DRENCHED 4.5 MILLION PEOPLE WITHOUT POWER FRANCES DUMPS UP TO 13 INCHES OF RAIN DEBRIS LITTERS STREETS; TREES DOWN DAMAGE COULD HIT $10 BILLION Broward Metro Edition

PHOTO 3; WATERLOGGED: In the wake of Hurricane Frances, Dottie Grondin surveys the flooding Sunday from her doorway in the Pineapple Park neighborhood of West Palm Beach. Staff photo/Robert Mayer PERIL IN A PARKING LOT: Phyllis Daniels walks past two cars that were hit Sunday by a falling air-condit...

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Published inSun-sentinel (Fort Lauderdale, Fla.)
Main Author Jennifer Peltz and Mark Hollis Staff Writers Staff Writers Kathy Bushouse, Mike Clary, Liz Doup, Peter Franceschina, Shana Gruskin, Alva James-Johnson, Akilah Johnson, Anthony Man, Joseph Mann, Robert Nolin, Lori Sykes, Michael Turnbell, and Brittany Wall
Format Newspaper Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Fort Lauderdale, Fla Tribune Publishing Company, LLC 06.09.2004
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Summary:PHOTO 3; WATERLOGGED: In the wake of Hurricane Frances, Dottie Grondin surveys the flooding Sunday from her doorway in the Pineapple Park neighborhood of West Palm Beach. Staff photo/Robert Mayer PERIL IN A PARKING LOT: Phyllis Daniels walks past two cars that were hit Sunday by a falling air-conditioning unit in the parking lot of her apartment complex at Blue Heron Boulevard and Avenue O in Riviera Beach. Hurricane Frances damaged many other units there with flooding and torn roofs. Staff photo/John L. White BATTERED: A boat slams against the Jensen Beach Causeway on Sunday as the last effects of Hurricane Frances hammer the Intracoastal Waterway in Jensen Beach in St. Lucie County. The storm tore into the Treasure Coast, where its center made landfall around Sewall's Point in Martin County. Staff photo/Joe Amon QUEUED UP: Residents line up Sunday at a Shell service station on Military Trail at Forest Hills Boulevard in West Palm Beach for snacks and cigarettes. The station was open, but not selling gasoline. The few stores that were open had long lines. Photo/ Michael Francis McElroy