Oct 12, 2024
Florida Fish and Wildlife officers joined neighbors helping to rescue people living in the Pemberton Creek area on Friday, as flood waters continued to rise. The Pemberton Creek neighborhood, north of I-4, is not far from Lake Thonotosassa. Jay Bolnick has lived there since 1996 and told the ABC Action News I-Team, Weve had some flooding, but never up to our house, you know, never. The flooding not only got into his house but stranded his nearly 50 head of cattle, the sheriff's office wants to help him rescue. Theyre on one little spot of dry land over there. The hardest thing is what do you do? Bolnick said, after swimming out and trying to coax the cattle to dry land. Bolnick was able to save his donkey and alpacas. But he wonders how devastating the flooding would have been had state and county leaders taken concerns more seriously. Look, we reached out to the county and our county commissioner a month ago, and we told them before even Helene started, we had a mess out here, you couldnt even see the creek it was so full of vegetation," Bolnick said, showing the I-Team a photo he took September 11. They told me that after the rainy seasons over, thats when theyre going to come clean the creek out. This is before Helene and Milton. Baker Creek, which comes all the way, flows to the north, to Lake Thonotosassa, it starts like down in Valrico. So you have a lot of areas draining into Baker Creek, which our concern has been all along to get the county to come out here and clean the creek out," he said. Bolnick said they still would be flooded. "But it wouldnt be as high, because there would have been a lot of water that got out of here," he said. Bolnick brought the I-Team back to his home. Youve got to get people out here, you know, like youre doing right now, let em see whats going on," he said. And its not the same. Even when people see it on TV, its not the same as seeing it right here. Its just I dont think you can have as much empathy for what other people have gone through until youve gone through it yourself, you know. Not saying thats a good thing, but it shapes who we are, our character and everything, what we go through. Again, try to give thanks just for the fact that were here right now.Sierra Schmidt and her family live on Flicker Court, the same street as Bolnick. "In our house, its about two and a half to three feet of water," she said. We have ridden the roller-coaster of emotions today. I think weve had our time of crying and then our time we have a wonderful church family thats come out to help us and we were able to salvage some of the things in our homeSchmidt is grateful for the help, and at the same time, left guessing why she and her neighbors' concerns about cleaning the creek weren't taken more seriously. "It just didnt happen. They said, its going to happen after the rainy season. Well, this is part of that problem," Schmidt said. We would have liked for that to be a little bit higher on their priority list." The I-Team plans to bring the concerns to county leaders. You cant wait until its too late, you know. You have to have a sense of urgency," Bolnick said. This story started with a tip. If you have something you'd like the I-Team to investigate, contact Kylie.
Respond, make new discussions, see other discussions and customize your news...

To add this website to your home screen:

1. Tap tutorialsPoint

2. Select 'Add to Home screen' or 'Install app'.

3. Follow the on-scrren instructions.

Feedback
FAQ
Privacy Policy
Terms of Service