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tv   Americas Newsroom  FOX News  October 10, 2024 6:00am-7:00am PDT

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and make sure to protect you. a lot of people are blaming fema for what's happening in north carolina. what do you say? >> governors are responsible for keeping our citizens safe. the initial lifesaving preparation and action is led by the state. we have to pre-position assets and send in resources, use our national guards capabilities, use our state police, use our department of forestry and v.s. fema comes in afterwards. our experience is virginia has been good with fema and answered our requested and fulfilled them and getting the response we need. >> lawrence: here is bill and dana. >> bill: good morning, everyone, from orlando our coverage continues. i'm bill hemmer live as we start to assess the fallout from hurricane milton still a very dangerous storm on the east coast of florida. it will be something we're dealing with throughout the day.
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let's get it going right now. a new hour begins. dana, good morning to you as well in new york. >> dana: i'm dana perino and this is "america's newsroom." right before this show and during "fox & friends" governor desantis gave quite an update. what were the highlights? >> bill: a number of things he said. imagine this, dana, 18 inches of rain. 18 inches of rain in one day for places like tampa and st. pete on the west coast. 80,000 people in shelters overnight. we imagine some will be leaving today. at what time we cannot say. sarasota county took a direct hit. eight to ten feet of storm surge. he seemed to suggest it wasn't as severe as hurricane helene from two weeks prior exactly 14 days ago today. helene had a 15-foot surge in taylor county, which is up in that big bend area of florida where the panhandle starts to break toward the west from the west of the state of florida.
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the bridge inspections are underway but far too early right now to assess the damage and long boat key, siesta key, venice, sanibel, pine island. all the barrier islands built up for 50, 60 years on the west coast of florida. it will take some time when you consider it has only been daylight for 90 minutes here and still with the weather conditions we're dealing with, wind and rain not too much of a factor to get out there, no media has been allowed. police and first responders are the ones who go in first and assess the damage, make sure it is safe for anyone to either go back to inspect their home or to allow us to know what kind of reality they are dealing with on this the morning after. michael is a fox weather meteorologist is live in jacksonville. he was talking about the st. john's river, michael. what are you experiencing thus far after 9:00 now on the east coast. good morning there.
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>> bill and dana, good morning to both of you. yeah, where we are right now, the winds are really the big weather story as of 4:00 this morning we had winds up and over 60 miles-per-hour and those gusts as you can see still super strong. in fact, you look at the sand and it is whipping past me. you look toward my right as well and we did see a little bit of storm surge. enough to where, of course, seaweed and sea foam has been blown on shore where we're at here in jacksonville beach area. the thing is that in downtown jacksonville, thank goodness that storm surge that was predicted we're not expecting to see a ton of flooding out of that. a saving grace at this point. it is the winds that have knocked down trees, power lines, power is still out right now to
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thousands of people in duvall county where we're at currently. something to keep in mind. to restore power and for power crews to restore power when we're talking about winds gusts over 45 miles-per-hour it can take a lot of work. erecting the buckets into the air. they won't do that when winds are that strong. it may be a few hours without power. give them grace and patience to get it restored. rain not a huge issue, thank goodness. not a ton of flooding here. you head south, though, we're seeing lots of flooding down that way. at least for right now winds are really going to be the big story and not expecting the winds to die down until late this afternoon or evening. milton's effects being felt here on the first coast. >> bill: when you see the track coming on the other side of the state, you naturally let your guard down, right? when the evacuation order on the west coast because you think
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take a direct hit, jacksonville, i don't like to use the word, got lucky. >> i completely agree with you. we dodged a bullet on this one, thank goodness. the storm surge wasn't as high as what we once thought it could be. one thing i did find interesting, bill, i have spoken with so many folks. spoke with a hotel manager up the street there who said that 95% of the patrons and guests were actually from tampa. they couldn't find refuge in orlando. he had to come to the east coast of florida to find the refuge. thankfully here it is not as bad as it could have been but we're still certainly not out of the woods. i really want people to be cautious and safe. a lot of downed branches, a couple of trees are down at this time. the winds will be with us through this evening. take it slow and safe and take it easy, bill. >> bill: thank you, michael. thank you much jacksonville.
