Journalists covering Milton were sheltering in their car. Then came a meow.
Story by Jennifer Hassan
Two journalists dispatched to Florida to cover Hurricane Milton were hunkered down inside their car amid a tornado warning in the Fort Myers area Wednesday when a concerned woman banged on their window. She told the pair about a yowling sound coming from underneath their vehicle.
Heavy rain was falling, and the wind was ripping branches off the trees around them. But that didnt stop David Barcenas, a photographer for Hearst Televisions D.C. bureau, from jumping out of the car to investigate. His colleague, reporter Christopher Salas, wasnt far behind him.
Under the back wheel of their car parked outside Florida Gulf Coast University, which was serving as an evacuation center Barcenas spotted a cat. He lay down on the ground, reached out for the animal, plucked it from underneath the vehicle and tucked it inside his jacket.
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Millie is not microchipped but veterinarians described her as well-mannered. Once the storm subsides, she will undergo a medical evaluation. Then, Barcenas said, it is a waiting game to see if she is claimed.
I hope she does have a loving family who misses her and she was not a case of abandonment, Barcenas said. If she is not claimed, I filled out the application with the county to contact me so that I can bring her home to D.C. with me.
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