Many Keys residents taking wait-and-see approach to Ike


The hurricane is predicted to hit the U.S. between the Florida Panhandle and the Texas coast.

KEY WEST, Fla. (AP) — With powerful Hurricane Ike on an uncertain course toward the Gulf of Mexico, many on these low-lying islands took a wait-and-see approach to evacuation orders Sunday, perhaps a harbinger of the attitudes to come from Louisiana and Texas residents returning from an arduous evacuation and already showing signs of “hurricane fatigue.”

Forecasts show Ike crossing Cuba and skirting Key West by Tuesday on a trek to the warm waters of the Gulf of Mexico, slowly strengthening to perhaps Category 3 strength on its way to a landfall late in the week somewhere between the Florida Panhandle and the Texas coast.

And once again, New Orleans — still recovering from the weaker-than-expected Gustav — is squarely in the crosshairs.

In Key West, evacuation orders became mandatory Sunday for tourists and the approximately 25,000 residents alike, but traffic off the lone highway from the island was steady rather than jammed.

Mike Tilson, 24, was preparing to ride Ike out in his houseboat, only planning to evacuate if the storm takes a sudden turn to the north.

“I got tarps and champagne,” he said as he pushed a wheelbarrow of supplies including Heineken beer, ice and a loaf of bread down the dock.

Ike was a Category 3 hurricane with sustained winds of 120 mph when it roared into Cuba on Sunday eveningjust north of the U.S. military base at Guantanamo Bay, prompting the evacuation of hundreds of thousands from coastal communities.It was forecast to re-emerge over the island’s western coast Tuesday morning about 100 miles south of Key West as a Category 1.

President Bush declared a state of emergency for Florida because of Ike on Sunday and ordered federal money to supplement state and local response efforts.

Key West Mayor Morgan McPherson said 15,000 tourists had already evacuated the region.

McPherson warned that anyone who thinks staying through a major hurricane is “champagne time” hasn’t thought it through clearly.

Still, many residents of the nation’s most southernmost city said they wanted to see what the storm does over Cuba and reassess today.

Among them was Claudia Pennington, 61, director of the Key West Art and Historical Society, who said she’s staying to care for the group’s three buildings and their contents. Don Guess, 50, was putting up plywood on a friend’s house Sunday and said he was sticking around because the storm didn’t worry him.

At the Key West Convalescent Center, 70 sick and elderly residents were being evacuated by bus and ambulance to Sunrise on Sunday afternoon.

The reluctance to leave didn’t surprise Hugh Gladwin, the director of the Institute for Public Opinion Research at Florida International University, who has studied evacuations in Florida and after Hurricane Katrina.

Gladwin said he’s never seen more than 80 percent evacuation participation anywhere, even with the biggest and scariest hurricane bearing down. And it can be harder to get people to leave when they’ve evacuated recently.

That’s the case in New Orleans, where many of the 2 million people who fled the Lousiana coast ahead of Gustav had only just returned from arduous evacuation. In many cases, jammed highways turned routine trips to such evacuee havens as Birmingham and Memphis into 15-hour crawls.

Some New Orleans residents were already digging in their heels ahead of Ike.

Christopher Gargiule, 37, said evacuating for Gustav cost him and his wife, Joanne, more than $1,500, and that they can’t afford to leave again even if Ike forces another mandatory evacuation of the city. And they live in a house just 50 yards from a levee that had water splash over it during Gustav.