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Crews were being stationed Monday in areas such as Marion County and Lake City to respond to power outages from what is expected to be a powerful Hurricane Idalia, Gov. Ron DeSantis and utility officials said Monday.

โ€œI’ve been in contact with all the major utility companies today. We will have tens of thousands of linemen positioned prior to the storm hitting the state,โ€ DeSantis said during an appearance in Largo. DeSantis added, โ€œFloridians in the path of this storm should be prepared to lose power.โ€

Duke Energy Florida and Tampa Electric Co. each said they were staging thousands of workers, including Duke bringing in crews from parent company Duke Energyโ€™s operations in the Midwest.

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Also, Florida Municipal Electric Association Executive Director Amy Zubaly said utility workers from various states are prepared to help her organizationโ€™s members.

โ€œCurrently, more than 30 utilities from Georgia, Oklahoma, Nebraska, Ohio, Louisiana, Arkansas, Texas, Missouri, Kentucky and Alabama have answered the call to provide mutual aid assistance,โ€ Zubaly said in a statement. โ€œCrews are deploying from their respective states today and will be pre-positioned in Florida or nearby so they can enter impacted areas to assist with power restoration as soon as it is safe.โ€

The Florida Municipal Electric Association includes 33 utilities.

Idalia could become a Category 3 hurricane before making landfall Wednesday morning on the stateโ€™s Gulf Coast.

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