recovery mission as of yet. reporter: there s always hope. yasmin, there s always hope. but as the hours progress and the hours become days that hope diminishes but never extinguished. there is hope. look. people know. people know that as time passes the odds get worse. but there s still a lot of hope here. jose, is there anything still standing there? reporter: here? very little. some structures. there s some structures, concrete structures. the church. the police station. an apartment block over there behind the debris that held. held. that s a it held because it s solid concrete and bricks. so they held but some don t have roofs. you know? it is so add. tornados almost like it s a
from hurricane laura one year ago. i before you up past storms and the impact the hurricanes and tropical storms have on communitieses. we re looking at homa, greater neighborhoods o it side new orleans where we spent the last three weeks. there are still homeowners that don t have power. a great number of them that still don t have roofs. that are filing insurance claims from ida s impact that are now looking in these hours ahead over the next 24 hours more rain, more wind from this storm. jeff? mush he will, good to have you back with us. circumstances aside. as vaughn points out, you know, this region is still not yet recovered from ida and now their expecting more rain. hi there. so good to see both of you. yeah, you re going to be seeing rain over the next several days. the problem is we have a
have homes, don t have roofs, even if they have anything left from their house at all. 4 of new rain on top of great abaco over the next 24 to 36 hours. it s going to be a rainmaker until that develops. until that happens, there won t be a lot of win and certainly no surge. when the wind does develop, it will eventually turn up toward the north and the northeast. that is the good news. ka kate, that s a big pool of cold water. how did it get there? dorian mixed it up. the potential might be less than for dorian. good news. hopefully cold water will take it, will protect us, florida special. thank you for keeping an eye on that. today could mark a development in the college admissions scandal. will actress felicity huffman be the first person charged in the case to see actual jail time? we ll take you live to the courthouse where this is going
$7.2 billion for the border. and they say with the hurricane season just three months away, there are marines and sailors working in compromised structures, basically that they re putting their well-being at risk. that s right, we were there last week and we saw these structures. the walls are caved in, mold overrunning, and marines working in the headquarters building that don t have roofs. you can see to the ceiling above them and they have be working like that for more than sixth months. thank you for bringing that to our attention, we appreciate it. coming up next, to infinity and beyond, one more thing. infinit beyond, one more thing s like th. this and even this. but i don t have to clean this, because the self-cleaning brush roll removes hair,
natural disasters, and i think it s just shameless and unconscionable that they are voting no for sandy aid. i think, again quid pro quo. it s quid pro quo and we re all americans and we have to help each other, and i know there are fights going on in congress now, and those fights will be taken care of, but our people need help. people who have don t have roofs over their heads or cannot rebuild or businesses that are closing. they need help, and they need it now and it s unconscionable for anybody to need help. they were devastated, many parts of new jersey and new york still recovering from that. thank you so much, congressman engel. thank you. an unnerving number of americans have gotten a flu shot but first, is he or isn t he? a mystery surrounding george p. bush. we ve got that for you. you re watching msnbc. ene.