CHICAGO (WLS) — As Hurricane Ian moves toward another landfall in the Carolinas, a Chicago native in the storm’s path has hunkered down Friday.

The storm returned to hurricane strength and warnings are in effect, although there was no evacuation order in place. President Joe Biden declared emergency hours ahead of the storm.

“It was a bit of a surprise,” Amy Langstone, a Chicago native now living in South Carolina, said. “We knew a tropical storm was coming, but we didn’t know it would build back up to a category one, so everyone here is hunkering down it’s too late for any evacuation orders.”

Langstone is originally from Chicago and moved to South Carolina 20 years ago.

Multiple deaths reported after Hurricane Ian slams into Florida

She and her family live about 15 miles from the shore near Charleston.

While speaking with ABC7, a flash flood warning went off and the winds picked up.

Hurricane Ian strengthens before SC landfall; FL rescues continue as death toll rises

“I am worried about trees falling on the house,” Langstone said. “That is my main concern.”

Across South Carolina, 211,000 are in the dark and trees are down after the storm made landfall earlier Friday afternoon near Georgetown, about 60 miles northeast of Charleston.

The state remains under both hurricane and storm surge warnings.

How to help those impacted by Hurricane Ian

“Everybody puts in the lawn furniture, secures as much as they can outside, we don’t want anything blowing in projectile,” Langstone said. “We do get water. We tend to fill up water bottles, just to have them and we buy some water…we fill

bathtubs, not necessarily for drinking but in case we lose water and power.”

South Carolina schools switched to e-learning Thursday to get ready for Friday.

In the meantime, recovery efforts continue in Florida, where stranded pets are expected to arrive at local Chicago shelters starting Saturday.

Flights to and from Florida resumed Friday at Chicago O’Hare after airports in the state were shut down for days because of hurricane Ian.

Jim Walsh was one of many hurricane-weary travelers arriving at O’Hare Friday after Ian pounded Florida leaving catastrophic damage across the state.

More than 1.7 million customers are still without power. Communities in the sunshine state are unrecognizable and officials say 21 are dead.

“This was the first Hurricane advisory that I was kind of nervous about,” Walsh said. “I’ve lived in Florida all my life.”

Walsh lives in New Port Richey Florida, about 50 miles north of Tampa.

“A lot of us in the Tampa Bay Area are kind of experiencing some guilt because all week the models were saying direct hit for Tampa and we were prepared,” Walsh said. “I think the storm may have caught some off guard

President Biden has called the damage from Ian among the worst in the nation’s history.

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