all right. steve, listen. i hope that this storm gets past you sooner rather than later. it is amazing the duration of the impact we re dealing with with this muhurricane. let us know how we can help. thank you very much. we really appreciate it. it s one of the basic tensions that happens in a situation like this. people who are out of their homes want to get home. people who are stuck in their home get desperate to get out of their homes to deal with the water to get into it to see what s going on. all of those feelings are normal and all create major problems. right. we just can t emphasize it enough that people need to stay put. the time will come to be able to go home and see what the aftermath looks like but right now it is just not safe enough. be back with you momentarily bus what will we see when the sun rises this morning. how will the communities deal with the damage? by the way. this is live video. sum ter county florida.
without power are here. le 6 million were eevacuated. there are over 150,000 in shelters still, as the sun comes up this morning at some point. we re all waiting for it because we need it not just to see, but to shed light on the situations that you re going to see all over this state. 6 million had to get out. 150,000 are in shelters, 4 million have no power. now the worst numbers to talk about will be those who didn t make it through the storm. frankly those stories are out there, but too early to confirm and too early to discuss. we have to know everything before we start talking about that because we don t want to give any false hope. now, let s deal with this current situation. steve gardener is the flagler county emergency manager in palm coast. the steve, what i ve seen, we all knew this was going to be bad but you re dealing with more than was expected. we did. i mean this wind field is