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move to cocoa beach, florida. dana marie mcnicholl. what do you have, dana marie? good morning. >> good morning, bill. a lot of destruction from a tornado that whipped off of cocoa beach yesterday. west coast of florida was bracing for a rain event, east coast over 126 tornado warnings according to fox weather. i want to show you what i have going on behind me. this is a super cuts. a fully glass building so, of course, when the tornado whipped off the coast it really did a lot of damage. you can see the roof completely fell through on the products off the walls. here is one business but, of course, there are multiple businesses that look similar. the wells fargo had their roof completely blown off as well. the columns falling down. behind us in a neighborhood, a lot of those homes destroyed. that's what we're looking at
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here at 6:45 last night. people here were hunkering down in place but they weren't really expecting a tornado. the mayor here said that he and his daughter were staying put and they had damage to their home. we heard from another couple that was thinking about going outside waiting 20 to 30 seconds saved their life. take a listen. >> pool pump was rung. i was going to turn that pump off. she said don't go yet. it wasn't 20, 30 seconds later where the wind just went crazy. the tornado came in and all this happened. i would have been stood right here turning the pool pump off when it happened. >> so happy to hear they're okay. south of us in st. lucie county. 17 tornadoes went through there. the public service officer said multiple fatality.
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we get the numbers. what i'm feeling now, winds that aren't comparable to what we felt through the morning and last night. it is dying down. that's the back side of milton what we're feeling here in cocoa beach, bill. >> bill: thank you very much. dana marie is 60 miles east of here. danny alvarez is 80 miles west of here. the size of the storm. the hillsborough county fire rescue. you are in the tampa area. give us your initial assessment with daylight now today. >> good morning, thank you for having me. initial assessment, we are suffering from trees being down, power lines down, flooding in the western portion of our county. overall, though, i believe we're very happy that the fact that our citizens are doing well and this thing could have been much
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worse for our area. >> bill: have you gotten any reports from the barrier islands along the gulf of mexico? >> currently we haven't received any reports on the barrier islands. we've been very focused on our community making sure we responded to them. during the time of the hurricane we had over 300 calls that were waiting for it to be safe for us to respond. so as far as information from other regions, we have not received. >> bill: are your bridges intact? >> we have three of the bridges currently are -- they are withholding all traffic in those areas, reports are that all the bridges are functional. we're keeping folks off the bridges at this time. >> it's been 100 years since tampa took a direct hit.
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looks like you survived again. how does that feel this morning? >> a sigh of relief. we love our community, year in and year out we're under threat of the possibility of a significant hurricane and we've dodged a bullet here with this one. hurricane helene did touchdown here and horrible storm surge and we were prepping for something similar but we understand what a blessing it is that we did not get as severely impacted as was reported. >> bill: yeah. as you well know, if it misses in one place, it will hit somewhere else. and i have to think you and others are thinking about sarasota, siesta key and other parts this morning. >> absolutely. our thoughts and prayers are
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with them. if it doesn't hit one place it is hitting somewhere else. we stand ready to support our neighbors and we have our task force teams ready to go. currently we're assessing damage in our area. as soon as we can get to them believe me we'll be responding and assisting with all possible rescues. >> bill: well done, sir. i'll let you take the call. a busy day for you and the men and women on your force. hillsborough county fire and rescue, the tampa area that they were holding their breath all week long into the night last night and now in the early morning hours they can go out and give us an idea what's left behind. >> dana: we'll need to see more about sarasota as the sun has only been up for a couple of hours now and continue to do that. we'll be right back. most people are running from the hurricane. some are meeting milton head on.
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>> dana: welcome back to our coverage. tornadoes destroying florida's treasure coast caught on video. a massive twister ripping through a neighborhood in west palm beach. watch this, too. >> oh, violent tornado, violent, violent. >> dana: sparks flying. it was from the united cajun navy and semi truck overturned in the road. the group brought the driver to safety. the st. lucie county sheriff's office leveled by a tornado. they reported 19 confirmed tornadoes and multiple deaths.
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we await details on that. janice dean, as you have been telling us for days, this is going to be a big storm and what do you think of the aftermath. >> well, if i could have a do over i would focus on the fact we could have tornadoes. we focused on the storm surge, very dangerous across the west coast. we focused very heavy rain, 18 i-in st. petersburg and focused on the hurricane-force winds. but we can see tropical tornadoes. the difference is it wasn't just a few. there were historic tornadoes and ones that you would typically see in the great planes, wedge tornadoes, violent tornadoes, i think that is the eye opener here. 126 most warnings issued statewide in a single day for florida. this was a prolific event and one that we don't see very often with hurricanes but usually you see a potential tornado outbreak when they're very strong.
