Social The 2017 Atlantic Hurricane Season (Harvey/Irma/Maria PBP)

94-year-old sues Florida nursing home where 8 residents died in wake of Hurricane Irma
By M.L. NESTEL | Sep 17, 2017



A 94-year-old woman living at the Florida nursing home where eight residents died after an air conditioning system failed in the wake of Hurricane Irma is now suing the rehabilitation center, claiming it showed "negligence and reckless indifference" toward its elderly residents.

Rosa Cabrera's legal guardian filed the lawsuit in a Broward County state court on Friday on her behalf against the Rehabilitation Center at Hollywood Hills in Hollywood, Florida.

Eight of the nursing home's residents died last week after the facility's electrical system for its air conditioning stopped working in the aftermath of the hurricane that hit Florida on September 10.

Cabrera is a double amputee "without the ability to walk or live independently," the complaint says. She sustained heat-related injuries and had to be hospitalized as a result of the days-long failure of the nursing home's air conditioning system, the complaint alleges.

"As the hurricane approached, Ms. Cabrera was told by the Rehab Center that she would not be evacuated, but would be safe and cared for" at the nursing home, the complaint says. She did not know that the nursing home lacked a generator to power its air conditioning system in the event of a power failure, the lawsuit alleges.


The complaint further contends that the Rehabilitation Center at Hollywood Hills should have known that the storm would cause a power outage, and that if that happened "the temperature inside the facility would be unsafe and dangerous" for its more than 150 residents.

"Notwithstanding these foreseeable, dangerous, and life-threatening conditions, the defendant made no effort to relocate the elderly and vulnerable residents or to secure an adequate cooling system for the center," the complaint says.


The lawsuit alleges that the Rehabilitation Center failed to adequately prepare for Irma after hurricane and storm-surge warnings were first issued for Broward County on Sept. 7.

Hill and Knowlton Strategies, a public relations firm representing the nursing home told ABC News, "It would be inappropriate to discuss a pending suit. However, counsel will be reviewing the filing."

Most of the eight residents of the Rehabilitation Center at Hollywood Hills who died had been treated for respiratory distress, dehydration, and heat-related issues, officials said. Some of the patients admitted to nearby Memorial Regional Hospital felt temperatures of up to 106 degrees, hospital officials said Thursday.

A timeline released by the public relations firm for the nursing home says that the center's staff reached out repeatedly to emergency hotlines and the local power utility in the days after the air conditioning system failed on Sept. 10.

Nursing home officials also called the personal cell phone of Florida Gov. Rick Scott seeking help, the governor's office confirmed to ABC News on Saturday.

Scott's office said the messages left on his cell phone were referred to two other agencies.

“Every call made to the governor from facility management was referred to the Agency for Health Care Administration and the Florida Department of Health, and quickly returned,” John Tupps, Scott's communications director, said Friday,

In a statement, the Florida Department of Health said, “It is 100 percent the responsibility of health care professionals to preserve life by acting in the best interest of the health and well-being of their patients. Let’s be clear -- this facility is located across the street from one of Florida’s largest hospitals, which never lost power and had fully operating facilities. The tragic and senseless loss at Hollywood Hills Rehabilitation Center is the subject of a criminal homicide investigation by law enforcement.”

http://abcnews.go.com/US/94-year-sues-florida-nursing-home-residents-died/story?id=49907255
 
Intensifying Hurricane Maria is a severe threat to the Caribbean and Puerto Rico
By Jason Samenow | September 18

imrs.php

The wicked 2017 hurricane season is set to deliver its next two punishing blows from Hurricanes Maria and Jose. In both the Caribbean and along the Atlantic coast of the Northeast United States, conditions are set to deteriorate rapidly through Wednesday as these storms arrive.

Of the two storms, however, Maria is the much more serious hurricane. The strengthening Category 3 storm with maximum sustained winds of 120 mph has the potential to cause widespread destruction along its path from the central Lesser Antilles through Puerto Rico.

“Maria is likely to affect Puerto Rico as an extremely dangerous major hurricane, and a hurricane watch is in effect for that island,” the National Hurricane Center said Monday.

