Homeowners await Rebuild Florida aid 8 years after Irma
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State Senator Clay Yarborough is calling for action after seeing firsthand the failures of a program meant to help hurricane victims.

ATLANTIC BEACH, Fla. — It’s been eight years since Hurricane Irma ravaged parts of Florida, and yet some families are still living in damaged homes, waiting for the state to deliver the help they were promised through the Rebuild Florida program.

“The bottom line for me is I don’t want to see this continue like what we are seeing here whether it’s regular state money or HUD money, any taxpayer money coming from the government whether Rebuild or HUD or anybody else,” State Senator Clay Yarborough said. “This can’t happen. It’s not acceptable.”

We invited Yarborough, who represents part of the First Coast, to tour Christopher Corson’s Atlantic Beach home with us to see the problems firsthand.

“You can smell all the mold and stuff in here because what comes in here underneath and is laying underneath the cabinets,” Corson said. “You can see up here, I think it’s still leaking because it’s getting bigger that spot up there.”

From his kitchen to his bedrooms he pointed out the problems he’s been dealing with for years.

“Water comes in. We’ve seen it come right up to the floor,” Corson explained. “It also leaks out this way and back over into the closet.”

Corson’s home was damaged by Hurricane Irma in 2017. As the years have gone by he says many of the problems have only gotten worse.

“This room never leaked before until they did all the dirt work,” Corson said. “It just pours in and we get the wet vac and suck it up and wipe the walls down trying to avoid the mold.”

Corson is one of dozens of homeowners across the state who joined Rebuild Florida only to face years of delays, problems, and unanswered questions.

“A reasonable period of time is understandable. but this has been years worth of time they’ve been waiting. I’m concerned for their health,” Yarborough said. “I think if the back wall or two back walls in the bedrooms that I saw today were opened up, there probably be a ton of mold in there, and that is just not acceptable. Another department of the state would shut a business down if it came in and saw that.”

For more than a year and a half First Coast News and 10 Tampa Bay have been investigating the Rebuild Florida program. We have visited Corson’s home several times to see the progress, or lack of progress, made to fix his home.

“They were told by the foundation company not to do anything until they squared away the foundation. They ignored it. They sent a second foundation company, they ignored it. So they sent a third foundation company, they ignored it. They put the roof on, which is about, I think, the fourth roof they’ve actually put on,” Corson said.

In September 2024, Corson paid for an independent inspection, which revealed extensive water intrusion and elevated moisture. The state has already spent thousands on Corson’s home, but the exact amount is unknown because records were removed from the Florida Accountability Contract Tracking System. Our public records request has not been answered and FloridaCommerce has only said, “Looking into this for you.”

After repairs, new windows, and a new A/C system, Rebuild Florida decided this year that Corson’s house needs to be demolished and rebuilt.

“All the work they’ve done is shoddy, and every dollar they spent on this house is wasted,” Corson said.

“That’s taxpayer money and that’s literally going to go in the dumpster because of what’s going on here,” Yarborough said.

In June FloridaCommerce told Yarborough the project was estimated to be complete in December 2025, but the house still hasn’t even been demolished.

“So the stress and the anxiety and just waiting on them, just waiting and waiting. You hurry up and wait, and then they tell you this and then it’s months later and it’s just, that’s over 8 years now,” Corson said. “It’s just totally ridiculous.”

“It’s all unacceptable,” Yarborough said. “I think the frustration about it is justified…It needs to be made right.”

Many of Corson’s belongings remain boxed up as he waits for demolition.

“We’re tired of living like this,” Corson said. 

“I don’t blame you,” Yarborough said.

*”I mean, we shouldn’t have to. We’re taxpayers too. I mean, I’m disabled and stuff, but I’m still a taxpayer,” Corson said.

“Well, the commitment was made to you,” Yarborough said. “It was committed to you that something would happen, and it hasn’t happened.”

Corson told Yarborough he really wanted two things: windows on the side of his house and power to his workshop. After the tour, Yarborough contacted FloridaCommerce again. He says those changes can be made to the scope of work but will push the project back. Yarborough was told demolition is now tentatively scheduled for early December and expected to take about 120 days to complete the home. 

“Here’s the biggest thing for me: it’s an integrity issue. You were told by the state you could rely on this program, and that we would take care of that for you, and that’s not happening,” Yarborough said. “There’s a failure there in a lot of ways. If I have to visit more properties and insist we get action, or give coverage to more of that until it gets done, that’s what we’ll do. We shouldn’t have to do that, but if we have to, that’s what the people elected me to do, so I’m willing to do it.”

The Office of Inspector General for the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development is currently auditing the Rebuild Florida program and has already visited some homes in the program. The audit is expected to be complete by January 2026.

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