Former Wilmette resident, Rob Paddor, safely evacuated but is eager to get back to do repairs on his Sanibel Island home.
"We are all coming back. There's no doubt in our mind and God willing, we got hit once and we won't see it until after I'm dead and gone," Paddor said.She's worked for CNA Insurance in Chicago for 30 years but lives in Winter Springs, Florida."Anything that was touched by the water is contaminated. You can't take that," Bush said. "If anything was high up in the closet, you might be able to salvage it.""It's devastating.
"It's an incredibly emotional moment for you when you walk in and there are young people and children who are suffering," McDaniel said. "You want to do everything you can.""We were working with a gentlemanwho was suffering and when he realized how far we had come, he broke down in tears and, you know, that gets emotion from you too," McDaniel said.
The Red Cross is also sending teams to assist with the physical and mental health of those trying to recover.
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