 A fierce storm packing Hurricane Force wind gusts dumped more than a foot of rain on parts of South Florida on November 16, flooding homes and streets, downing power lines and trees and leaving tens of thousands of homes and businesses without power. In the 20 years I have been in Miami, this is the first time I have seen this situation like this. If it had been a super strong storm, there would be no one left. Ana Hernandez said outside her home where her entire Hialeah neighborhood flooded the storm, which started on November 15, dropped almost 14 inches of rain from Key Largo to Fort Lauderdale while wind gusts topped out at 86 miles per hour. The US National Service said on Thursday more than 86,000 homes and businesses remained without. Electricity early on Thursday afternoon across Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach counties, according to the tracking site Powrudage.us, as the storm crawled north. The red stuff they put there ends up on her property because the waves bring her on her property. When we left last year we had the same, same thing. I was out there in my swimsuit to rake up all that stuff. So my grass when I come back at this year does not burn. It's the second time that happened. So obviously our sewer system is not adequate for that type of rain. I'm not concerned about the pavement because it's all paved, you know what I mean? Underneath it. It's all cement. We'll take pictures of the drain too. That doesn't work. We just had a lot of rain. I just read that Fort Lauderdale is approaching. It's probably over the record now that was set back in 1947 of 102 inches and we were at 101 before this storm. So we're number one. I would imagine it'll be gone by Monday morning. We've got three days at least. You can always tell, okay, if you look up there, see the white mailbox on the right? Okay, when the water starts to recede there it goes pretty quick. But here's the big problem right behind you. Go this way and watch. And people just, they don't care. They don't live in here and they come down here like it's a race track. That makes things worse and worse. In the 20 years that I've been in Miami, it's not the first time I've seen this situation like this. This foundation that we had never seen so much water at night and all day. This has been approaching for a long time because this didn't happen here. But the truth is that we felt it because if it had been a super strong storm, we wouldn't have had anyone left.