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Hurricane Ivan

Storm shoppers: Expect long lines, limited stocks

By LEANORA MINAI
Published September 11, 2004


IVAN
Path unknown, fear grows
Floridian endures Ivan in Grenada
Jamaica in line for hit overnight
Whom do you trust for news on the weather?
Projected path
Interactive: Storm Watcher
2004 hurricane guide
Photo gallery
Go away, Ivan: Write a message to Ivan to ward him away

TAMPA BAY
Half-million await Pinellas' decision about evacuation
Rumors, nervous drivers combine to drain gas supply
Storm shoppers: Expect long lines, limited stocks
Closings
Q&A: Want valuables safe? Try the dishwasher

STATE
Troubled kids crisscross state to avoid storms
Islanders flee Florida Keys in staggered, steady stream

HILLSBOROUGH
Rain, wind bring them down
Weary, worried, getting ready
Companies told to stabilize dikes

PASCO
Circuit Court closes for Ivan
Fertilizer plant ready to weather storms
Nerves fray as hurricane Ivan nears

HERNANDO
A balancing act between storms
Storm notebook

CITRUS
County holds its breath as Ivan nears
No school Monday, thanks to Ivan's uncertain path
Utilities under pressure to speed up storm repairs
FROM TAMPA BAY'S 10 NEWS
Favorite weather person
When you want a weather forecast, who do you turn to?
Steve Jerve, News Channel 8
Paul Dellegatto, Fox 13
Dick Fletcher, Tampa Bay's 10
Denis Phillips, 28 Action News
Alan Winfield, Bay News 9
Official county evacuation and shelter maps for Tampa Bay area
National Hurricane Center
Computer models
Hurricanes Explained
Interactive: Damage and Danger
Hurricane preparedness tips
Complete Hurricane Ivan coverage

ST. PETERSBURG - At 3:10 p.m. Friday, Home Depot worker Ken Wilson delivered the news to weary plywood shoppers waiting in a line that stretched 300 feet.

"We are out of plywood," Wilson said. But two more truckloads of plywood were headed to the store at 2300 22nd Ave. N.

Maria Sarmentero, who stood in line three hours, would have to wait at least another two hours.

"I'm going to stay here until the truck comes because if I don't stay, I won't get plywood this weekend," said Sarmentero, 55.

Anxious hurricane shoppers hoping to stock up for Hurricane Ivan should expect long waits and hit-or-miss supplies across the Tampa Bay area.

Some lumber stores have sold out of plywood and managers don't know if more will arrive. Chains such as Home Depot expect delivery but are limiting plywood to 20 sheets per customer. Supermarkets are scrambling to stock milk, water and bread.

"Our trucks are rolling, and we're replenishing items," said Camille Branch-Turley, of the Kash N' Karry in Tampa's Hyde Park. "We've been through the drill a number of times, and the citizens know what they're after."

Many stores had plenty of tarps, batteries and duct tape. In high demand and scarce supply were generators and plywood.

A Largo man slept in his truck Thursday night in a Home Depot parking lot in St. Petersburg so he could be first in line for a generator. He was still sitting in the store, waiting for delivery Friday afternoon with a dozen others.

Outside the Home Depot, another customer in search of a generator ran up to store manager Frank Essex.

"So, if I give you a phone number on the back of a $10 bill, will you call me?" joked St. Petersburg resident Steve Koch, 41.

"I'd call every hour on the hour for the next four hours," Essex said.

Suppliers sometimes hold off on shipping generators until forecasters can better predict where a hurricane is expected to make landfall. They don't want to ship generators to Miami if Tampa is in the storm's sights.

"We have no clue when we're getting them, if we get them," said Ed Warren, a Home Depot manager. "We're just hoping they'll send us more."

At 84 Lumber Co. in Tampa, sales coordinator Ryan Fleming said he doesn't expect more truckloads of plywood until Tuesday or Wednesday.

By noon Friday, he had about 1,000 sheets of plywood left and said he didn't know if he would have more today.

"There's going to be a lot of people showing up who are going to be disappointed," Fleming said. "What we have is what we have."

Cox Lumber in St. Petersburg sold 4,000 sheets of plywood by 1 p.m. Friday and was about to start selling more expensive floor and cabinet-grade wood to people.

Grocery stores saw a constant flow of people as workers stocked shelves depleted from Frances.

At a Publix in St. Petersburg, pallets of bottled water sat outside the doors.

Shopper Midge Trubey bought $170 of groceries, including a 20-pound turkey she planned to roast before the storm.

"I have water left over from the last two hurricanes," said Trubey, 56.

While other shoppers buzzed around, searching for canned tuna and peanut butter, 22-year-old Paul Barnes had a simple grocery list.

He left Publix with only a card and a dozen yellow roses for his wife, Samantha, who is seven months pregnant.

"I love her," Barnes said.

[Last modified September 11, 2004, 07:18:26]


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  • Hurricane Ivan
  • Half-million await county's decision about evacuation
  • Rumors, nervous drivers combine to drain gas supply
  • Storm shoppers: Expect long lines, limited stocks
  • Closings
  • Q&A: Want valuables safe? Try the dishwasher

  • Schools
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