passing a baton at 120-mile-an-hour and atlantaing dead center on target. vice president pike members sitting down with maria bartiromo. you can see it tomorrow morning at 10:00 a.m. eastern on sunday morning futures. . i m jon scott. thanks for joining us. watters world starts next. [national anthem]
this goes forward. the dominican republic tomorrow, still 75-mile-per-hour winds generally, 4 to 6-foot storm surge. 4 to 8 inches of rain or more over the dominican republic. the next big place we re going to see real devastation again, ali, is going to be the turks and caicos. still a category 4 storm, 120-mile-an-hour winds, but the storm surge anywhere from 10 to 15 feet. if it s high tide, you could add three or four or five feet to that and upwards of more rain, so that s going to be bad. then it could hit the atlantic on sunday morning between the coastal states and bermuda. it s not done with puerto rico just yet. we look at the winds. wind gusts will be, again, up to 125, 150 miles per hour. these are current wind gusts right now. we re talking about complete roof failure and structure failure for a lot of these
devastating. we were actually we re on the left side of the eye wall. we saw about 120-mile-an-hour winds. just to our east, oh my gosh, it was horrible. there was storm surge that came up everywhere. trees are shredded. the wind that came through there had to be 140 miles per hour. there s storm surge damage all along the coastline. it s really sad to see what happened there. i m sorry. correction. it was oohs of key west, sorry. it s been a long few days. but, yeah, it s just devastating, don. i mean, to see what happened to my hometown, it just makes me extremely sad. can you talk to me about this video, mike? that we re showing now. you shot just before the eye wall came onshore. how does this compare to other storms you ve chased. this is one of the scariest storms i ve ever chased because the wording about you ll not survive and all these things i
what a morning. yes, indeed, sir. we spoke 14 hours ago. i know you re still in orlando. you are getting on board a u.s. helicopter, you are going to pick up marco rubio, you fly together to key west, florida, sir. what have you been told about the damage in key west now? it is what you would expect with the 120-mile-an-hour wind. but the keys, they are accustomed to wind. they are tough. the great news is that most of them evacuated, they were only about 10,000 people left in the whole island chain. most of the emergency personnel had moved up to the northern most key, key largo. they are all getting back down the road now.
after a storm. i just noticed while we were out here and it may have just washed away, but they were here is some of it, chunks of glass from a window. this is a tiny shard, it s about the size of a quarter. but in 120-mile-an-hour wind gusts his would rip your eye apart. it s like a bullet to your head. as far as power outages go, the last number we got which was a little while ago was 880,000 in miami-dade county without fourr- without power. but i m sure that number has rise in the last bit of time. this is the southern exposure. we are waiting for the southern end of irma to hit us and smack