Owner Resources 5629 Strand Blvd, Suite 412 · Naples FL 34110
(239) 734-3200 Mon–Fri · 9:00 – 4:00
Paramont·Owner Resources·Hurricane Preparedness

Hurricane preparedness.

Florida's storm season runs June 1 through November 30, with the peak between mid-August and mid-October. This page is the readiness protocol for residents of Paramont-managed communities — what we handle, what you handle, and how the whole thing works when a storm enters the cone.

Naples has been through enough storms in the last decade — Irma in 2017, Ian in 2022, Helene and Milton in 2024 — that the protocol is no longer theoretical. This is the actual practice.

The season, month by month.

VI
June
Season Opens
VII
July
Active
VIII
August
Cape Verde
IX
Sept
Statistical Peak
X
October
Gulf Risk
XI
Nov
Wind-Down

September and October carry the highest risk for Southwest Florida specifically — both Ian (Sept 2022) and Milton (Oct 2024) struck during this window. October storms tend to form in the Gulf with less warning. We track every system from the moment NOAA assigns a tropical-cyclone designation.

The four phases of storm response.

Pre-Season

Phase I · May

What Paramont does before the season starts — and what we ask of you.

  • Building exterior inspection — loose tiles, signage, antennae, anything that becomes a projectile
  • Generator service — full annual on common-area generators
  • Shutter system check — operability on every building shutter
  • Vendor contracts confirmed — tarp, board-up, tree, water mitigation
  • Owner contact tree updated — please confirm your seasonal phone & email
  • Vacant-unit protocols — for snowbird owners

Storm Watch

Phase II · 72–48 hrs out

When a storm enters the cone of probability, the clock starts.

  • First email goes out — to every owner with current contact info
  • Vendors put on standby — board-up crews, tarp teams, water mitigation
  • Common-area secured — pool furniture, signage, planters stowed
  • Generator fuel topped off — common-area systems
  • Elevator protocol staged — service interruption planning
  • Board calls scheduled — daily check-ins until landfall or all-clear

Storm Warning

Phase III · 48 hrs to landfall

Warning means a hurricane is expected within 36 hours. Final preparations.

  • Shutters deployed — common-area windows, lobby, amenity buildings
  • Evacuation guidance — Collier County zone-based; we relay alerts
  • Elevators secured — moved to top floor or as building protocol dictates
  • Critical documents off-site — association records to cloud + secured copies
  • Pre-storm photos — every common area photographed for insurance baseline
  • Lights left on — strategic for post-storm assessment access

Post-Storm

Phase IV · 0–72 hrs after

As soon as it's safe — and not before — we are on site.

  • Initial assessment — within hours of all-clear, weather permitting
  • Vendors dispatched — tarp, board-up, water mitigation as needed
  • Insurance carrier notified — claim opened within 24 hours of damage
  • Owner update sent — building status, access info, return guidance
  • Photo documentation — every damaged area, before any repair touches it
  • Adjuster scheduling — we are on-site for every walk-through

Your unit-level checklist.

What we cannot do for you — and what every owner of a Paramont-managed home should have ready, by June 1, every year.

Inside Your Unit
  • Hurricane shutter operability confirmed
  • Plywood or panels available for windows without permanent shutters
  • Lanai and balcony furniture able to be stowed inside
  • Important documents in waterproof container or cloud backup
  • Personal property photographed for insurance baseline
  • Battery-powered radio, flashlights, batteries on hand
  • Two weeks of prescriptions filled, especially for late-season storms
Coordination with Paramont
  • Current phone & email on file (call billing@ to update)
  • Vacant-unit form filed if away during season
  • Emergency contact identified (key holder, neighbor, family)
  • Pet evacuation plan in place
  • Insurance binder current (review every March)
  • Special-needs registry filed if applicable
  • Evacuation zone known (collier zone lookup linked below)
If you evacuate Take your prescriptions, important documents, devices, chargers, a change of clothes, and your pets. Lock the unit. If you have time, deploy your shutters. Email us where you'll be reachable. Do not return until Collier County issues an all-clear for your zone.

After-the-storm contacts.

When you need someone after the storm — and especially after-hours, with phone lines under load and email queues backed up — these are the lines that get through.

Emergency · 24-Hour
Page on-call CAM · all hours
Storm Reporting
For non-urgent damage reports
Collier Emergency Mgmt
County-wide alerts & shelter info