Three years after Hurricane Ian slammed into Fort Myers Beach, jackhammers still echo along the barrier island’s main road, where new houses and businesses are going up next to vacant lots and the shells of buildings gutted by the storm.
“We are nowhere near where we thought we would be three years ago today,” says Jacki Liszak, chief executive of the Fort Myers Beach Chamber of Commerce, who owned a small hotel that the hurricane washed away. “I don’t think we understood what happened to us — the extent of it.”
The town emerging from the storm’s aftermath could be out of reach financially for many who called it home before. Sky-high costs for construction and property insurance now threaten to squeeze out a lot of the family-run hotels that characterized Fort Myers Beach. And there’s little hope that the store clerks and bartenders who once lived there will be able to afford it anymore. In their place, a lot of locals expect more big resorts and expensive homes fortified against hurricanes.
“That gentrification is a real thing, the change in the cost is a real thing,” says Rob Fowler, president of Fowler Construction & Development, a local builder. “And it all adds up to the fact that only well-heeled players can play now.”
The changes unfolding in Fort Myers Beach are an extreme version of what’s happening throughout southwest Florida. Older, wealthier people have been flocking to the region for years. That fueled an affordable housing crisis, which was amplified by Hurricane Ian. Rising prices for home and flood insurance have added to the problem, leaving working- and middle-class families struggling with the costs of living in a disaster-prone area, according to Realtors.
The challenges Florida faces, heightened by a warming planet, are playing out nationwide. Home insurance premiums across the United States have been increasing, in part because climate change contributes to more-intense storms, floods and wildfires that damage and destroy property…