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Gov. Rick Scott issues new warning as Florida sees first signs of Hurricane Irma’s winds and rain

“Once the storm starts, law enforcement cannot save you,” Scott said at a news conference in Sarasota

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Hector Retamal, AFP/Getty Images
Debris and trash is seen on a beach in Cap-Haitien on Sept. 7, 2017, as Hurricane Irma approaches. Irma was packing maximum sustained winds of up to 185 mph (295 kph) as it followed a projected path that would see it hit the northern edges of the Dominican Republic and Haiti on Thursday, continuing past eastern Cuba before veering north for Florida.
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By Joel Achenbach, Katie Zezima and Perry Stein, The Washington Post

MIAMI – The outer bands of Hurricane Irma lashed Florida Saturday, with millions ordered to evacuate and high winds and tens of thousands of power outages already reported from a storm that threatened to ravage the state with destruction not seen in a generation.

More than five million people across Florida have been ordered to evacuate and thousands crammed into shelters. Gov. Rick Scott sounded dire warnings about the storm Saturday morning, urging residents in evacuation zones to leave their homes immediately.

“Once the storm starts, law enforcement cannot save you,” Scott said at a news conference in Sarasota.

Irma’s track shifted overnight: The eye of the storm is now expected to head up the state’s west coast, rather than the middle. Naples, Fort Myers and Tampa are now expected to bear the brunt of the storm. But because of the size of the hurricane, Florida’s east coast remains in danger, including from storm surges that will easily overwhelm some areas. But before the storm reaches the peninsula, the Florida Keys will experience its full force.

The National Hurricane Center downgraded Irma to a Category 3 storm Saturday, with maximum sustained winds of 125 miles per hour. But the storm is expected to strengthen as it moves away from Cuba and toward the Florida Keys, where it is expected to hit Sunday morning. Irma will move along or near Florida’s southwest coast Sunday afternoon.

Regardless of its track, all of Florida will likely experience damaging winds, rains, flooding and possibly tornadoes. The National Weather Service has issued a tornado watch for all of southern Florida and the Florida Keys until midnight Eastern Time.

“This is a deadly storm and our state has never seen anything like it,” Scott said.

Counties including Broward have issued curfews and at least 70 more shelters will open across the state Saturday. At least 50,000 people are staying in 260 state shelters, Scott said. He implored nurses to volunteer throughout Florida; the state desperately needs 1,000 nurses in its special needs shelters.

In Estero, on the west coast of Florida, thousands of people wrapped around the massive Germain Arena, which officials opened as a shelter Saturday and has a capacity of 7,000 to 8,000. At least six ambulances have responded to people who were overcome in the muggy, 90-degree heat. Troopers, the National Guard and local police sought out people in wheelchairs and moved them to the front of the line, said Lt. Greg Bueno, public information officer for the Florida Highway Patrol.

Leaning on a cane, Betty Sellers, 68, and her son, Doug, 49, got in line at 9:30 a.m. and were still 100 people away from the front doors. They had driven up to Estero from Naples, because “the shelters were mostly closed there,” she said.

Officials at the Collier County emergency operations center in Naples said 15,000 people have filled all its shelters, but they are trying to expand space in each location to accommodate more people. Demand exceeded expectations as the forecast showed the area likely taking the brunt of Irma’s impact. The county said it will be difficult for it to house everyone who needs or wants to evacuate in shelters and urged people who can find shelter with friends or family to go there.

Officials are also concerned that wind gusts will send water over the Herbert Hoover Dike that holds back Lake Okeechobee, which covers more than 700 square miles. Evacuations have been ordered for cities and towns on the south side of the lake in Hendry, Palm Beach and Glades counties.

Nearly 29,000 people have already lost power across the state as of Saturday afternoon. Florida Power and Light said 4.1 million people across the state could lose power as a result of the storm, and Scott said utility crews are standing by in Florida and surrounding states to get power back as soon as possible after the storm moves out.

The storm decimated Caribbean islands, killing at least 22 people. In St. Martin, 25 United States citizens were evacuated on a C130 military aircraft Friday from Sonesta Great Bay Beach Resort. Resort officials said another evacuation is expected. Michael Joseph, president of the Red Cross in Antigua and Barbuda, said Barbuda is “uninhabitable” and in a “total blackout” with almost all of its infrastructure wiped out.

