboring communities take notice.

“We’ve gotten calls from residents outside the city, saying ‘Your streets are clean, mine aren’t. Could you, would you please come out and pick up our stuff, too?’ ” said Frank Martz, Altamonte Springs city manager.

Edgewood Mayor Ray Bagshaw said crews in his city worked fast and smart to move the suburb’s 20,000 cubic yards of storm debris to a 5-acre lot a 6-mile drive from City Hall.

If the city had been forced to haul loads to the county landfill 20 miles away, “it would’ve added weeks” to the cleanup schedule, he said.

Stephen Hudak can be reached at 407-650-6361, shudak@orlandosentinel.com or on Twitter @Bearlando.