Kevin continues to be the Everyman of Galveston:
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Galveston has been pushed out of the news by the election and nationwide economic troubles.
The situation here is very mixed. Some people had little damage and were able to fix it promptly. Some kept their jobs. (I am in this group.) Some lost everything they had. Many are somewhere between these extremes.
Though many businesses have bounced back, and many homeowners are busting their butts to clean up, one-third of the population has evaporated, and about half the businesses were not sufficiently insured to reopen. The jobs that those businesses provided are gone. Real-estate and sales-tax dollars that government budgeted for are also gone.
People whose homes were destroyed or so damaged that they are unlivable have received nothing but obfuscation from insurance companies, more than two months on.
Many homeowners will probably walk away from the wreckage and leave the mortgage company and city to sort out the details.
UTMB, the largest employer in Galveston County, has announced the layoff of 3,800 people. That translates into 3,800 households that will see their income reduced by half or entirely. Many of the best physicians have already found positions elsewhere. UTMB was one of the top research and teaching hospitals in the world. It will be a shadow of its former self indefinitely.
We have received help from unexpected sources. A Christian charity called Friend Ships is operating a mission here. (They usually go to places like Haiti, which tells you something.) People with some connection to Galveston who no longer live here have organized clothing drives, book drives, and so forth.
But the restoration of core infrastructure and services, which can be provided only by the city, state, Army Corps of Engineers, and utility companies is too slow to meet the needs of those trying to rebuild.
If you were accustomed to take day trips to Galveston, it is still here and open for business. The beaches, most of Moody Gardens, the San Luis-Holiday Inn complex, and many independent restaurants are open. Dickens on the Strand and the motorcycle rally will be held next month. See
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The only caution to the tourism market is that you can't get a hotel room or RV hookup. You are pretty much limited to a day trip or driving an RV that does not need to be hooked up.
- Jim