The Prince George Citizen

Hurricane death toll rises to 20

- Chuck BURTON, Martha WAGGONER

WILMINGTON, N.C. — Throwing a lifeline to a city surrounded by floodwater­s, emergency crews delivered food and water to Wilmington on Monday as rescuers picked up more people stranded by Hurricane Florence and the storm’s remnants took aim at the densely populated Northeast.

The death toll from Florence rose to at least 20, and crews elsewhere used helicopter­s and boats to rescue people trapped by still-rising rivers.

“Thank you,” a frazzled, shirtless Willie Schubert mouthed to members of a Coast Guard helicopter crew who plucked him and his dog Lucky from atop a house encircled by water in Pollocksvi­lle.

It was not clear how long he had been stranded.

A day earlier, Wilmington’s entire population of 120,000 people was cut off by flooding. By midday Monday, authoritie­s reopened a single unidentifi­ed road into the town, which stands on a peninsula. But it wasn’t clear if that the route would remain open as the Cape Fear River kept swelling.

And officials did not say when other roads might be clear.

In some places, the rain finally stopped, and the sun peeked through, but North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper warned that dangerousl­y high water would persist for days. He urged residents who were evacuated from the hardest-hit areas to stay away because of closed roads and catastroph­ic flooding that submerged entire communitie­s.

“There’s too much going on,” he told a news conference.

About two dozen truckloads of military MREs and bottled water were delivered overnight to Wilmington, the state’s eighthlarg­est city, officials said.

The chairman of New Hanover County’s commission­ers, Woody White, said three centres would open by today morning to begin distributi­ng essentials to residents.

“Things are getting better slowly, and we thank God for that,” White said.

Mayor Bill Saffo said he was working with the governor’s office to get more fuel into Wilmington.

“At this time, things are moving as well as can be in the city,” he said.

Crews have conducted about 700 rescues in New Hanover County, where more than 60 per cent of homes and businesses were without power, authoritie­s said.

Compoundin­g problems, downed power lines and broken trees crisscross­ed many roads in Wilmington three days after Florence made landfall. The smell of broken pine trees wafted through damaged neighbourh­oods.

Desperate for gas to run a generator at home, Nick Monroe waited in an 800-metre line at a Speedway station even though the pumps were wrapped in plastic. His power went off Thursday before Florence hit the coast, but he couldn’t recall exactly when. “It’s all kind of a blur,” Monroe said. At another gas station, a long line of vehicles followed a tanker truck that pulled in with 8,800 gallons of fuel.

Downgraded from a tropical depression, the deadly storm still had abundant rain and top winds around 35 km/h. Forecaster­s said it was expected to continue toward the Northeast, which is in for as much as 15 centimetre­s of rain, before the system moves offshore again.

Flooding worries increased in Virginia, where roads were closed and power outages were on the rise. In all, about 420,000 homes and businesses in three states were in the dark. Most of the outages were in North Carolina.

The death toll climbed by two as authoritie­s found the body of a one-year-old boy who was swept away after his mother drove into floodwater­s and lost her grip on him while trying to get back to dry land.

Elsewhere in North Carolina, an 88-yearold man died after his car was swept away.

Florence, once a fearsome Category 4 hurricane, was still massive. Radar showed parts of the sprawling storm over six states.

Fears of what could be the worst flooding in the state’s history led officials to order tens of thousands to evacuate, though it was not clear how many had fled or even could.

Emergency officials had difficulty keeping up with the scope of the spreading disaster. In Lumberton, where the Lumber River inundated homes, Fire Chief John Paul Ivey couldn’t even count how many calls authoritie­s had received about people needing to be rescued.

“We’ve been going so hard and fast we don’t have a number yet,” he said.

Steve Helber, Jonathan Drew, Gary Robertson and Jay Reeves contribute­d to this report.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Cars try to navigate a flooded road leading to Interstate 40 in Castle Hayne, N.C., after damage from Hurricane Florence cut off access to Wilmington, N.C., on Sunday.
AP PHOTO Cars try to navigate a flooded road leading to Interstate 40 in Castle Hayne, N.C., after damage from Hurricane Florence cut off access to Wilmington, N.C., on Sunday.

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