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Residents and business owners return to Holmes Beach

Residents and business owners return to Holmes Beach
This beachfront home along Avenue F in Holmes Beach was demolished. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

HOLMES BEACH – Residents and business owners began returning to Holmes Beach on Saturday to assess the damage inflicted by Hurricane Helene.

At 10 a.m. Saturday morning, Mayor Judy Titsworth and Police Chief Bill Tokajer greeted the first wave of arrivals, some of whom passed through Holmes Beach on their way to Anna Maria, with law enforcement personnel checking for re-entry tags or other forms of proof of residency or business ownership.

“The chief and mayor have met and the mayor has asked to let residents and business owners to be allowed to enter the city to start their cleanup efforts,” said the reopening notice posted at the Holmes Beach Police Department Facebook page earlier that day.

With Cortez Bridge vehicular access still restricted, a law enforcement-monitored bar­ricade was deployed at the south end of the city to prevent motor­ists from entering Bradenton Beach through Holmes Beach.

Residents and business owners return to Holmes Beach
A Holmes Beach police officer was stationed near the barricaded Bradenton Beach border Saturday afternoon. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

As Sunday unfolded, Tokajer decided to eliminate the checkpoint and he explained his decision in another Facebook message.

“Today, we were allowing the residents, employees and contracted cleaning crews to enter the Island. In the first three hours of the checkpoint, we did not have to turn anyone away and the line of cars was backed up past 75th Street causing huge delays. I decided it would be more helpful to the residents to get them, their cleaning crews and employees onto the Island faster so they are not sitting in traffic for hours…The curfew is still in place from dusk to dawn and it will remain in place until the police chiefs decide it is no longer necessary. We will still be closing access to the Island at 7 p.m.”

DAMAGE AND RECOVERY

A late Saturday afternoon tour of Holmes Beach revealed the damage done and the recovery efforts underway.

The stretch of Gulf Drive between Walgreens pharmacy and Skinny’s restaurant was limited to a single lane carved out of the sand by a front-end loader.

Residents and business owners return to Holmes Beach
Gulf Drive began with a single lane in the sand. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

At the five-unit, ground-level Bamboo Apartments vacation rental complex, St. Petersburg-based owners Alice and Stephen Sutton and their sons had already removed the carpeting and other items damaged by the floodwaters that they said could have been much worse.

Residents and business owners return to Holmes Beach
Holmes Beach vacation rental owner Alice Torres Sutton shows how high the storm surge rose. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

Alice, the third-generation owner, said, “This is the only time we’ve ever flooded.”

With some drywall replacement potentially looming, Alice had already cancelled their guest reservations for the coming week and possibly until the end of October.

At Manatee Beach, a heavy equipment operator was remov­ing sand piled up on Anna Maria Island Beach Café’s beachfront patio.

Residents and business owners return to Holmes Beach
A heavy equipment operator spent Saturday afternoon removing sand from the patio at the Anna Maria Island Beach Café at Manatee Beach.

A large puddle covered much of the Gulf Drive S-curve near the beach parking lot and some traffic signals worked and some did not. Throughout the city, water, sand and mud were common sights and many property owners had already hauled their damaged furnishings and belongings to the curb.

Residents and business owners return to Holmes Beach
Hurricane-damaged furniture and home goods sat in front of this Holmes Beach home. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

Along Avenue F, Hurricane Helene demolished two beach­front homes, severely damaged others and partially buried an SUV.

Residents and business owners return to Holmes Beach
Hurricane Helene tore apart this house along Avenue F. – Joe Hendricks | Sun
Residents and business owners return to Holmes Beach
This beachfront home in Holmes Beach sustained heavy damage. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

On Sunday evening, Titsworth said, “Holmes Beach was totally devastated from the flood waters. The Holmes Beach police, public works, building and code enforcement departments have been working non-stop and we were able to quickly get property owners back on the Island to assess their damage and begin cleaning up. I had 3 feet of water in my home and lost most everything. I have much empathy for our property owners as to the magnitude of the devastation. I can’t thank FPL enough for getting our power back on so quickly and the county’s rapid response in getting our lift stations back in operation was commendable. We will get through this recovery together.”

Approximately two feet of stand washed up against this auxiliary building at the Bamboo Apartments in Holmes Beach . - Joe Hendricks | Sun

Approximately two feet of stand washed up against this auxiliary building at the Bamboo Apartments in Holmes Beach . - Joe Hendricks | Sun

One of the Martinique condo buildings was missing some roofing material. - Joe Hendricks | Sun

One of the Martinique condo buildings was missing some roofing material. - Joe Hendricks | Sun

Floodwaters rearranged the inventory at the Holmes Beach Ace Hardware store. - Joe Hendricks | Sun

Floodwaters rearranged the inventory at the Holmes Beach Ace Hardware store. - Joe Hendricks | Sun

This vehicle was partially buried along Avenue F in Holmes Beach. - Joe Hendricks | Sun

This vehicle was partially buried along Avenue F in Holmes Beach. - Joe Hendricks | Sun

Hurricane Helene pushed a lot of stand up this beachfront home in Holmes Beach. - Joe Hendricks | Sun

Hurricane Helene pushed a lot of stand up this beachfront home in Holmes Beach. - Joe Hendricks | Sun

The deck on this beachfront home in Holmes Beach is now tilted. - Joe Hendricks | Sun

The deck on this beachfront home in Holmes Beach is now tilted. - Joe Hendricks | Sun

Damaged belongings are common sight in Holmes Beach. - Joe Hendricks | Sun

Damaged belongings are common sight in Holmes Beach. - Joe Hendricks | Sun

A buoy washed ashore in Holmes Beach. - Joe Hendricks | Sun

A buoy washed ashore in Holmes Beach. - Joe Hendricks | Sun

The storm surge left sand piled high against the Anna Maria Island Beach Café tiki-bar. - Joe Hendricks | Sun

The storm surge left sand piled high against the Anna Maria Island Beach Café tiki-bar. - Joe Hendricks | Sun