Journal Pioneer

Looking for calm after storm

Trump visits North Carolina as governor pleads for patience

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The death toll from Hurricane Florence climbed to at least 37, including two mental health patients who drowned when a sheriff’s van was swept away by floodwater­s, and North Carolina’s governor pleaded with thousands of evacuees not to return home just yet. President Donald Trump, meanwhile, arrived in storm-ravaged North Carolina on Wednesday. Wilmington, population 120,000, was still mostly an island surrounded by floodwater­s, and people waited for hours Tuesday for handouts of food, water and tarps. Thousands of others around the state waited in shelters for the all-clear. “I know it was hard to leave home, and it is even harder to wait and wonder whether you even have a home to go back to,” Gov. Roy Cooper said. After submerging North Carolina with nearly 3 feet (1 metre) of rain, the storm dumped more than 6.5 inches (16.5 centimetre­s) of rain in the Northeast, where it caused flash flooding. Cooper warned that the flooding is far from over and will get worse in places. “I know for many people this feels like a nightmare that just won’t end,” he said. Addressing roughly 10,000 people who remain in shelters and “countless more” staying elsewhere, Cooper urged them to stay put for now, particular­ly those from the hardest-hit coastal counties that include Wilmington, near where Florence blew ashore on Friday. Roads remain treacherou­s, he said, and some are still being closed for the first time as rivers swelled by torrential rains inland drain toward the Atlantic. At least 27 of the deaths happened in North Carolina. In South Carolina, two women died on Tuesday evening after a van taking the mental health patients from one facility to another was overtaken by rising floodwater­s near the Little Pee Dee River, authoritie­s said. The risk of environmen­tal damage mounted, as human and animal waste was washed into the swirling floodwater­s. More than 5 million gallons (18 million litres) of partially treated sewage spilled into the Cape Fear River after power went out at a treatment plant, officials said, and the earthen dam of a pond holding hog waste was breached, spilling its contents. The flooding killed an estimated 3.4 million chickens and 5,500 hogs on farms.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Flood waters from Hurricane Florence surrounds two hog houses and it’s lagoon near Kinston, N.C. on Monday.
AP PHOTO Flood waters from Hurricane Florence surrounds two hog houses and it’s lagoon near Kinston, N.C. on Monday.

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