Unwilling or unable to evacuate, some Florida residents ride out 
		Hurricane Ian
		
		 
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		 [September 29, 2022]  
		By Sharon Bernstein and Rich McKay 
		 
		(Reuters) - Outside the window of Susan 
		Flack's darkened condominium in Naples, Florida, on Wednesday, trees 
		bent in the wind and a portable toilet floated by on rising floodwaters.
		 
		 
		Flack, one of thousands who decided to flout official evacuation orders 
		and ride out Hurricane Ian, was not worried about her safety. Hunkered 
		down on the second floor of her building, where the power had been out 
		all day and the lobby was filled with several feet of water, she took 
		videos of the scene outside.  
		 
		"Being hysterical is not going to help," the retired attorney said in a 
		phone interview. 
		 
		Ian plowed into Florida's Gulf Coast with catastrophic force on 
		Wednesday, pummeling the state with howling winds, torrential rain and a 
		treacherous surge of ocean surf that made it one of the most powerful 
		storms on record to hit the United States. 
		  
		
		
		  
		
		 
		Some 2.5 million coastal residents and others in danger zones around 
		Tampa, Ft. Myers and nearby communities were ordered or encouraged to 
		evacuate ahead of the massive storm. But many did not, with some simply 
		vowing to ride it out and others unable to leave for financial or other 
		reasons. 
		 
		In Sarasota County, officials warned that emergency vehicles would not 
		respond to calls for help until it was safe to be on the road. Those who 
		failed to get out by Wednesday afternoon, officials said, needed to 
		shelter in place. 
		 
		"Most people heeded the warnings of doing the evacuations in those very 
		sensitive locations, but not everyone may have done that," Florida 
		Governor Ron DeSantis said.  
		
		Inside her St. Petersburg home on Wednesday, Vanessa Vazquez, 50, 
		soothed the four cats she had stayed behind to care for. The power 
		winked out as the storm roared overhead. But the software engineer 
		didn't regret her decision. 
		 
		[to top of second column] 
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            Hotel guests watch from a hallway window 
			as gusts from Hurricane Ian approach Florida’s Gulf Coast in 
			Sarasota, Florida, U.S. September 28, 2022. REUTERS/Steve Nesius 
            
			
			
			  
            "I still don't want to go," she said.  
			 
			In Venice, Doug Coe walked through rainfall on Wednesday morning to 
			see how a friend's home was weathering the storm. Coe admitted to 
			never experiencing a storm of this magnitude, but he was unfazed by 
			the prospects of it ravaging his neighborhood. 
			 
			“I’m staying vigilant, but trying not to worry," he said. 
			 
			Nearby, residents of an assisted living facility also decided to 
			ride out the storm in a new building meant to withstand the most 
			severe hurricanes. 
			 
			Flack said she had traveled to her Naples condo from her home in 
			Washington, D.C. to watch her 16-year-old grandson compete in a 
			baseball tournament. 
			 
			The hurricane doused the tournament plans. But she decided not to 
			leave, in part because the storm wasn't initially set to hit Naples 
			and also because she hoped her son's family would still come down 
			for a visit after the hurricane passed. 
			 
			By Wednesday, the road below looked like a river. Lawn furniture and 
			a neighbor's car floated by. Flack was certain her car had been 
			flooded, too. 
			 
			"I'm not frightened," she said. "But I am annoyed with myself for 
			not moving my car." 
			 
			(Reporting by Sharon Bernstein and Rich McKay; Editing by Colleen 
			Jenkins and Lisa Shumaker) 
            
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