Augusta leaders approve millions for Hurricane Helene cleanup

Augusta Commission member Brandon Garrett on Tuesday announced he is stepping away to “take care of his family and spiritual mental health.”
Published: Oct. 15, 2024 at 6:54 PM EDT
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AUGUSTA, Ga. (WRDW/WAGT) - Millions of dollars are now free to go toward clearing Hurricane Helene debris from roads, Augusta Commission decided Tuesday.

Commissioners approved the money for cleanup crews to get to work – and they have their work cut out for them.

One is for storm-related costs for destruction to any city-owned facilities or buildings.

The other is for at least 13 contractors already working with the city, who started immediately after the storm.

Augusta Commissioner Brandon Garrett stepping away for a time

Augusta Commission member Brandon Garrett on Tuesday announced he is stepping away to “take care of his family and spiritual mental health.”

Brandon Garrett

The city says the money commissioners approved will come from the general fund balance.

Commissioners approved $2.5 million in damage costs and $3.1 million for the 13 contractors, plus one coordinating firm.

The says Augusta is in good shape right now regarding cleanup, but that there’s more work to be done.

“We didn’t just have the debris that was created by Hurricane Helene,” said Allen. “We also have additional trees that were leaning and things of that nature that many of our homeowners see coming down, as well.”

Augusta suspends recycling in aftermath of Hurricane Helene

Due to the impact from Hurricane Helene, the city of Augusta has temporarily suspended recycling collection until further notice.

Augusta garbage goes from the curbsite cart to the landfill.

Allen says it’s going to take time for the city to get back – perhaps months.

“We just ask our citizens to continue to be patient and to know that you have a good team as far as the city of Augusta, working hard to do what we can to bring it back to normalcy,” said Allen.

Augusta Transit resumes regular schedules on all its bus routes

All routes were shut down in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene, then the agency began offering limited services a few days ago. Now things are mostly back to normal.

Augusta Transit

The says the city is down to five traffic lights still out right now.

Debris pickup is still going on across Richmond County. So far, crews say they’ve picked up 190,000 cubic yards of debris.

If the city gets the mess cleaned up within 90 days, the federal government will fully reimburse the costs.