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International union steps in to help firefighters rebuild their homes after Hurricane Ian

Cape Coral fire chief Christopher Moore assesses the damage done after three feet of water flooded his house.
Gerard Albert III
/
WLRN News
Cape Coral fire chief Christopher Moore assesses the damage done after three feet of water flooded his house.

Firefighters in Southwest Florida have been working almost nonstop to respond to emergencies after Hurricane Ian.
Not only do they have to worry about keeping the community safe, many local firefighters have damage to their own homes, and work often comes first.

Cape Coral Fire Chief Christopher Moore was only able to return to check on his house 20 hours after the storm hit.

"When we got here the house was in shambles, everything inside. I think one way to describe it it's almost like a washing machine clothes furniture chairs that were normally in one place in the house were in other rooms upside down smashed through walls,” he said.

He took in the damage then turned around and went back to the station. There was a backlog of emergency calls.
Since then, the chief and his staff haven’t stopped working to make sure residents are safe. So Moore hasn’t had much time to care for his house, which flooded with about three feet of water.

“We realized we were going to have a lot of personal loss, but that gets pushed to the side to focus on what's at hand,” he said, speaking on behalf of himself and his crew.

A week after the storm, help arrived from across the state.

"This house in particular is probably the worst house that we've been to today,“ said Keith Costa, a Fort Lauderdale firefighter and member of the International Association of Fire Fighters.

Wednesday afternoon his team started work on Moore’s home.

A Fort Lauderdale firefighter removes a door frame in Christopher Moore's Cape Coral home.
Gerard Albert III
/
WLRN News
A Fort Lauderdale firefighter removes a door frame in Christopher Moore's Cape Coral home.

Costa and his crew are part of a larger group of firefighters stationed in Bonita Springs. They come on their days off. Some go to work on houses, others hand out water and other supplies. The union sends crews to houses of firefighters who are working around the clock on other missions.

At Moore’s home, a group worked to chainsaw through fallen trees in the backyard. The pile of tree limbs grew taller than the one story home. The volunteers moved furniture to dry out in the patio. And boxes of family photos filled the rest of the space.

Inside, another group worked to pull off door frames, cut through drywall and remove the flooring.

"This house in particular is probably the worst house that we've been to today."
Keith Costa, a Fort Lauderdale firefighter and member of the International Association of Fire Fighters

“Literally everything that was below that water line or near it is just getting ripped out,” Costa said.
Costa and the others worked through the heat with a smile. They told jokes and drank coconut water. Moore’s house was the fourth one that day.

“It's in our nature, we come out every day we respond to 911 calls for other people. And in the event of a storm like this where we're off duty, we want to help our brothers and sisters out is just what we do,” he said.

Moore has been sleeping at the fire station and will likely have months of work ahead of him. But that process was sped up, at least a little bit, from the help of other first responders.

“What these gentlemen are doing right now, it will definitely relieve a lot of stress," Moore said. "I've been trying to move out equipment or like a wet mattress, one person can barely move it. And the amount of work they've done would have taken me a month to do it ”

The firefighters from Fort Lauderdale worked through the afternoon to gut the house. Moore, who has lived there for 32 years, will have to remodel and replace almost everything.

"For me, the special memories are where our children were raised, they grew up here all through school, have gone on to have their own family. Now the grandkids come to the house. My daughter's in college. It's going to be tough for my daughter to come home and realize nothing she remembers that the house is left," Moore said. "So that's going to be very sad.”

WLRN News