For some families, the hurricane has affected loved ones in both the Caribbean and now Florida.

Since early Wednesday, when Hurricane Irma tore across the Caribbean island of St. Martin, Gretchen and Peter Bogacz have been hunkered down at the Hotel L’Esplanade with no power or running water, trying to find out if assistance was on the way. But with the airport seriously damaged, there was no way out.

Meanwhile, Irma was headed toward their 12-year-old daughter Isabella as well as Peter Bogacz’s parents, who planned to ride out the storm together at home in Sarasota, Florida.

The situation is overwhelming for Gretchen’s sister, Natalie Grinnell, who is urgently monitoring the forecasts from her home in Spartanburg, South Carolina.

“My worry for my loved ones is pervasive,” she wrote in an email to The Post.

In the United States, local, state and federal officials have offered ominous warnings as the storm zeroed in on Florida, making clear how much danger they felt the Sunshine State could face in coming days. William “Brock” Long, administrator of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, urged people from Alabama to North Carolina to monitor and prepare for the storm, calling it “a threat that is going to devastate the United States, either Florida or some of the southeastern states.”

About 5.6 million people in Florida and 540,000 in Georgia have been ordered to evacuate. Airports throughout Florida and in Savannah, Georgia, were closed. Disney World is closed Sunday and Monday, with resort hotels staying open.

In Pompano Beach on the southeast coast of Florida, winds were blowing to about 40 miles per hour Saturday afternoon. At a shelter inside Pompano Beach High School, video of Irma’s devastation in the Caribbean were constantly being aired on two big-screen TVs set up in the cafeteria, where 280 evacuees have sheltered in place. They ate a lunch of sausage pizza, canned corn, applesauce and milk or juice. Mayor Mark Fisher stopped by to thank people for evacuating to the shelter.

It is one of 20 set up by Broward County. Three of the shelters are pet-friendly, though not the one at the high school. Another is specifically for people with special medical needs.

Infants, parents and grandparents all crammed into an at capacity emergency shelter at the Miami-Dade County Fair & Exposition. There were pets, cots, a few birds, and wheelchairs – lots of wheelchairs. Two elderly people, one with diabetes already feeling fatigued, said they came with little food and no beds, so they’d be sleeping in their wheel chairs until the storm passes.

In Key West, where officials bluntly told residents to “get out,” and emergency personnel evacuated, some locals refused to budge.

“It’s going to be a fun ride,” said Jason Wasser, who had a few drinks at Don’s Place. “All of our friends are here, our family, why bother leaving? We’re all going to die eventually, so why not have a good time with it?”

Here in Miami some also stayed put. On Friday night, before Irma was expected to torpedo through the city, South Beach was deserted, shelters were overflowing and last minute preparations were underway.

But it wouldn’t be Miami if the night life completely died with the storm.

Locals packed bars in Coconut Grove, drinking and watching the U.S. Open and the Miami Marlins game. There was a 45-minute wait for a table at Happy Wine. The restaurant alerted people that it was business as usual by writing “We’re Open” in big red letters on the plywood that covered its windows.

And people seemed to get the message. Bartender Edgar Escorche said he had opened at least 150 bottles of wine Friday evening. Parking was hard to find near the small restaurant.

At Happy Wine, Julio Blanco, a Miami Beach police officer, said he’s been working around the clock this past week while prepping his own condo. He isn’t working during the storm, but expects to have to return to help with recovery.

But before he clocks back in, he said he just wants to enjoy a bottle of wine with his wife.

“This is my way to thank and reward myself,” Blanco said. “And it’s such a daunting storm; we don’t know what’s going to happen. At least tonight, I am giving a little to myself and my wife.”

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Achenbach and Stein reported from Miami and Zezima from Washington. Patricia Sullivan in Estero, Florida; Scott Unger in Key West, Florida; Leonard Shapiro in Pompano Beach, Florida; and Lori Rozsa in Gainesville, Florida, contributed to the report. Lori Aratani, Mark Berman, Thomas M. Gibbons-Neff, Matea Gold and Jason Samenow in Washington contributed reporting.

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