Here's what I've seen having followed it closely via the Internet while in WI this weekend, and now that I'm back up here and have at least driven around Houghton a little bit.
I drove up this afternoon, going from Chassell to Houghton early this afternoon. Highway 41 was open, just down to one lane in a couple spots. This evening I saw pictures of what some of those spots looked like right after the washouts and am downright impressed with how quickly they were patched with gravel fill. In town there certainly is debris, but could tell major efforts were put out already to clean up public spaces. While I didn't get very many places in town, I do live a block away from 41 and it felt like "business as usual" in the area. I think major efforts are going to continue to be made to get the main roads open and driveable as quickly as possible (already seen firsthand on 41).
However, from a transportation standpoint, secondary roads are going to be the bigger problem for the locals who use them. Highways rightfully should be the priority, but there are many locals who live on county roads which only have one access point and now may be stuck transportation wise due to a washout on that single access point, with a great time unknown of when it will be fixed.
Most importantly, keep area homeowners in your thoughts and prayers. For me personally, it is a big unknown on how many have been effected since the structure may look fine from the outside, with possible indoor flood damage unseen. It looks like there are areas around Ripley & Lake Linden were the worst hit in which the building damage is very noticeable, but in other areas property damage can't be seen from the surface.
For anyone who has a pending vacation up here, due to the efforts being put into the main roads, I feel like many vacations a couple weeks from now and beyond will be nearly unaffected. And even if some of the attractions of the immediate Houghton / Hancock area are inaccessible, there is so much more to visit in this area (the main area of destruction is only a small portion of the Western U.P.). The best thing anyone outside the area can do aside from disaster relief funds is come and visit, enjoy the beauty of the area, and support local businesses.