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a lot of energy and deep tropical moisture and it felt so soupy across florida. this is something you would typically see in an outbreak when we go on tv and say there is a cold front and cold air moving into a warm air mass. that's what happened. so in hindsight i think i will warn more about tornadoes going forward when i do forecasting for tropical storms. wind gusts. we have a hurricane, 85 mile-per-hour sustained winds off shore. 40 mile-per-hour winds along the coast. not done yet. it will continue throughout the next couple of hours. the storm is quickly moving out to sea. look how big it is. it was a small category 5 storm relatively speaking and once it interacted with that cold front it got bigger. it is 500 miles wide and why we're seeing impacts along the east coast. it will take time to get out there and assess the damage.
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the takeaway from this was the incredible amount of tornadoes and deaths because of that. >> dana: tell me a little bit about what you mentioned yesterday that this was going to happen at high tide. >> we were lucky because this storm actually came in earlier than we first present tepidityed. we were thinking it was going to be a midnight overnight situation and it made its right hand turn around 8:30 so it missed high tide which helped save a lot of these towns. i'm not saying we won't wake up and see damage in parts of sarasota, maybe fort myers but it could have been a whole lot worse. >> dana: thank you so much. >> bill: back to the west coast and pick up our coverage with a storm chaser. i understand you are in sarasota overnight. that must have been something. now you are in tampa. what did you learn in sarasota, let's start there, chris. >> we were in sarasota for
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landfall and moments after. let me just tell you it looked like a war zone just the amount of power flashes and you can hear the trees snapping in the town. it just sounded like a war zone. that was right in downtown sarasota. it took us nearly 2 1/2 hours to get back to tampa, what would originally be maybe an hour. >> bill: i'm thinking about st. armin's key, bird key and ledo key on the water. were you able to assess anything happening out there or pick up any coverage from there? >> no. at the time we barely made it back to i-75 to come north and the barrier islands, most of them were blocked off during the duration of the hurricane . we'll go back down today and assess the damage and getting ready to leave tampa in a little bit so i can tell you what i
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know once i get down there. >> bill: tell me what you learned from overnight. you chase storms for a reason. you want to pick up data and information. what data and information did you get last evening. >> we recorded gusts over 100 miles-per-hour in downtown sarasota. we are going to talk to our team this morning and see what other information that they recorded because a lot of people actually did put out the probes to record the pressure and everything into the hurricane. we're waking up to a beautiful sky this morning. no issues getting back south today. >> bill: i wonder when they let you on the islands, because a lot of those roads could be blocked off for some time. last comment on that, chris. >> yeah, i agree. it all comes down to how the bridges are to access those barrier islands.
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if anything, they think may be wrong with it, they'll keep that closed for a little while. we went through this during hurricane ian and sanibel island the bridge completely collapsed going into there. it is a safety issue and understandable. we'll see once we arrive down south today. >> bill: all right, chris. thank you, chris, storm chaser in tampa is headed south to find what he can today. good luck to you and your team. that storm also ripping through major league baseball. drone footage that captures the damage at tropicana field at st. petersburg, home of the tampa bay rays and this video was really passed around on social media all night long. the number of angles on this is truly breathtaking. something that we have quite never seen before and now you
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see the field below and what they are left with to try to fix sometime very soon. a closer look at that as our coverage continues this on the morning afternoon of hurricane milton moving off the east coast of daytona beach, florida as we speak. back in a moment on "america's newsroom."
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>> right now it looks like sarasota county had the most significant storm surge. likely somewhere between eight to ten feet and remember, with helene we had 15 to 20 feet up in taylor county. rescue missions have been underway throughout the night. state search and rescue teams report 48 individuals have been rescued. national guard search and rescue teams have worked overnight and successfully executed rescues of families and pets on the west coast and the destruction of the tornadoes.