While Jose is capable of producing coastal flooding and pockets of damaging wind from Delaware to Massachusetts, its effects are most likely to resemble those of a strong Nor’easter – rather than a devastating hurricane.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...crape-northeast-coast/?utm_term=.b05387449592
 
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Intensifying Hurricane Maria is a severe threat to the Caribbean and Puerto Rico
By Jason Samenow | September 18

imrs.php


The wicked 2017 hurricane season is set to deliver its next two punishing blows from Hurricanes Maria and Jose. In both the Caribbean and along the Atlantic coast of the Northeast United States, conditions are set to deteriorate rapidly through Wednesday as these storms arrive.

Of the two storms, however, Maria is the much more serious hurricane. The strengthening Category 3 storm with maximum sustained winds of 120 mph has the potential to cause widespread destruction along its path from the central Lesser Antilles through Puerto Rico.

“Maria is likely to affect Puerto Rico as an extremely dangerous major hurricane, and a hurricane watch is in effect for that island,” the National Hurricane Center said Monday.

While Jose is capable of producing coastal flooding and pockets of damaging wind from Delaware to Massachusetts, its effects are most likely to resemble those of a strong Nor’easter – rather than a devastating hurricane.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...crape-northeast-coast/?utm_term=.b05387449592

Oh crap, it's at the M&M level now :eek:

That's worse than the Hot pocket level or the Skittles level
 
I no longer want to live in the carribean.
 
Intensifying Hurricane Maria is a severe threat to the Caribbean and Puerto Rico
By Jason Samenow | September 18

imrs.php


The wicked 2017 hurricane season is set to deliver its next two punishing blows from Hurricanes Maria and Jose. In both the Caribbean and along the Atlantic coast of the Northeast United States, conditions are set to deteriorate rapidly through Wednesday as these storms arrive.

Of the two storms, however, Maria is the much more serious hurricane. The strengthening Category 3 storm with maximum sustained winds of 120 mph has the potential to cause widespread destruction along its path from the central Lesser Antilles through Puerto Rico.

“Maria is likely to affect Puerto Rico as an extremely dangerous major hurricane, and a hurricane watch is in effect for that island,” the National Hurricane Center said Monday.

While Jose is capable of producing coastal flooding and pockets of damaging wind from Delaware to Massachusetts, its effects are most likely to resemble those of a strong Nor’easter – rather than a devastating hurricane.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...crape-northeast-coast/?utm_term=.b05387449592

My daughters name is Maria Jose.

Now im going to call her Maria Jose the stormbringer.
 
We've been listening to Observer radio tonight, it usually just plays music at this hour but it's staying on doing a storm watch for some of the other islands because their stations went down. There were people calling in from Dominica earlier and their family members living in Antigua (there's a bunch of them). Observer is a #fakenews outlet that's circling the drain but I have to give them props for the job they're doing tonight. It's windy in Antigua right now but they're getting lucky again and missing the storm.

Dominica is a very poor place (hence why they immigrate to Antigua) and it's the most mountainous island in the Caribbean so I expect the devastation to be catastrophic. There's nowhere on the island where you aren't on a hill. The mudslides are gonna be really really bad. Earlier tonight the PM of Dominica was posting of FB that his roof blew off and his house was flooding. Saying he was completely at the mercy of the hurricane. Here's his statement from like half hour ago:

DKEI3Q1V4AATco9.jpg:large
 
This season has been insane, you would never see this many storms of this magnitude in one season. Man-made climate change, wrath of God, whatever the fuck it is these islands won't be able to survive if this becomes the new normal.
 
Generators, butane burners, canned food, and 5-gallon water containers in disasters-prone states pretty much sells themselves. No community leaders actually have to go on TV to tell you to get those essential items, it's just simple survival logic, really.

When that big earthquake hits NorCal, I reckon we'll be able to live and eat quite comfortably for weeks in SoCal with no power and tap water.

Might be just a little icky and smelly though, can't waste the water reserves on shower, but even that inconvenience could be solved with a few boxes of babywipes.
You are making the giant assumption that the water canals through central ca, that allows u socalians to steal our water, will not be damaged.
 
