MADEIRA BEACH — You’ve
probably never heard the name Rudy Clark, but chances are,
you know his music. He wrote some of the biggest hits of the
60s and 70s, recorded by everyone from Aretha Franklin to
George Harrison.
Mr. Clark passed away in 2020, and his daughter contacted
ABC Action News after Hurricane Helene. She said her condo
association tossed out his memorabilia, including his gold
records after the condo she inherited was damaged by the
storm.
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Gina Clark with her father Rudy Clark |
Condo owner Brian McFaw is glad
contractors are doing the dirty work. He and dozens of other
owners signed an authorization form for the contractor to
remove his personal property.
“We signed a waiver. And we were very lucky they came in,
and they got rid of everything. Didn't have to do anything.
Easy. Cause there’s nothing really salvageable,” McFaw said.
McFaw said the sooner everyone clears out their stuff, the
sooner repairs can start.
“This is a race against time cause there’s no AC, there’s
nothing running out here. All that mold’s starting to grow
up, which is going to be affecting people who are allowed to
stay, which are the second-story units,” he said.
"Why is someone else allowed to decide what is worth saving
and what's not?"
Owner Risann Curry said she doesn’t believe the contractors
should be removing personal property without permission.
She lives in the area, but she says about half of the owners
of units in the complex live in other states or other
countries, including Canada and the United Kingdom.
Due to back-to-back hurricanes and limited lodging options
in Pinellas County, many have not come to the yacht club to
remove their belongings.
“Why is someone else allowed to decide what is worth saving
and what’s not?” Curry said.
The association said most owners signed the consent forms,
but some did not.
“That’s a permission slip. You don’t have my permission.
Leave it alone. And if it holds everybody up, oh well. This
isn’t getting done anytime soon,” Curry said.
"They threw my stuff out like garbage"
Gina Clark, who lives in New York City, is one of the owners
who said she did not sign the consent form. She inherited
her condo unit from her late father Rudy Clark.
Rudy wrote or co-wrote dozens of hit songs in the ‘60’s and
‘70’s, including “Good Lovin”, “Everybody Plays the Fool”,
“I’ve Got My Mind Set on You” and “The Shoop Shoop Song”
(It’s in his Kiss).
Gina flew down after Hurricane Helene but said furniture and
appliances blocked her from retrieving personal items before
she had to leave. She said she tried to arrange to rent a
unit to store his belongings but was unable to find any
storage space available for rent.
“They threw my stuff out like garbage. And things that
represent my late father, they’re gone. They can’t be
replaced. And it did not have to happen this way,” Gina said
in a phone interview.
She said two gold records presented to her father by
recording artists and the flag from his military funeral
were among the missing items.
“It was the actual flag that they fold and they place on the
casket,” Gina said. “It was a flag folded, and I had it in a
protective plastic bag.”
Gina said she never signed an authorization form allowing
the remediation company to remove her possessions. Still,
the board said she was given a two-week notice, and the
deadline to submit an authorization form has passed.
“They had the opportunity, and now the opportunity is gone.
As a board, we have a fiduciary responsibility to all the
owners and also to the buildings themselves. So we’ve got to
get these buildings up and running,” Green said.
Florida law says association can dispose of storm-damaged
items
Attorney Jonathan Ellis, who is not involved in this
situation, said the law is generally on the side of the
board.
“The statute allows the association to come in and actually
start disposing of things within the unit that can cause
damage. The statute specifically says you can get rid of
carpeting, drywall, things like that that can cause mold
problems or maybe damage the unit,” Ellis said.
But Ellis said the law is not clear on items being removed
that don’t interfere with remediation. He said some of those
items could be moved to lanais or closets, which would not
interfere with the work.
“What happens when there’s a jewelry box?
Does that really need to get thrown out? Especially if you
actually open it and you see there’s a fair amount of gold
or silver? “ Ellis said.
“If you’re not here and you’re not here full-time and you
have these possessions here, are they really that
meaningful? They that valuable? That’s why you leave them to
sit here?” McFaw said.
We searched the bags near Gina's condo but didn’t find the
flag or the gold records. Contractors constantly moved small
piles scattered around the complex and added them to much
bigger piles, making it virtually impossible to find
anything.
"It's an us mentality"
“They have a deadline, and once that deadline comes, we
cannot slow down for one owner. We have to proceed,” Green
said.
“It's almost like this is what we’re doing, and you just
have to go with it. Let us take control. Some people are ok
with it, some aren’t,” Curry said.
“People's sentimental values, I can understand that. I feel
bad. I do. But it’s not about me. It's about us. Really what
we’re living in is townhouses and condos. It’s an “us”
mentality. Not an “I” mentality,” McFaw said.
For Gina Clark, those sentimental values are worth more than
gold.