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>> dana: that was ron desantis giving an update. the numbers were from 6:30 in the morning. not quite light by then. talking about the rescues so far. probably more to come. >> bill: you think about, dana, the number one job of the governor in the state of florida, republican, democrat, doesn't matter, is getting your people and state in a position to respond to a natural disaster such as this hurricane. think about what desantis has done while he has been governor here. he has been on top of every single one of these and reminds me of what led jeb bush as the governor of florida to such great popularity because during jeb bush's term in florida 20 years ago, there was a number of storms that just kept hitting the state of florida one after the other. looking at video, over and again. that is your number one job. bush did it really well. desantis learned from that and done very well also. his office put out a note a few minutes ago and brief at noon
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eastern time. i think he might be down in fort pierce, st. lucie county where the tornado had the fatalities at that community center for seniors. we'll watch that a bit later today. in the meantime want to get to kendall smith. you are live now, kendall. from fox weather. what are you hearing about the community center and cop shop that got tangled into a mess? good morning. >> good morning, bill. this is just complete devastation, we just arrived on the scene here in fort pierce, florida. a community of just about 50,000 residents right along the treasure coast. and this extremely large and dangerous tornado ripped through this community just after 5:00 p.m. yesterday. we had 45 total reports of tornadoes yesterday alone. we had 126 tornado warnings which set a new daily state record for the state of florida. an unprecedented day and the
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devastation unimaginable. i'll walk around and show you what folks are dealing with. this is the lakewood methodist church behind me. one area hit extremely hard. this side of the building may not look as bad. the other side of the building is completely gone. this is the congregation. the roof they just got. a brand-new roof completely ripped off and there is a community center just back behind here. there is a steel octagon building and there was a couple that were staying and sheltering in this community center. they said that they were watching the weather all day long yesterday. they knew there was a potential we could have hurricane-force winds, torrential rain. the typical hazards associated with a hurricane. what they were not aware of was that something of this magnitude could occur and this quickly. they said they heard a freight train. the stereo typical sound that
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most people associate with a tornado. that's exactly what they said they experienced. it happened in just a few minutes. they quickly sought shelter in an office building in the community center behind me and able to ride out the storm. immediately after the tornado they left that community shelter. see if i can show you what that community shelter and walked out to find all of this. trying to avoid this debris. an s.u.v. with a tree limb that is completely shattering the windshield right here. you can see lots and lots of downed trees. it smells like fresh cut wood. this massive tree. just want to show you the magnitude. this proves how strong and violent a tornado we had. look, it wasn't snapped in half, it was all the way at the base came crashing down. so thankful it did not fall directly on the church behind it. here is in the distance that
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community shelter and where we are located is we're just a few miles away from where unfortunately we have had confirmed fatalities. as of this morning, we have had the st. lucie county emergency operation center confirm four fatalities to fox and this is an ongoing situation. search and rescue efforts are ongoing this morning. there have been at least 25 individuals that have been rescued and all of those individuals unfortunately have sustained either cuts, bruises, lacerations. there is a lot of injured folks here in this community. there is no power. there is also very limited cell service. we had to hook up to our starlink to get wifi this morning because we had no cell service otherwise. the sun is just now coming up behind me. we still have rain in the forecast today. it is a big concern with folks trying to get outside, pick up the pieces of their livelihoods and try to salvage anything they
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can. this is just utter devastation, to say the least. >> bill: kendall, hang with me one moment. janice dean was talking about the size of this storm, 500 miles across, or a 500 mile area affected. we're in orlando, you are 125 miles southeast of where we are and the gentleman we just talked to in tampa is 80 miles west of here. that gives you a sense of the scale for this storm and how many people were affected. but that area was hit with these leading bands of the storm. this isn't storm surge. this is tornadoes that popped up yesterday afternoon. >> yeah. this is unfortunately like we were mentioning a new daily state record for florida with 126 tornado warnings that were issued yesterday alone. speaking with those individuals that are members of this church, that's what they said. they were the most surprised by is the fact that they were not
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aware that something like this could occur and have this many tornadoes out of a land falling hurricane. >> bill: the governor may head your way in a couple of hours. i'm not sure many people stuck around the neighborhood. good hustle down there and hoping for the best. also more word, dana, in a moment on the fatalities she mentioned a few miles if her location. back to new york with more. >> dana: all of this is happening in the homestretch of the presidential election and vice president kamala harris is catching some flak for conducting business as usual during back-to-back hurricanes. the "washington post" wrote this. some of harris's decision including attending splashy fundraiser and political events after helene made landfall and participating in light hearted interviews have opened her to criticism from opponents. joining us now is fox news contributor karl rove.
