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Heat, high water, hurricanes: Schools are not ready for climate change

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When Hurricane Michael hit the Florida Panhandle in 2018, Calhoun County schools were ravaged. Winds of 160 miles per hour destroyed an elementary school and ripped high-school bleachers from the ground.

It was complete devastation, said Darryl Taylor Jr., superintendent of the district. It was like a nuclear bomb had gone off.

The Calhoun schools are still trying to rebuild what they lost five years ago. A new elementary school is not yet finished, and some students are still in temporary classrooms. The process of assessing the damage for insurance, along with the pandemic, has been arduous.

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