MIAMI — Hurricane Milton is expected to unleash its greatest force over hundreds of thousands of immigrants who don't speak English, most of them Latin Americans harvesting oranges and tomatoes in the fields along Florida's I-4 corridor, washing dishes in restaurants, cleaning hotel rooms and working construction.
For the Spanish speakers and a smaller number of African refugees , new lives in the U.S. were already a daily struggle because of the language barrier and lack of resources.
Milton has turned those obstacles into matters of life and death.
Migrants in the eye of the storm
Florida is home to at least 4.8 million immigrants, according to the Pew Research Center. Orlando and Tampa are the metropolitan areas with the highest number of immigrants after Miami, the majority from Latin American countries such as Mexico and Venezuela.
In Central Florida, most migrants work in hospitality, construction and agriculture, picking strawberries, other berries, tomatoes and oranges. Many new arrivals don't have access to TV or internet access and don't know the best way to find information about Milton, a powerful storm that pushed state and local authorities to order evacuations in the areas where most of these immigrants live.
Around 250,000 Mexicans live in the area where Hurricane Milton would hit hard and many fear leaving their trailer homes, or facing deportation.
''There is resistance to going to a shelter,'' Juan Sabines Guerrero, Mexican consul general in Orlando.