Lodi News-Sentinel

Water still rising after Florence

- By Molly Hennessy-Fiske

SHALOTTE, N.C. — Rivers continued to rise out of their banks across the Carolinas on Tuesday, frustratin­g rescue efforts and residents hoping to return home.

North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper and Brock Long, administra­tor of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, acknowledg­ed the difficulti­es following a tour of flooded areas in the Tar Heel State.

“It’s really important for me to get out of D.C. and make sure we’re doing a good job,” Long said, adding that he’s pleased with what he’s seen but “the next 48 hours are going to be incredibly critical.”

“We realize there’s a lot of displaced folks and we’re doing what we can to make life better,” Long said. “It’s going to take some time for these waters to recede.”

The FEMA chief said floodwater­s have hampered repair crews trying to reopen roads and restore power.

He said officials would examine the impact of the storm on the environmen­t and industry. Environmen­tal groups worried the storm may have washed away toxic ash from power plants and hog waste from open-air storage lagoons. Up to half of the state’s tobacco crop was still in the fields and could be damaged, Cooper said, along with cotton and peanut crops.

“We’re going to be dealing with a lot of hazardous waste, agricultur­al issues,” he said.

Long said FEMA sent several thousand claims adjusters and disaster assistance teams to community centers and shelters in storm-battered areas to register people for assistance “so we can kick-start recovery.”

He said he has been discussing options for temporary, post-storm housing with Cooper, who acknowledg­ed the state has struggled with affordable housing.

Cooper urged storm victims to register with FEMA by phone or online, to evacuate as directed and not drive around road barricades. He asked evacuees not to return to coastal Hanover, New Brunswick and Pender counties yet, even though many feel the storm has become “a nightmare that just won’t end.”

“Sunshine doesn’t necessaril­y mean safety. Rivers continue to rise and we will see more flooding,” Cooper said.

He said the state’s death toll from Florence increased to 26 Tuesday. More than 2,200 people and 578 animals had been rescued from floodwater­s, Cooper said, and 10,000 remained in shelters. Officials opened four emergency kitchens serving free hot meals in Kinston, Lumberton, New Bern and Washington and planned to open four more this week.

More than 1,100 roads have been closed, including I-95 and 40, and 343,000 people were still without power, Cooper said. An emergency ferry had been created between Morehead City and Wilmington that was expected to start shipping much needed supplies Wednesday, according to James Trogdon, the state’s transporta­tion secretary.

Cooper said he would take Long on a visit to Wilmington late Tuesday, and he also planned to meet with President Donald Trump when he visits the state this week.

Florence’s peak rainfall — 35.94 inches at Elizabetht­own, N.C. — was the fourth-highest for a U.S. hurricane since 1950 and left rivers across the Carolinas swollen.

The storm has killed a total of 32 people, including a 1-year-old boy whose body was found Monday after he was swept away by floodwater­s near Charlotte.

 ?? JULIA WALL/RALEIGH NEWS & OBSERVER ?? New York Urban Search and Rescue team members help residents get off a N.C. Army National Guard truck after being evacuated from the Heritage at Fort Bragg Apartments in Spring Lake, N.C., on Tuesday.
JULIA WALL/RALEIGH NEWS & OBSERVER New York Urban Search and Rescue team members help residents get off a N.C. Army National Guard truck after being evacuated from the Heritage at Fort Bragg Apartments in Spring Lake, N.C., on Tuesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States