MARSH HARBOUR – Flying over the coastline of The Abaco Islands, days after Category 5 Hurricane Dorian and her 185 mile-an-hour winds tore through them, the thought of rebuilding feels overwhelming.
It is hard to know where to start when the islands’ infrastructure has completely collapsed.
“You can say ‘Nippers’, just about anywhere in the United States. If anyone’s ever been here, they know it. It’s gone,” said Nicholas Mastroianni, over a helicopter headset, as we flew past the famous Bahamian bar. “I’m speechless to tell you the truth. It’s unbelievable.”
Since Wednesday, Nicholas and his father, Harbourside developer and Jupiter resident Nick Mastroianni have rescued nearly 80 Bahamians and sent over 14,000 pounds of donated supplies by paying for cargo planes and jets to get people out through their family’s foundation.
Saturday’s flight is another rescue mission, and the first time either of the Mastroiannis have set foot in the Bahamas since the storm.
“It looks like a combat zone,” said helicopter pilot Jim Holmes. “The wreckage is just, oh my God,” Mastroianni said.
Many places are still only accessible my helicopter, and areas around Marsh Harbour are no exception.
We land and find a group of doctors from Martin County working out of the airport. “Is the Black Hawk still coming,” one of them asks. “They are going to puddle jump here, and then head to Fox Town to get people out,” another answers.
The doctors and first responders came from Cleveland Clinic, the Martin County Sheriff’s Office and Martin County Fire Rescue. They came to operate on people. Now, they are just trying to get people out.
“The worst thing we have seen so far since we got here was in Fox Town, said Dr. Michael Ferraro. “Fox Town has been completely cutoff by the bridge. The bridge is completely wiped out.
“They said they have only had two flights in and out of there. We were actually able to secure two black hawks to do a humanitarian drop in there today.”
At the airfield we also find a group of Bahamians who survived the storm.
“We are evacuating this place. That is exactly what we are doing here,” said Rubin Tecy.
He cannot forget the sound Dorian’s winds made as they passed over his home, taking his roof with them. “They sounded like murders, you know? Real murders. It is almost basically like a war zone more or less. It’s almost like a hurricane with tornadoes inside of a hurricane.”
Another man, Allintino Joseph also has no where to go, and most of the flights to Marsh Harbour are prioritizing women and children first.
“Most of our houses are destroyed. We don’t have any electricity. We don’t have any water. Even if we have supplies and stuff, where are we going to put it?,” said Joseph.
Joseph says people cannot stay on the island, because dead bodies are contaminating any water supply that is left. The tropical paradise he calls home is now unrecognizable.
“There is no more life on this island. I never imagined it. I was telling my family earlier, the only time I see things like this happen is in movies. I never thought that my life would end up like this.”
Unfortunately, this isn’t the group of people the Mastroianni’s came here to rescue. There is only so much room on the plane, and these guys are gonna have to wait for the next flight.
“It is something you just cannot erase from your mind. I cannot begin to imagine the people that stayed here lived through it,” Mastroianni said on our way back to Nassau.
While we were in the air,Nick Mastroianni, Nicholas’ father, handed out thousands of dollars in cash to Bahamians waiting at the airport in Nassau and at a local shelter. Some burst into tears when they are handed the money. For Bahamians already in Nassau, cash is the only thing standing between them and a commercial flight off the island, away from the hell they’ve been living the past several days.
The Mastroiannis rescued five people during their mission Saturday. Tomorrow night on WPTV, you will hear from one of the women rescued. She shares her story of how she fought for her life as the eye of the storm passed over her home. Plus, find out the common household item she and a handful of family and neighbors used for protection for the storm, even when their roofs were taken off.
article from WPTV