Bush surveys hurricane damage

Death toll is at least 16

? Residents left homeless by Hurricane Charley’s 145 mph winds dug through their ravaged homes Sunday, sweeping up shattered glass and rescuing what they could as President Bush promised rapid delivery of disaster aid.

With temperatures in the 90s and humidity that made it feel hotter, people waited with carts in long lines to buy ice. Supermarkets gave away water in five cities as just under 1 million people remained without power and 2,300 stayed in emergency shelters.

“It’s as close to hell as I can think of,” said Khoum Khampapha, a resident of Easy Street in Port Charlotte, as he looked around his neighborhood of gutted homes. “It’s just breathtaking.”

As the storm weakened off the coast of New England, Bush surveyed the devastation in Florida, where the storm caused billions of dollars in damage and killed at least 16 people.

In and around Punta Gorda, trailer after trailer lay toppled. Others were blown apart entirely, exposing interior walls that had been pushed down flat, with doorways leading to nowhere. Other rooms stood, but without ceilings or roofs to shelter them from the open sky.

Emergency officials pronounced Charley the worst hurricane to hit Florida since Hurricane Andrew in 1992. Twenty-six deaths were directly linked to Andrew, which caused $19.9 billion in insured property losses.

The hardest-hit areas appeared to be the retirement community of Punta Gorda and Port Charlotte in Charlotte County, though federal officials expanded the disaster aid zone to 25 counties on Sunday.

President visits

From his helicopter Marine One, Bush could see debris from trailer park homes strewn across green fields and roofs that had been torn off hangars at Charlotte County Airport. He consoled storm victims in Punta Gorda.

“All the clothes that I’ve got now is just what I’m wearing,” resident George Nickols told Bush during the president’s 2 1/2-hour visit.

President Bush, second from left, and Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, left, are briefed by Federal Emergency Management Agency Director Mike Brown, center, on the damage caused by Hurricane Charley at Charlotte County Airport in Punta Gorda, Fla. The president surveyed damage Sunday in the state.

The president promised rapid assistance for Florida, where officials estimated damages of up to $11 billion to insured homes alone.

“There’s a lot of supplies surging this way,” Bush said.

Asked about why he made such a quick trip to Florida in this election year, the president said: “If I didn’t come, they would’ve said we should have been here more rapidly.”

The Federal Emergency Management Agency was sending teams of medical, urban rescue and communication workers; at least 60 semitrailers containing cots, blankets, meals, portable toilets, wash kits and other necessities; and truckloads of water and ice.

FEMA said the state had requested catastrophic housing for 10,000 people, and more than 4,000 National Guard troops have been activated.

“It’s going to be awesome — shock and awe — that’s our goal,” said Gov. Jeb Bush, the president’s younger brother.

Some still missing

Officials have said hundreds of people were unaccounted for but still had no official count on Sunday. The search for missing people was slow in some areas because downed power lines and debris was making the search dangerous, law enforcement officials said.

Charlotte County Chief Deputy John Davenport said the search of mobile home parks was complete and crews were proceeding to check houses.

Earlier, Charley killed four people in Cuba and one in Jamaica.

Officials were still assessing the total damage caused in Florida. An initial estimate of $5 billion to $11 billion was based on the value of homes and insurance policies in Charley’s path, state Chief Financial Officer Tom Gallagher said. Uninsured homes, businesses and cars were not included.

Meanwhile, the fourth and fifth named storms of the Atlantic hurricane season were out at sea Sunday. Tropical Storm Danielle formed Friday and developed into a hurricane Saturday but was several days from land.

Tropical Storm Earl had sustained winds of 45 mph and was centered about 90 miles west of Grenada Sunday afternoon.