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Hurricane Melissa Leaves Behind a Staggering Homelessness Toll

It would be a stretch to call the dark, doorless cement slab where Sashoya Wynter and members of her family are living a “shelter.” But it is where they have been sleeping and cooking since Hurricane Melissa destroyed not just their home, but also the elementary school where they sought refuge during the storm.

The family, including six children, is residing in what appears to have been a storeroom of what’s left of All Souls Anglican Church in Brompton, not far from the southwest Jamaican shore that experienced the brunt of the hurricane’s fury.

By day, Ms. Wynter’s younger brothers and sisters stand along the busy road outside holding cardboard signs begging for food and water. By night, Ms. Wynter, 22, and her mother take turns keeping watch, because they are afraid of being assaulted by strangers.

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“We are sleeping in fear,” Ms. Wynter said.

That the church grounds also contain a graveyard does not ease her anxiety.

A person in profile holds a fork in one hand a bowl in another.
Sashoya Wynter cooking for her family in the remnants of a church in Brompton, Jamaica, after Hurricane Melissa tore through the country.

More than two weeks after Hurricane Melissa wrecked western Jamaica as a Category 5 storm, killing at least 45 people, the authorities are beginning to take stock of the staggering losses.

As international aid organizations, church groups and the U.S. and Jamaican militaries fly pallets of relief to isolated communities, officials fear the enormous challenge that lies ahead: what will happen to the thousands of families left homeless by the storm.

Relief agencies are still focusing on the immediate urgent need for food and water for the approximately one million people affected by the storm. But they say the mission must soon shift to putting roofs over the heads of those whose homes collapsed, a daunting challenge that the Jamaican government is not prepared to meet on its own.

Experts say no government would be ready to adequately respond to the kind of monumental crisis faced by Jamaica, a developing island nation largely dependent on tourism. Government officials acknowledge that it will take the help of international aid groups, the United States and countries in Europe and Asia to tackle the challenges ahead.

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About 146,000 structures in Jamaica sustained major damage, including the loss of roof or walls, affecting at least 90,000 families “direly,” Alvin Gayle, commander of Jamaica’s Office of Disaster Preparedness and Emergency Management, said on Thursday. The number of damaged buildings keeps increasing as officials conduct more assessments, he said.

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Storm damages are estimated to run as high as $7 billion, officials said.

A child walks through grass littered with planks of wood and a small yellow building whose roof has been torn off, leaving only a frame.
Ms. Wynter and her family are staying in the remains of a church after their homes and the school where they were sheltering were destroyed by the hurricane.

Satellite data and drone footage showed that many houses sustained severe or catastrophic damage, and large sections of the country are still without power and water, said Dana Morris Dixon, who as minister of education, youth, skills and information serves as a government spokeswoman.

“It’s essentially about a third of the country that is impacted significantly,” she said in an interview. “We are just under three million population — to have that many people be affected is huge.”

The government’s first priority was getting water to areas that needed it and clearing roads so that help could get to marooned communities, she said. But the rainy season is still underway, and many people are living in the demolished ruins of their houses, exposed to the weather.

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“We have to put a focus on shelter,” she said.

Only about 20 percent of the nation’s damaged structures had insurance, Ms. Morris Dixon said. The government plans to work with aid organizations and the private sector to get the materials needed to erect temporary structures flown into the country.

For now, many families have resorted to putting tarps over at least one room to stay dry, she said.

Still, Ed Raine, the chief executive of Food for the Poor, an organization that distributes aid and builds modest wood homes in Jamaica, said it was unclear to him what form short-term housing would take.

“Are we able to use existing structures for displaced people or do we need to pop up temporary centers?” he said. “Nobody will want to build a tent city.”

Six people sit or stand in front of a wall and behind a green pole.
From left, Ashanta Daley, 19, and her sister Kara Hereood, 33, holding her young son Jeremiah, 4, with others whose homes were destroyed by Hurricane Melissa. They were sleeping in classrooms at Petersfield High School.

Michael Capponi, the founder of a Florida-based disaster relief organization called Global Empowerment Mission, said a second catastrophe was now unfolding.

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“Too many people don’t have a roof over their head, and there are too many places that were destroyed,” he said. “There is not enough inventory.”

Organizations are rushing to deliver tarpaulins, other forms of emergency shelter, water and food to places that aid groups identify as most in need.

Brian Bogart, who runs the World Food Program’s Caribbean office, said more helicopters were arriving in Jamaica to improve relief organizations’ abilities to reach remote areas and take critical supplies. The initial days after the storm passed saw a staggering need for food and water, he saidbut that will soon shift to housing.

Though Jamaican officials said about 1,400 people were living in shelters as of Thursday, they also acknowledged that many schools that would otherwise have served as temporary housing did not survive the storm’s wrath.

“There is no shelter,” said Brandon Brown, 27, who lost his home in the coastal community of Whitehouse. “We need help bad.”

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A line of cars passing and people walking on a road near a sign that reads, “We need help food.’’
A makeshift sign asking for help and food in the aftermath of Hurricane Melissa in Westmoreland Parish.

He and his cousins said they had resorted to squatting in unfinished buildings. Like hundreds of other people throughout western Jamaica, they sifted through hurricane debris to find zinc and boards that could be reused to retrofit the structures to live in.

Mike Basset of World Vision, a Christian relief organization, said most people seemed to either be staying with neighbors whose homes had fared better or trying to get by in the ruins of their houses.

“I have heard, not witnessed, that people are sheltering in schools, but most of the schools I am seeing were destroyed or compromised,” he said. “I have never seen anything on the scale and size of this.”

Shanique Johnson, 36, moved into Petersfield High School, her alma mater, with her boyfriend, mother, niece and daughter. They lined up old wooden desks and lay on top of them to sleep, using clothes and sheets as padding.

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The two children sleep on the floor.

“We don’t have a choice,” Ms. Johnson said. “It’s devastating. We’re stressed out.”

Sherman Williams, a taxi driver who was living in the remnants of his home in Whitehouse with his partner and 12-year-old daughter, said solutions had to come soon. He did what he could using wood and zinc found in the rubble to patch together a roof, he said, but the house is largely unprotected from the elements.

“I don’t think we can live long like this,” he said.

VideoSherman Williams outside the remnants of his home in Whitehouse.CreditCredit…

Camille Williams contributed reporting from Kingston, Jamaica.

Frances Robles is a Times reporter covering Latin America and the Caribbean. She has reported on the region for more than 25 years.

Erin Schaff is a photojournalist for The Times, covering stories across the country.

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