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great to have you here. hurricane season always coincides with election season. how do you think she has handled this so far? >> those are reasonably good criticism of her. she is in a bad place. the federal government is not in charge of disaster recovery. we were talking about this off camera. the governors are in charge and desantis in florida and cooper in north carolina are the people who are making the decisions. they call on the federal government for assistance but they are in charge. we look to washington and think it is up to them. so she may not be the person who is getting instructions from the state governors saying here is what we need in the way of resources and money but she looks like she is disengaged. >> dana: ron desantis and kamala harris had a back and forth. she said i called him. i talked to the president and you are not in the chain of command. how dare he not take my phone call. she doesn't have anything to offer. >> look, in fact look, it's
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ceremonial, the governor talking to the president. what the president will say is anything you need, you just tell my fema director what it is that you need and we'll give it to you. that's the customary phone call in a disaster like this. even the president doesn't have much to do with it. and again, i repeat, the role of the federal government is to have a big checkbook and to have federal resources that can be drawn upon by the governor at his direction. >> dana: president biden came out twice yesterday to talk about misinformation when it comes to hurricanes. he said this, no one should make americans question whether their government will be there for them when disaster strikes. here is a little bit more on the misinformation. call for two, please, play this for karl. >> are we concerned about any misinformation or disinformation regarding evacuations that we need to clear up at this point? >> there has been a lot of misinformation out there, madam
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vice president. >> why do you think trump is spreading this information? >> i don't know, it is unam an. not who the hell we are. >> disinformation is harmful. >> dana: yes, but there is confusion especially when the first thing that mayorkas said at the hurricane was we'll need more money. >> why they did that, i don't know. look, we're in a budget battle. we're in a new fiscal year without a federal budget in place operating under a continuing resolution that keeps last year's level. they have plenty of money to do what they need to do on this. this was all worry and action about the future. i do worry about one thing. this idea that all you can get is $750. let's be clear, not true. $750 is the atms are out. i need to go to the grocery store and my credit card will not work. i need to pay with cash. give i.d. you get logged into the
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computer. you can't do it more than once but they give you 750. the maximum amount of federal assistance, not state or insurance is up to $42,000. the 750 is emergency money if the banking system is shut down and your credit cards don't work. >> dana: quick comment. do you think the hurricanes either helene or milton or ones to come. seven weeks before hurricane season is over and 3 1/2 before the election. will it affect voting? >> it might in the people in the affected areas western north carolina and a big swatch of florida say i don't think my governor or government is doing enough. >> dana: what about their physical ability to vote? >> that will be in real problem. in five congressional districts in northern georgia and the three in western north carolina, those are heavily republican districts. all eat -- eight of them.
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62% republicans and goes up from there. those people may not be there on election day. i have friends in atlanta and they don't know when they'll be able to go home. >> dana: you are a road warrior now and appreciate you coming by. vice president harris is calling an old friend for help on the campaign trail. barack obama is schedule to give a speech for harris in pittsburgh, pennsylvania today. peter doocy, i've been wondering where he was. he had the big presence at the convention and hasn't been seen until today. >> and today is going to be the first of many barack obama headlineed speeches before the election and harris campaign is showing us how important they think the pittsburgh area is. this is where the vice president came to unveil her economic policy and this is where they have barack obama for the first time headlining something on her behalf. we do not expect the vice president to be here just like she was not at his keynote at
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the dnc convention. they prefer for whatever reason to have them apart. and the harris campaign has not provided us with any kind of prepared remarks but want us to know that barack obama has great influence over the democratic party but he is not pulling the strings. >> who tells you -- i guess it's a whole think-tank. did obama advise you on your pick for vice president? >> no, i made the decision. i made the decision. >> and in the literature, the harris campaign has provided us ahead of this evening's remarks, they are reminding us the harris campaign, that obama and harris have known each other and good friends for 20 years. a quick google this morning reminds us early in the friendship barack obama called her the best looking attorney general and his press secretary jay carney had to say obama called her to apologize. >> dana: we'll take a live look
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>> bill: here we go. this story and video will tell us a lot.
