© 2025 WGCU News
PBS and NPR for Southwest Florida
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Lee County Recovery Task Force gets feedback from Lehigh Acres for Hurricane Ian recovery plans

The ResilientLee & Recovery Task Force Branches have been discussing priorities to focus on regarding the recovery to Hurricane Ian. During the firs round of town halls, each member of the audience is given eight stickers. At each Branch Station, participants vote for the priority that best matches their top priority for the Hurricane Ian recovery as it relates to that Branch.
Tara Calligan
The ResilientLee & Recovery Task Force Branches have been discussing priorities to focus on regarding the recovery to Hurricane Ian. During the firs round of town halls, each member of the audience is given eight stickers. At each Branch Station, participants vote for the priority that best matches their top priority for the Hurricane Ian recovery as it relates to that Branch.

Hurricane Ian caused an estimated $7.3 billion in damage to residential and commercial structures alone and is poised to be named the third-largest storm in U.S. history.

As an effort to better unify and calculate the needs of various areas of Lee County following Ian, the ResilientLee & Recovery Task Force was created.

The task force is composed of eight branches overseen by community experts to review, research, and analyze needs to rebuild Lee County.

Branches include infrastructure, housing, health and social services, and also consider cultural resources.

Tessa LeSage, director of the FutureMakers Coalition at the Collaboratory in downtown Fort Myers, led the Lehigh Acres town hall. She says forgetting about tourism can spell trouble for Lee County’s economy.

“If the only reason people come here is for our beaches, and the beaches are down, then we have a problem," said LeSage. "So, just like diversifying the economy, we need to diversify our cultural resources.”

At the Lehigh Acres ResilientLee & Recovery Task Force town hall on May 9, 2023, 13 people attended and gave feedback about ways to recover and rebuild post-Hurricane Ian. Tessa LeSage, director of the FutureMakers Coalition at the Collaboratory in downtown Fort Myers, led the town hall.
Eddie Stewart/WGCU
At the Lehigh Acres ResilientLee & Recovery Task Force town hall on May 9, 2023, 13 people attended and gave feedback about ways to recover and rebuild post-Hurricane Ian. Tessa LeSage, director of the FutureMakers Coalition at the Collaboratory in downtown Fort Myers, led the town hall.

Tourism employs one out of five people in Lee County and visitors spend more than $4 billion while visiting, according to the Lee County Visitor & Convention Bureau.

Since damages caused by Ian vary throughout the county, the first objective of the task force is to hold widespread town halls to get feedback from residents about what priorities to consider going forward.

Katie Heck, Public Relations Officer for the Lehigh Acres Fire Control & Rescue District said a lack of infrastructure strained their department during Ian.

“In East Lee County, even though we have our own branch of the EOC out here, we don't really have a secure place to be during a storm,” said Heck.

Lehigh Acres residents also communicated a lack of transportation and need for better public transport to the task force.

To participate or learn more about future town halls, visit Resilientlee.com. There is also a survey that can be filled out online here.

WGCU is your trusted source for news and information in Southwest Florida. We are a nonprofit public service, and your support is more critical than ever. Keep public media strong and donate now. Thank you.

Trusted by over 30,000 local subscribers

Local News, Right Sized for Your Morning

Quick briefs when you are busy, deeper explainers when it matters, delivered early morning and curated by WGCU editors.

  • Environment
  • Local politics
  • Health
  • And more

Free and local. No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.

More from WGCU
  • Gray Catbirds are in a bird family known as the “Mimidae” – because they mimic other birds, other animals, and even mechanical sounds. Other members of their family in Florida include the Brown Thrasher and the Northern Mockingbird – two excellent mimics that we often see and hear year-round as they feed, sing, and nest in relatively open vegetation. They often mimic the vocalizations of other bird species and it has been suggested that their mimicry may send the message that the area is crowded – and cause other birds to search for food elsewhere.
  • Personal connections, aggressive lobbying and hundreds of thousands of dollars in campaign contributions fueled the rapid rise of an obscure school bus camera vendor, BusPatrol, which quickly became a major player in a niche industry that didn’t exist in Florida until last year. That success represented a remarkable turnaround for a company with a troubled history of allegations that it values revenue over public safety and opportunity over ethics. BusPatrol’s reversal in fortunes, already evident in other states, echoes the comeback of Florida state Rep. Vicki Lopez, once a down-and-out Lee County commissioner, with whom BusPatrol is inextricably linked.
  • There were 96 flight delays and nine cancellations Saturday and at least 134 flight delays and 15 flight cancellations as of early Sunday evening at Southwest Florida International Airport. The numbers come from the MiseryMap, a listing of delays and cancellations at U.S. airports by FlightAware, a flight tracking service.