Santa Fe New Mexican

Devastatin­g drenching

Officials and volunteers rescue hundreds of people trapped by Florence’s onslaught as the storm dumps several feet of rain in the Carolinas.

- By Allen G. Breed

NEW BERN, N.C. — The Marines, the Coast Guard, civilian crews and volunteers used helicopter­s, boats and heavyduty vehicles Saturday to rescue hundreds of people trapped by Florence’s onslaught, even as North Carolina braced for what could be a fearsome new stage of the disaster: widespread, catastroph­ic inland flooding.

The death toll from the hurricane-turned-tropical storm climbed to 13.

A day after blowing ashore with 90 mph winds, Florence practicall­y parked itself over land all day long and poured on the rain. With rivers swelling toward record levels, thousands of people were ordered to evacuate for fear the next few days could bring the most destructiv­e round of flooding in North Carolina history.

More than 2 feet of rain had fallen in places, and the drenching went on and on, with forecaster­s saying there could be an additional 1½ feet before Sunday is out.

“I cannot overstate it: Floodwater­s are rising, and if you aren’t watching for them, you are risking your life,” Gov. Roy Cooper said.

As of 11 p.m., Florence was centered about 40 miles eastsouthe­ast of Columbia, S.C., and crawling west at 3 mph — not even as fast as a person walking. Its winds were down to 40 mph. But with half of the storm still out over the Atlantic, Florence continued to collect warm ocean water and dump it onshore.

In its initial onslaught along the coast, Florence buckled buildings, deluged entire communitie­s and knocked out power to hundreds of thousands of homes and businesses. But the storm was shaping up as a two-part disaster, with the second, delayed stage triggered by rainwater working its way into rivers and streams. The flash flooding could devastate communitie­s and endanger dams, roads and bridges.

Stream gauges across the region showed water levels rising steadily, with forecasts calling for rivers to crest Sunday and Monday at or near record levels. The Little River, the Cape Fear, the Lumber, the Neuse, the Waccamaw and the Pee Dee were all projected to overrun their banks, possibly flooding cities and towns.

Authoritie­s ordered the immediate evacuation of up to 7,500 people living within a mile of a stretch of the Cape Fear River and the Little River, about 100 miles from the coast. The evacuation zone included part of the city of Fayettevil­le, population 200,000. Record flooding is expected Tuesday on the Cape Fear at a crest of 62 feet there.

In the Fayettevil­le area, John Rose owns a furniture business with stores less than a mile away from the Cape Fear River. He moved quickly as workers helped him empty more than 1,000 mattresses from a warehouse in a low-lying strip mall. “If the river rises to the level they say it’s going to, then this warehouse is going to be underwater,” he said.

And on Saturday evening, Duke Energy said heavy rains caused a slope to collapse at a coal ash landfill at a closed power station outside Wilmington. Duke spokeswoma­n Paige Sheehan said about 2,000 cubic yards of ash were displaced at the Sutton Plant and that contaminat­ed storm water likely flowed into the plant’s cooling pond.

The company hasn’t yet determined whether any contaminat­ion entered the Cape Fear River. Sutton was retired in 2013 and the company has been excavating ash to remove to safer lined landfills. The ash left behind when coal is burned contains toxic heavy metals, including lead and arsenic.

One potential road out was blocked as flooding forced the shutdown of a 16-mile stretch of Interstate 95, the main route along the Eastern Seaboard.

In New Bern, along the coast, homes were completely surrounded by water, and rescuers used inflatable boats to reach people.

Kevin Knox and his family were rescued from their flooded brick home with the help of Army Sgt. Johan Mackie, whose team used a phone app to locate people in distress. Mackie rode in a boat through a flooded neighborho­od, navigating through trees and past a fencepost to reach the Knox house.

“Amazing. They did awesome,” said Knox, who was stranded with seven others, including a boy carried out in a life vest.

New Bern spokeswoma­n Colleen Roberts said 455 people in all were rescued in the town of 30,000 residents without any serious injuries or deaths. But thousands of buildings were damaged in destructio­n Roberts called “heart-wrenching.”

Across the Trent River from New Bern, Jerry and Jan Andrews returned home after evacuating to find carp flopping in their backyard near the porch stairs.

Coast Guard helicopter­s were taking off across the street to rescue stranded people from rooftops and swamped cars. Coast Guard members said choppers had made about 50 rescues in and around New Bern and Jacksonvil­le as of noon.

And Marines rescued about 20 civilians from floodwater­s near Camp Lejeune, using Humvees and amphibious assault vehicles, the base reported.

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 ?? STEVE HELBER/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A pickup drives on a flooded road past a farmhouse Saturday surrounded by flooded fields from tropical storm Florence in Hyde County, N.C.
STEVE HELBER/ASSOCIATED PRESS A pickup drives on a flooded road past a farmhouse Saturday surrounded by flooded fields from tropical storm Florence in Hyde County, N.C.

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