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this is the first video we're seeing on venice beach, florida. that's a barrier island. in a moment you will see a gentleman, a member of the local fire department, rolling down the street in a golf cart. if you look at the homes off to his left, you can get a sense now here is the video, roll it, guys, out of new york. you can get a sense of the homes and how much damage they took on. remember, there is storm surge of eight to ten feet high and you think about what happens there when you've got the ocean sitting in your neighborhood for several hours at a time and on top of that you have the wind pushing the waves on top of the water. and that is really the destructive aspect of the storm when it comes to the foundation and structures of homes, businesses, and buildings. this is tampa right now. if we get a moment, guys, show us the video of the gentleman in the golf cart rolling down the street. it is very telling. it's the first time we have had
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an opportunity to see some of the bare yes islands. as we wait on that major general of the florida national guard is with me. thank you for your time. i may have to interrupt you because i'm looking at something that i've seen for the first time. a live picture from venice, florida now. general, i don't know if you can see our screen from where you are but this is -- you see the sand that has been built up on the side and to me that might be debris and other things left over from helene two weeks ago today and then you've got probably new structural damage as you saw in that yellow home a moment ago and the white home that was three doors down from there. general, give us your assessment as we watch these images for the first time. >> good morning, thank you for having me on. as the storm passes, we have
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over 10,000 guardsmen on site or moving into the site. over 3,000 of those are coming from more than 20 other states, tremendous support from around the country for florida and we appreciate that. so we put over 6,000 guardsmen, along with the first responders, into the impact zone prior to the storm and so that we could get out at first light as soon as the winds go below hurricane force winds to help start the search and rescue and do any assessments. what you see is a lot of destruction but it comes on the heels of helene. as you said we were in the process of cleaning up helene when milton came. i think we have a combination of both. what you see for the destruction. currently we have over close to 7,000 guardsmen on scene, another 3,000 plus coming to help.
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we have 31 helicopters that were just to the north and south of the impact areas staged and ready to go. now that the winds have died down they are filling in behind from the north and south to assist the search and rescue. currently they are doing the search and rescues now going on until local authorities decide they don't need to do it. they did a few overnight in the middle of the storm because of the tornadoes. >> bill: i want to issue a bit of a clarification to viewers at home. a lot of this video is coming in hot. what you saw on the golf cart where all that sand led out to a home, that was bradenton beach on the south side leading into the bay of cam pennsylvania and general, i have to tell you, the initial assessment here is bad. i look at some of these homes and there is extensive, extensive damage, sir. >> again, the assessment is
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ongoing now. most importantly we're focused on search and rescue to identify and get everybody out that had remained. and then in parallel with that they'll start doing damage assessments and moving normally about 72 hours after search and rescue is completed we move into recovery move and assist state and local authorities in the recovery. as i've said, there is, as you see, extensive damage. a lot of the sand had already been pushed because of the previous storm. the state, along with the guard assisting them, did a tremendous effort really going 24/seven just prior to this storm to try to move as much debris and sand from helene away as possible so it didn't make the effects worse, particularly the debris that could be launched by
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hurricane force winds. it was heroic efforts on the part of the state and folks moving the debris until the hurricane-force winds started coming in. >> bill: if you see a refrigerator in the road it's from helene two weeks ago. a lot of that debris was taken away. it takes a long time to get this stuff out of the street. when you consider the span of the storm two weeks ago how much debris had to be cleared you didn't get to all of it but certainly tried. if you been able to get an assessment from the air and if so, what have they told you? >> i have not personally gone up in the air. we have 31 national guard helicopters available. they are launching now. they are in the air along with many of the state's law enforcement helicopters, there is coast guard and many agencies all in the air. a very coordinated effort at the state to get all those aircraft in the air and they are focused
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on search and rescue immediately. they do do damage assessments in parallel when they can but those assessments will come a little later as they are focused on the search and rescue now that the aircraft can get in the air with now that the storm has passed and the winds allow it. so like your assessment, there is a lot of damage but it would be hard at this point to categorize it. >> bill: general, you know a lot of curious folks wondering how their homes are doing today and be anxious to get back and have a look. when do you think it's safe? >> as you heard the governor say we won't prevent folks coming into home. pay attention to local law enforcement agencies say and that it is safe. that's our primary focus is that it's safe. so we're looking at clearing the roads that are down. there will be a lot of trees and power lines down and we have to
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clear those first. do the assessments. assess damage especially on bridge. once those are clear folks will be welcome to come back into home and start the cleanup and their own assessments. >> bill: thank you so much for your time and get back to work. great source of information, major general robert carruthers, florida national guard. let's get a break. live images coming in on "america's newsroom." customize and sa— (balloon doug pops & deflates) and then i wake up. is limu with you in all your dreams? oh, yeah. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty, liberty, liberty, liberty. ♪
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these men of means with their silver spoons, eating up the financial favors of the 1%. what would become of them when they discover robinhood gold allows others to earn their very liberal rates on idle cash, unlimited deposit bonuses and handsome retirement matching? they would descend into chaos. merciless chaos. >> the storm did bring much destruction and damage. tornadoes ravaged parts of the east coast of the state. flooding occurred on the west and east coast and strong winds lashed the state. we had over 80,000 people that were into shelters overnight as the storm hit the state. we will better understand the extent of the damage as the day progresses.

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