Dear Alaskan,

On September 16, remnants of Typhoon Merbok produced widespread damage to communities in Western Alaska—flooding homes and businesses, damaging infrastructure for power and water, as well as roads and bridges; and impacting approximately 1,000 miles of coastline. I monitored the storm closely and after receiving the initial reports of the impacts, I headed to impacted communities – Elim, Nome and Golovin, and was joined by Representative Peltola in a visit to Hooper Bay and Chevak – to see firsthand the extent of the damage. With cold weather and freeze-up right around the corner, it is critical that those in the impacted regions have the resources necessary to provide heating fuel for winter and to quickly continue the process of rebuilding.

We are fortunate to have well-prepared state and local emergency management teams, skilled first responders, and dedicated public works personnel on the ground immediately following the storm. I thank each and every person who has pitched in – whether it be a community member helping out a neighbor, National Guard members stationed throughout various communities, local leadership who continue to provide assurance and guidance to your communities, and so many others.

U.S. Senator Dan Sullivan, Representative Mary Sattler Peltola, Governor Dunleavy and I were united in advocating for Alaska to have as much immediate support as possible and our efforts paid off. We recently welcomed announcements that the President issued a major disaster declaration to support Western Alaska’s recovery and also approved our request to waive 100 percent of the state’s cost share for individual and public assistance for recovery efforts for the next 30 days.

This federal assistance is critical for the recovery of the impacted communities, but we have to work together to ensure everyone has the resources and information they need. For questions on applying for aid, please email storm@ready.alaska.gov.

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VISITING STORM IMPACTED COMMUNITIES


NOME

In Nome I was able to listen and share information on federal aid opportunities at a community meeting, joined by Rep. Mary Peltola, Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) Administrator Deanne Criswell, Alaska Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Management Director Bryan Fisher, and Mayor John Handeland of the City of Nome. We saw the total loss of many subsistence camps and sites, with costly equipment strewn about in the typhoon’s wake.


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Speaking to community members in Nome.


GOLOVIN

I was initially only scheduled to make one stop in Golovin, however, upon meeting with FEMA Administrator Criswell in Nome, I pressed the importance of her and her team not only visiting Nome, but also a village while in-region. Because of that advocacy, we were able to join the National Guard for assisting with a brief visit in Golovin, where the FEMA Administrator was able to see increased resource and logistical challenges as residents began their home repair. Communities may be close together on a map, but experience a range of unique impacts as a result of Typhoon Merbok. In Golovin we saw houses that were literally moved from their foundations due to storm surge and inundated the community.

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On the National Guard flight to Golovin.

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Assessing flood damage to homes.

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ELIM 


The community of Elim suffered significant damage to their shoreline and transportation infrastructure, including 8 miles of an 11-mile road to the subsistence use area of Moses Point. I saw how the main frontage road, previously paved with asphalt, had been peeled up and washed away, and how a house teetering over a bluff was stabilized with a telephone pole as the tribe worked to save it. On top of road damage, entire fish camps were washed out and they lost primary cranberry patches, which provide their only source of vitamin C for the winter.

 

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In front of the lifelong home of an elder, located on the edge of a bluff, temporarily being held up by a telephone pole. The ground beneath it – and entire swaths along the surrounding coast – had been completely obliterated.

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Surveying damage to Elim’s roads: 8 miles of the 11 mile road to Moses Point – a subsistence use area vital to their livelihoods –  was wiped out during the storm.

 

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HOOPER BAY

In Hooper Bay Representative Peltola and I took a walking tour to survey the damage. It was unnerving to see snowmachines, motors, and boats littered across the tundra – all devastating losses of tools and equipment that are vital to their survival and the subsistence way of life. A number of homes experienced severe water and structural damage – including homes moved off of their foundations – displacing multiple families.

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Walking tour of storm damaged homes and infrastructure.

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CHEVAK

Chevak had declared a state of emergency just days before our visit. We went to the Ninglikfak River where subsistence skiffs are usually kept but instead saw damaged and capsized boats, and completely destroyed subsistence items such as nets and drying racks. Chevak, like all of the communities we visited, saw considerable shoreline erosion from the powerful storm.

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