We've been listening to Observer radio tonight, it usually just plays music at this hour but it's staying on doing a storm watch for some of the other islands because their stations went down. There were people calling in from Dominica earlier and their family members living in Antigua (there's a bunch of them). Observer is a #fakenews outlet that's circling the drain but I have to give them props for the job they're doing tonight. It's windy in Antigua right now but they're getting lucky again and missing the storm.

Dominica is a very poor place (hence why they immigrate to Antigua) and it's the most mountainous island in the Caribbean so I expect the devastation to be catastrophic. There's nowhere on the island where you aren't on a hill. The mudslides are gonna be really really bad. Earlier tonight the PM of Dominica was posting of FB that his roof blew off and his house was flooding. Saying he was completely at the mercy of the hurricane. Here's his statement from like half hour ago:

DKEI3Q1V4AATco9.jpg:large

Here's the direct link to the Dominican Prime Minister's FB post:


The National Hurricane Center confirmed that Maria struck Dominica hard at Category-5 with 160mph winds, and is heading straight for Puerto Rico next.

maria_track.jpg
 
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Dominica PM: Hurricane Maria 'devastates' island
By Euan McKirdy, Joe Sterling and Holly Yan | September 19, 2017

170919054014-hurricane-maria-category-5-path-091917-530a-exlarge-169.jpg

The Caribbean island of Dominica has been "devastated" by Hurricane Maria, the country's Prime Minister tells CNN.

The powerful storm, which made landfall Monday night, has since been downgraded to a Category 4 with sustained winds of 155 mph. After it passes over Dominica it is on course to score a direct hit on the US territory of Puerto Rico -- the first hurricane of its strength to do so in 85 years.

"We're just waiting for daybreak to do an assessment of the damage," Dominica Prime Minister Roosevelt Skerrit told CNN's Rosemary Church.

"Our first order of business will be search and rescue to ensure we can account for every single citizen and residents who were on the island during this really devastating hurricane."

A statement from the National Hurricane Center (NHC) said that its record-topping winds reached 160 miles per hour when it hit the island nation. In an update the Center said that reports "indicate significant damage to structures has occurred in Dominica."

Maria made landfall on Dominica late Monday, coming ashore at 9:15 p.m. ET. It was so powerful that it tore the roof off the Prime Minister's residence.

"Personally I was affected," Skerrit said. "The roof of the residence caved in because of the strength of the wind. But I was taken to safe ground by ... police officers, thank God.

"This hurricane stayed in the country for a very, very long time and (was) just unrelenting. I don't think there were very many roofs which would survive the hurricane."

In a Facebook post he added: "So far we have lost all what money can buy and replace.

"My greatest fear for the morning is that we will wake to news of serious physical injury and possible deaths as a result of likely landslides triggered by persistent rains."

The storm will continue moving toward Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands as a strong Category 4 or a Category 5 and is not expected to diminish in strength.

Relentless march

After Dominica, Puerto Rico is in Maria's sights. It is moving toward the island as an "extremely dangerous major hurricane, and a hurricane warning has been issued for that island," the hurricane center said.
Puerto Rico's governor, Ricardo Rosselló, has declared a state of emergency ahead of that landfall, which will likely happen Wednesday.

A hurricane warning from the NHC remains in effect for Guadeloupe, Dominica, St. Kitts, Nevis, and Montserrat, the US and British Virgin Islands as well as Puerto Rico, Culebra, and Vieques.
US President Donald Trump issued an emergency declaration for the US territory for federal assistance to augment the territory's storm-response initiatives.

The ferocity of Maria bears striking similarities to Hurricane Andrew, the Category 5 hurricane which hit the Bahamas and Florida in 1992, says CNN meterologist Pedram Javaheri. Both storms are compact, and Maria's wind speed comes close to that of Hurricane Andrew -- 165 mph -- when it hit southern Florida.

http://www.cnn.com/2017/09/18/americas/atlantic-storms-maria-jose-lee/index.html
 
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So apparently at least 6 people died in this one village in Dominica, I heard on the radio. There are still large parts of the island where there's no contact with anyone, they expect a lot more fatalities unfortunately. Earlier today they were contacting people with ham radio. The rebuilding process is gonna be a long one.
 

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