As a low-lying coastal Florida community with the Gulf of Mexico overwhelming the city’s waterway, Crystal River Mayor and lifelong resident Joe Meek said Hurricane Idalia fueled the area’s worst storm surge since the “no-name” hurricane three decades ago.

“We saw significant flooding there, and I would say that this storm surge is on par with that,” Meek, 43, told USA TODAY on Wednesday. “And that was our worst flooding event we had in decades.”

Hurricane Idalia, now a tropical storm, barreled through Florida’s Big Bend early Wednesday as a Category 3 tropical cyclone, causing calamitous storm surge and flooding for hundreds of miles. The system then made its way through southeastern Georgia and the Carolinas Wednesday evening.

While officials are still calculating totals, Meek estimates Crystal River, a tourism hub on the coast of western Florida, was hit with seven to nine feet of storm surge. “Most of the roads throughout the city at this point are still underwater,” Meek confirmed.

Crystal River is home to about 3,500 residents and attracts a wide tourist crowd for its natural attractions, including wildlife refuges, natural springs, and the Crystal River waterway, Meek said.

Older homes face the brunt of flooding

Meek’s home, a newer structure with the first floor about 15 feet off the ground, was spared from the surge Wednesday. Other homes in Crystal River, many of them older structures, weren’t as lucky.

Newer building codes require homes to be built higher off the ground to prevent damage in flood events, according to the mayor. But older homes that were built before codes were updated sit lower and are often hardest hit in surges, Meek said, a problem exacerbated in coastal communities.

The surge Wednesday brought four to six feet of water into some Crystal River homes, he noted.

“As we get newer structures, we will ensure that as we build, we plan for these types of things going forward,” Meek said.

‘COULDN’T BELIEVE IT’:Floridians emerge from Idalia’s destruction with hopes to recover