the devastation in very direct terms. the impacts of this storm are historic and the damage that was done has been historic and this is just off initial assessments. take a look at fort myers, close to where ian made landfall. you see the downed trees and the boats tossed around like toys. storm surges as high as 7 to 10 feet swept through surrounding areas making streets look more like oceans. ian has left more than 2.5 million floridians without power. folks who were in shelters are leaving to see if they even have a home to return to. the focus is now on the people who did not evacuate. finding a lot of the roads are impassable. we have a lot of power lines down, a lot of flooding going on. i don t want to speculate on fatalities, but we have had some reports being called into us in reference to potential bodies being found. right now the storm is moving eastward through florida with the carolinas and georgia in its sights with flash flooding a major concern. you c
here in colyer county and lee as well. there are 20 shelters across -z the country. 18 of those are already filled up. you have a situation where at this last minute you have people, families going from shelter to shelter looking for a place to ride out the storm safely and sometimes just not finding it. naples could get hit really by a two fist by first the strong wind of a major hurricane but also perhaps more damaging could be the storm surge in some places here 16 feet, that would basically change the geography here. we could see entire first floors of structures, businesses and homes under water by monday morning. arthel, back to you. arthel: steve harrigan in naples, florida. thanks, steve. eric: federal agencies gearing up for back to back major hurricanes, in texas, well, now they are add it again, how are they preparing, coming up, we will talk to dhs acting