se. people are coming back into the neighborhoods. this is what you are coming back to. so they have to be very, very careful, jake. >> thank you. joining me now is fema senior administrator james joseph live for us at fema headquarters in washington. thanks so much for joining us, mr. joseph. we have seen the track of hurricane dorian changing almost daily. now that the storm is moving on from the bahamas, are federal resources in the right places right now to help people during and after the storm? >> hey, jake, thanks for having us on tonight. first and foremost, my condolences, thoughts and prayers to everyone impacted in the bahamas. as you have been reporting, a tragic event there. yes, we have the resources. we have prepositioned personnel in the state emergency operations centers several days ago well in advance of the track making its way, the storm making its way now, and we have been embedding with the governor's offices, working with the governors of the southeastern state and working with state emergency management officials to assess any gaps they may have in their plan and help them fill that. >> how do you decide