Hurricane Ian Relief with FloodGate Foundation

Hurricane Ian Relief with FloodGate Foundation | WGCU | By Mike Walcher

Floodgate Medical, a recruiting company headquartered in Tampa, has adopted a hurricane-ravaged community 120 miles away. Volunteers from Floodgate are helping Suncoast Estates, often called the world’s largest trailer park, come back from Ian’s damage and destruction.

A Tampa company’s staff has adopted a community in North Fort Myers as a place to help hurricane victims.

Volunteers Floodgate Medical, a recruiting company in Tampa, bonded with people in Suncoast Estates, even though 120 miles separate the two locations, and company employees and even some of their relatives are helping Suncoast recover.

Hurricane Ian damaged or destroyed some of the older mobile homes in Suncoast, often called the world’s largest trailer park. A few people are living in tents or cars, weeks after the storm.

“We talk about being blessed to bless others,” Josh Heuchan, founder and CEO of Floodgate Medical, said. “Putting other people first and improving lives. And this is part of it.”

Heuchan said his brother told him about the destruction in Suncoast, so about a dozen Floodgate employees and their relatives have devoted several days of labor there. They have cut up fallen trees, supplied generators when there was no power, at put tarps on roofs of more than a dozen homes.

Suncoast is a lower socio-economic area in Lee County, but some residents don’t mind the attention from high-powered businesspeople from Tampa.

“We’re feeling special because of that help. They are helping a lot of people by cleaning up stuff and everything.” Suncoast Estates resident Rosely Lucas

Josh Heuchan said he is not concerned about Suncoast’s past or its reputation. He says his volunteers love the spirit of the residents.

“We go to where the help is most needed,” Heuchan said. “We don’t worry about the past or present. We know that their future can be bright.”

Heuchan said Floodgate Medical may return to Suncoast to help with rebuilding. And he added that volunteers plan to come back to serve meals at Thanksgiving, and help with toy give-aways at Christmas.

“We know there is a lot of pain and suffering out there, so anything we can do to show God’s love, and help people get through from one day to the next, we’re all about that,” Heuchan said.

For more photos of the Floodgate teams at work in Suncoast Estates: https://photos.app.goo.gl/UYEWrw3UdphKeZwn9

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