to the curfew. i would reiterate to them that this storm is moving so quickly, the great danger is that people will take it lightly and because of the storm winds and the surge, people can put our first responders in a difficult situation of trying to rescue them. people should not let their guard down. what did you and emergency experts do? you ve been preparing for this pretty significantly in the past couple of days. what type of preps have you put in place? well, anybody who has done this knows that every storm is different and every one brings you a different threat. often times storms will bring you things you don t expect. we prepare for electrical outages, we prepare for storm surge, we prepare for wind, we prepare for flood, we prepare for all of it. that s what we ve been working through. we keep drilling through a bunch of different scenarios, you have to have clear command and control, clear communication and
going to get slammed. what are you telling your people tonight? exactly what you all were just talking about in the last two or 3 minutes. the biggest concern i have is the storm surge, the biggest concern that our emergency experts have is all about the storm surge. this is a very different hurricane then what we just saw in texas. texas was a huge rain factor, a huge water factor is tragic as it was, is just a different type of hurricane. we think this will be one that will bring a tremendous amount of water up through the ocean, out in front will be pushed by the wind and if it happens to come ashore during our high tide, the start of our seasonal high tide season. with the seasonal high tide combined with a storm surge combined with an eastern win, you guys have accurately describe what could happen. julie: the storm surge and high tide cometh catastrophic. the governor said this or to be 33 to 10 feet. do not put your life or your family at risk if you have been