Albany Times Union (Sunday)

Still in danger

Travel remains troublesom­e in North Carolina.

- By Gary D. Robertson, Martha Waggoner and Alan Suderman Associated Press

Bladenboro, N.C. Travel remained dangerous Saturday in southeaste­rn North Carolina, where the governor warned of “treacherou­s” flood waters more than a week after Hurricane Florence made landfall, and urged residents to stay alert for flood warnings and evacuation orders.

Gov. Roy Cooper said nine of the state’s river gauges are at major flood stage and four others are at moderate stage, while parts of Interstate­s 95 and 40 will remain underwater for another week or more.

Emergency management officials said residents whose homes were damaged or destroyed will begin moving into hotel rooms next week.

“Hurricane Florence has deeply wounded our state, wounds that will not fade soon as the floodwater­s finally recede,” Cooper said.

South Carolina also has ordered more evacuation­s as rivers continue to rise in the aftermath of a storm that has claimed at least 43 lives since slamming into the coast more than a week ago.

The small farming community of Nichols, S.C., about 40 miles from the coast, was inundated by water, Mayor Lawson Batter said Saturday. He called the situation “worse than Matthew,” the 2016 hurricane that destroyed almost 90 percent of the town’s 261 homes. Battle said flooding from Florence has wiped out the 150 or so homes rebuilt afterward.

“It’s just a mess,” said Battle, who was awaiting a visit from Gov. Henry Mcmaster. “We will try everything we can to come back ... but we need to have federal and state help.”

Benetta White and David Lloyd were among 100 people rescued with helicopter­s, boats and high-wheeled military vehicles during a six-hour operation in southeaste­rn North Carolina’s Bladen County that lasted into Friday morning — their second evacuation in a week.

White and Lloyd, who live in the North Carolina town of Kelly, were given little time Thursday night to evacuate when the Cape Fear River came rushing onto their property. By the time they loaded their van, they had to slog through waist-high, foulsmelli­ng water to get to a neighbor’s pickup.

From there, they went to the town’s fire department and were taken by an Army truck to a shelter at a Bladen County high school.

“We had to evacuate again, all over again, and got trapped in a bunch of water and almost lost our lives,” said White.

In Wilmington, where Hurricane Florence made landfall and which had been cut off by floodwater­s, officials said they’d identified three safe routes into town.

They encouraged people to avoid travel in areas where the risk of flooding remains.

North Carolina Emergency Management Director Michael Sprayberry said Saturday that eastern counties continue to see major flooding, including areas along the Black, Lumber, Neuse and Cape Fear rivers. The Cape

Fear river is expected to crest Sunday and remain at flood stage through early next week.

He said residents who register with the Federal Emergency Management Agency can begin moving into hotels Monday. The program initially will be open to residents in nine counties, then will be expanded.

A FEMA coordinato­r said about 69,000 people from North Carolina already have registered for assistance.

North Carolina environmen­tal officials said they’re closely monitoring two sites where Florence’s floodwater­s have inundated coal ash sites.

The state is using drones to get photos and video of a dam breach at the L.V. Sutton Power Station in Wilmington, where gray muck has been seen flowing into the

Cape Fear River, and at the H.F. Lee Power Plant near Goldsboro, said Michael Regan, secretary of the North Carolina Department of Environmen­tal Quality.

He said Saturday that the video and photos show sand and “potential coal ash” leaving the Sutton site, and the DEQ will put people on the ground when it is safe. He said that DEQ staff has seen that coal ash left the basin and entered flood waters at the H.F. Lee plant, and is trying to determine “how much of that, if any” has entered into the Neuse River.

In Conway, S.C., water from the Waccamaw river began flowing into a Santee Cooper ash pond. The company said in a statement that the overtoppin­g occurred Saturday morning, but no significan­t environmen­tal impact was expected because nearly all of the ash had been excavated from the pond.

The National Weather Service confirmed Saturday that 10 tornadoes spawned by Hurricane Florence touched down Monday in Virginia, the strongest of which leveled a flooring company in Chesterfie­d and killed one worker.

An economic research firm estimated that Hurricane Florence has caused around $44 billion in damage and lost output, which would make it one of the top 10 costliest U.S. hurricanes. The top disaster, Hurricane Katrina in 2005, cost $192.2 billion in today’s dollars, while last year’s Hurricane Harvey cost $133.5 billion.

Moody’s Analytics estimates Florence has caused $40 billion in damage and $4 billion in lost economic output, though the company stressed that the estimate is preliminar­y and could go higher or lower.

South Carolina Gov. Henry Mcmaster has estimated damage from the flood in his state at $1.2 billion.

He asked congressio­nal leaders to hurry federal aid.

 ?? N.C. Department of Environmen­tal Quality ?? In this image made from Friday drone video provided by the N.C. Department of Environmen­tal Quality, light gray fluids flow out of a flooded coal ash dump toward the Cape Fear River at Duke Energy’s L.V. Sutton Power Station in Wilmington, N.C. Floodwater­s from Hurricane Florence breached a dam at the plant’s reservoir on Saturday flooding a dump containing 400,000 cubic yards of coal ash.
N.C. Department of Environmen­tal Quality In this image made from Friday drone video provided by the N.C. Department of Environmen­tal Quality, light gray fluids flow out of a flooded coal ash dump toward the Cape Fear River at Duke Energy’s L.V. Sutton Power Station in Wilmington, N.C. Floodwater­s from Hurricane Florence breached a dam at the plant’s reservoir on Saturday flooding a dump containing 400,000 cubic yards of coal ash.

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