One Advisor's Hurricane Ian Story: Over $100K in Damage but Lots of Gratitude

Jeff Winn, managing partner of IAA

What You Need to Know

A managing partner at an Orlando BD suffered about $100,000 or more in damage as a result of Hurricane Ian.
His home, however, was structurally sound after the storm passed and he didn’t have flooding like many neighbors.
His niece in North Port, Florida wasn’t as lucky, losing her entire house.

Despite being dealt a costly blow from Hurricane Ian, one Florida advisor told ThinkAdvisor he’s grateful the storm didn’t cause him far more serious damage and his heart goes out to neighbors, relatives and others who weren’t quite as lucky.

Despite an estimated $100,000 and likely much more in damage to his boathouse and the trees that had fallen on his house in Orlando suburb Windermere, Jeff Winn, managing partner at Orlando, Florida-based broker-dealer International Assets Advisory, said: “People around us, both within a matter of miles, as well as around us in the sense of our immediate family, are having it so much worse.”

The boathouse, several feet from his property in Windermere on the Butler Chain of Lakes, was torn apart during the storm, he said. His house, normally 50 feet from the lake, was only five feet from the lake as of Monday, he said.

Meanwhile, “I was fortunate that the trees that fell on our roof didn’t do real integrity damage but they banged up the roof,” he told ThinkAdvisor, adding: “I’m grateful that my [house’s structure] still has its integrity.” As his house is on higher ground than many of his neighbors’, he was spared the flooding they faced, he said.

See also  Stocks Push Lower as Investors Digest Rate Moves

The damage was “not insignificant by any stretch, but it’s not life and it’s not an entire house,” he said.

Post-Ian, the main issues for the small inland city he lives in were almost all from flooding, he said, noting the nearby lakes and rivers had been “filled with a whole summer full of rain.”

Several days a week, “we had these daily afternoon deluges that just filled everything to levels that gradually [reached] their record heights and then along came the storm [and] there’s no place for that water to go,” said Winn. “So that’s what created all the damage here.”

Ahead of Ian’s arrival, IAA closed its Orlando office at 4 p.m. on Tuesday and remained closed until after the storm passed. When Winn woke up on Thursday, he said, “there were rivers where there aren’t supposed to be rivers and the trees [were] down on the power lines.” Electricity didn’t come back on for many until late Sunday, he added.