Published October 23, 2008 08:05 pm - BRIDGE CITY — Benny Warr knows that many families in Bridge City are worse off than he is, but he is almost at the end of his rope.
Couple lives in tent awaiting insurance funds, FEMA help
The Port Arthur News
By Amy Moore
The News staff writer
BRIDGE CITY — Benny Warr knows that many families in Bridge City are worse off than he is, but he is almost at the end of his rope.
The 62-year-old and his wife, Sherry, 55, are living in a tent in the front yard of their Hurricane Ike damaged home on Rose Avenue while they wait for insurance money to come through.
While the living situation isn’t the best, the Warrs made the best of it - buying and setting up an air mattress in the large Coleman tent and covering it with a comfortable, floral blanket.
A smaller orange tent in the yard covers what they were able to salvage from their home and another canopy was purchased to cover the kitchen table and chairs that are set up under the large oak tree.
The couple even salvaged a small television from their ruined home that they set up in their makeshift home in the yard.
But the warm, sunny skies that lingered for weeks after the storm have gone and the rains and cold have come in.
“The wind blew over the canopy and all of our papers and pictures blew through the yard,” Benny said of the cold front storm that blew in Wednesday night, early Thursday morning and whipped around the tents. “We were running through the yard in our pajamas in the middle of the night trying to get all of our stuff. It was all ruined.”
Benny said he’s frustrated not only with his insurance company, but with the situation in general.
“Why the government has to pay for my house that was insured, I’ll never know,” he said. “I don’t believe the government should be taking care of us anyway.”
But instead of being the squeaky wheel, Benny said he’s kept quite about his issues.
“I’m not on the phone bugging FEMA. We’re not the only ones like this, there are people worse than us,” he said.
Benny said a FEMA representative said crews would be out to his house to measure for a manufactured home - the units FEMA is providing to hurricane victims. He knows, though, that that process could take weeks to complete and even longer before he could live in the trailer.
He explained that his sister, who lives next door, only recently got a manufactured home from FEMA. With her health problems, Benny said she is considered a higher needs victim than he is.