a lesson of tolerance. you ll meet her this hour. let s start with the latest on tropical storm bonnie. our man is covering it, chad myers is on top of the story. tropical storm bonnie hit miami as a storm, 40 miles an hour 40, right. and probably more wind up here on the north side. it was moving at 18 miles per hour that way. you can kind of add some 50 would be the maximum. that s a lot of wind. it s not a hurricane. it s not a hurricane. i think right now if we watch it, this is the top part of monroe county. this is monroe county. this is all of monroe as well. here s dade and then collier. we re somewhere moving out of dade into collier and then eventually struggle this get probably south of cape coral. the big question is, what happens when it gets back into
storm is probably intensifying. when we lose purple, it is going down in scale. that s expected because it made landfall in miami and worked its way across florida. as much this is land. there s a lot of swampland there and the everglades are quite warm. the water is fairly warm. and there s not a mountain. it didn t hit a 14,000-foot mountain in south florida because they don t exist. this is going to get into this warm water, not going to have a very long time in this water because this thing is hauling the mail. we re focused on landfall somewhere most likely somewhere in louisiana. here s what it looks like. we could see for a while a center of circulation. came across miami, dade it s about collier, going to move out into the ocean. here s the official track from the hurricane center, what it looks like. still gets a little bit bigger.
nope, easy does it. of you can t get so big, because i m in your way. and look it at this. i just want to point this out. this is flight explorer, 70 planes in the air out of miami right now, so like whatever. 40 miles per hour, we can handle this, this isn t even a employee blow. so we re getting over it. south florida getting over it now. it will eventually get into the gulf of mexico. it is hauling. we just weren t joking that it s probably moving faster than its winds are blowing. right. that s good for a storm. the faster it moves means less time for it to sit and churn and get big. so the storm is moving this way, the spin moves this way, if the winds are only 40 miles per hour and this thing is moving in the direction of 30, that means the winds down here are only 10. you can do the subtraction. the winds up here could be greater, because winds, you add them together, and that s why the right side of a hurricane is always this side of the hurricane, is always more dangerou
elsa could send what remains of the apartment complex toppling on to those on the ground, so they re now looking to demolish it before elsa makes landfall. this will protect our search and rescue teams because we don t know when it could fall over and, of course, with these gusts, potentially, that would create a really severe hazard. that means boring into the structure of the building in order to install explosives a precarious proposition, given how unstable it has become. 0nce complete, however, the effort will give officials their first access to the garage area, which has been the focus of the search so far. meanwhile, residents of another miami apartment building have been evacuated after engineers came across concrete and electrical problems. their building is just seven miles from the one that collapsed. there, two more bodies were discovered overnight, bringing the total confirmed dead to 24. david willis, bbc
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