but this city and this county of franklin which has 12,000 mandatory evacuation in the entire county. one of the problems with this is city right here, it s kind of a peninsula. the only way off are two long bridges over a bay. the feeling is with an elevation of 13 feet and potential storm surge up 14 feet, this city could be underwater by there time tomorrow. people have taken heed of the warnings. most people are gone. a mandatory evacuation. like miguel, this is a ghost town. people are very worried. gary and miguel, thank you both. be safe. i want to get to mark de maria in the national hurricane center. thank you for joining us. you ve been tracking the storm all night. what can we expect over the next few hours? well, it looks like the system is now approaching its landfall. it s about 128 hours or so every reaching the coast. however, we expect to see the impacts coming in pretty soon. you can see in the outer stands on the radar image that they
we have dulles airport on a ground stop. because they re in a tornado warning. look at this mean radar image. you can see washington, d.c. and alexandria you re next. if you don t have a tornado, you could have gusts up to 70 miles an hour. hail and damaging winds from chicago to st. louis and the lows you see going to spring up more in the way of severe weather. anywhere from binghamton to philadelphia, right through baltimore. that s tomorrow. the low near the gulf of mexico it s also produced three to five inches of rain. easily could produce another four. thanks, ginger. we ll see you first thing in the morning. from cincinnati we have new details what went wrong after a teenager kyle plush called 911 for help from the back of his mini van. he was being crushed to death after a seat had fallen over on him. the city has released a report. that heart broken family says it leaves unanswered questions.
of this? let s get to our meteorologist: what s going on, allison? that s the million dollars question. let s talk about where it is right now. this is the radar image of the space station taken from space. it may not look that big, it s quite large. it s the average size of a school bus. about 12 meters long which is 40 feet and it weighs about 8 and a half metric tons. here s the thing. it was lunched back in china 11. china lost contact with it in 2016. reentry is expected later on tonight until early tomorrow. 8:00 eastern time tonight through the early morning hours. here s the thing. the reason why it was delayed is we like to call space weather. there was calmer space weather. we anticipated that some of those strong solar winds would create a denser atmosphere, thus pushing the space station back down into reentry a little bit faster. those winds didn t have too much of an impact, so thus the
night. i m brooke baldwin. we re talking about hurricane nate miles away from making its second landfall in the united states. let s go to tom sator in the cnn weather center whereas you have been hammering home, the storm surge concern number one. i think so without a doubt. it s not so much the winds although it s moving at 20 miles per hour and sustained winds are at 85, you couple them together and there will be some power outages. but here s the radar image. and that sets stage here for what s going to happen now. you can now see the eye, all right. this is a larger eye, it s about 35 miles in diameter. it s those tighter eyes that make stronger storms. but all of the precipitation is in the north and eastern quadrant here, there s almost nothing underneath. at 6:55 it made its first landfall, extreme section of plaquer man s paris. that was landfall number one and we re only 20 miles away from a second landfall. again, if it moves at 20 miles per hour and it s 20 miles away we
possible. 40 miles per hour gusts. and again 40 miles per hour gusts done knock down too many trees. it s higher up to 50 miles per hour. and here s the last radar image. this is the last center point. at 11:00 east coast time. at the new 2:00 a.m. point should be inland here. you can see somewhere the center if we track it. the black line was the forecast line. which does would be on shore. so as far as who has the strongest winds now. now we re moving awa from the coast. it s an inland event. more trees and foilage. hurly is probably through winds about maybe 50 to 70 miles per hour winds. so that s where we could get power outages. mobile is going to be far enough away from the strong winds. gusts in the 50 miles per hour range. that will do it. further to the north. we go up towards at more, not too bad. these are strong bands coming out here. here s pence cola. we can get an isolated thord