announced tomorrow. and we re told that u.s. officials are on the phone tonight with their europe an counterparts trying to kind of coordinate their response here. the president is also expected to talk to g7 leaders tomorrow morning, mid-morning, washington time, to try and get sort of on the same page on these sanctions. and then, he will come out, midday tomorrow, and and lay out what he is planning to do. and what we are told to expect is, again, these sort of swift and severe sanctions that the president had been promising, should vladimir putin go ahead with this assault in ukraine. and that includes things like export controls, which would restrict american export of teng technology to russia and that would have sort of a withering effect on things like its military sector. we also expect safrpgz sanctions on russian banks. the president announced earlier on two financial institutions but this would go after much
we have fox team coverage. alex hogan is live on long island, but we begin with meteorologist adam klotz who is tracking the storm in the fox weather center. adam? adam: hey, jon, the storm henri currently sitting a couple hundred miles off the coast of virginia with winds at 75 miles-per-hour. we could see this get up to 80 or 85 miles-an-hour overnight, moving to the northeast at 18 miles-an-hour. you start to notice some of those very front outer bands of rain beginning to work their way up along the new jersey coast and approaching long island. things will deteriorate as we head through the overnight hours, but again, a landfall, and when we say landfall, we re talking about the center of the storm. that s probably coming closer to midday tomorrow, but by early in the morning, you are really going to notice things getting rough out there, so do think of early sunday morning as a time when things should deteriorate in a big way, even though you may begin to notice some rain overni
storm s potential tomorrow. right? yes. that s correct. they are measuring it against the arrival of tropical storm elsa which could come maybe by midday tomorrow. not clear if that storm is going to track on the east coast of florida florida. it will be in the west, but they could get remnants which could be worry some. days after the condo collapsed, the miami dade mayor ordered an audit for all buildings 40 years or older. one of the cities that started a review is sunny iels beach just north of surfside. larrissa is the acting mayor of sunny isles beach, florida. tell me about any results you all have seen from audits of any of your buildings 40 years or older. thank you. first, happy 4th of july. we have amazing results. we started this immediately.
don t, even if we don t get a landfall, we are still going to get 4 to 7 feet of storm surge across north carolina. we all know how vulnerable the outer banks are with that push of water. one of the most vulnerable pl s places in the world with storm surge. so it s going to be a rough night. this is going to end by midday tomorrow, and then it will be offshore, but it s still going to be a wild night across north carolina. it is sapp headed toward what kind of impact could it have there? is storm surge the biggest concern? yeah, storm surge is going to be the biggest concern, especially for these areas right along the coast and even into the outer banks. we are going to see a lot of rain and also the tornado threat is very real with these hurricanes. in fact, we ve been seeing it all afternoon. we re going continue to see it through the overnight hours, and especially with the sun down now, it is going to be it s definitely going to be rough as far as as far as the tornadoes
seems to be a tropical storm at the moment. it s not going to get full hurricane-force winds. but right now this storm is due south of us. and it s headed probably within tens of miles of charleston. it won t come here, but we ll have stronger winds by tomorrow morning, by midday tomorrow and final by 6:00 tomorrow we ll get the heaviest winds. you can see there are some winds. there are some people in charleston right now, most of this area has been evacuated. it s been under mandatory evacuation, about a half million people here. the problem around here is that it floods all the time. charleston is a place that experiences a lot of flooding. you ll see this restaurant is boarded up and it has sandbags, except the city ran out of sandbags halfway through the day today, so flooding is going to be a concern. the city has opened up all of its garages in town, they re multistory units where they are allowing people to park. but as you know, the issue is flooding more than it is wind damag