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Hurricane Ian slammed into Florida’s southwestern coast Wednesday as one of the most powerful storms in U.S. history, tearing apart homes and buildings and leaving some residents stranded as storm surge flooded communities. 

The storm made landfall near Cayo Costa as a Category 4 storm Wednesday afternoon with maximum sustained winds measured at a stunning 150 mph — only 7 mph slower than a Category 5, the highest status on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale of Hurricane Intensity. It slowed as it lashed the state and was downgraded to a Category  1 storm Wednesday night, the National Hurricane Center reported. 

“It is going to have major, major impacts in terms of wind, in terms of rain, in terms of flooding,” Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis warned in a briefing Wednesday. “So this is going to be a nasty, nasty day, two days.” 

As of 11 p.m. ET, the storm’s center was located 70 miles south of Orlando. The storm was moving north-northeast at 8 mph with weakening maximum sustained winds at 90 mph, according to the hurricane center. Ian is forecast to continue to weaken and move slowly over Florida, slamming much of the state with life-threatening storm surge, catastrophic winds and flooding, the National Hurricane Center said. It then is set to trek north-northwest, likely hitting parts of Georgia and South Carolina. 

Latest developments:

► More than 2 million are without power in Florida, according to PowerOutage.us. That number might continue to rise as the storm continues its trek across the state.

► In Naples, Fla., the first floor of a fire station was inundated with about 3 feet of water and firefighters worked to salvage gear from a firetruck stuck outside the garage in even deeper water, a video posted by the Naples Fire Department showed.

► Ian’s strength at landfall tied it for the fifth-strongest hurricane when measured by wind speed to strike the U.S. It’s tied with five other hurricanes that reached 150 mph — two in Florida, two in Louisiana, and one in Texas.