Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Misery grows in North Carolina

Long stays in shelters, long lines for supplies amid growing hazards

- By Chuck Burton and Martha Waggoner Bloomberg News contribute­d.

Residents continued to muddle through the aftermath of Hurricane Florence with long lines for supplies.

WILMINGTON, N.C. — Hundreds of people waited in long lines for water and other essentials Tuesday in Wilmington, still mostly cut off by high water days after Hurricane Florence unleashed epic floods, and North Carolina’s governor pleaded with more than 10,000 evacuees around the state not to return home yet.

The death toll rose to at least 35 in three states, with 27 fatalities in North Carolina, as Florence’s remnants went in two directions: Water flowed downstream toward the Carolina coast, and storms moved through the Northeast, where flash floods hit New Hampshire and New York state.

North Carolina also faced a health and environmen­tal crisis after several hog waste lagoons were compromise­d and sewage plants across the state flooded, releasing millions of gallons of partially treated human discharge.

During an aerial tour of a swath of swine country — the dozen top hog-producing counties cover an area the size of New Jersey — many lagoons appeared intact. Roughly the size of a soccer field, they are bluegreen or red, thanks to bacteria that break down the feces and urine. Several, though, were swamped with water from the torrential rains and creeks that had burst from their banks.

North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper warned that the flooding set off by as much as 3 feet of rain from Florence 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 residents to stay put for now, particular­ly those from the hardest-hit coastal areas 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.

“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,” Cooper said.

In Wilmington, population 120,000, workers began handing out supplies using a system that resembled a giant fast-food drive-thru: Drivers pulled up to a line of pallets, placed an order and left without having to get out. A woman blew a whistle each time drivers were supposed to pull forward.

Todd Tremain needed tarps to cover up spots where Florence’s winds ripped shingles off his roof. “The roof is leaking, messing up the inside of the house,” he said.

Others got a case of bottled water or military MREs, or field rations. An olive-drab military forklift moved around huge pallets loaded with supplies.

Supplies have been brought into the city by big military trucks and helicopter­s, which also have been used to pluck hundreds of desperate people from atop homes and other structures.

At Fayettevil­le, about 100 miles inland, near the Army’s sprawling Fort Bragg, the Cape Fear River had risen about 50 feet toward a crest that was predicted to be more than 25 feet above flood level.

The river swallowed trees, lamp posts and a parking lot near its banks. City officials warned that still-rising water threatened some neighborho­ods and businesses that seemed safe, but said the worst was nearly over and life was beginning to return to normal downtown. Businesses were re-opening and owners were removing sandbags and plywood from storefront­s.

But human and animal waste is mixing with the swirling floodwater­s, which have killed about 1.7 million chickens on poultry farms.

More than 5 million gallons 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. A dozen more such pits, which contain animal feces and urine, were damaged.

The governor said 16 rivers statewide were at major flood stage and more than 1,100 roads were closed. Emergency workers reported rescuing and evacuating more than 2,200 people and around 575 animals, he said.

In a bright spot, the Lumber River appeared to be falling in hard-hit Lumberton, about 70 miles inland.

Power outages in the Southeast also were down, from a high of more than 910,000 to about 310,000, nearly all in North Carolina.

The White House said President Donald Trump will visit North Carolina on Wednesday to see the damage.

 ?? CHUCK LIDDY/RALEIGH NEWS & OBSERVER ?? Boxes of tarps for victims of the storm are unloaded Tuesday in Wilmington, N.C. President Donald Trump is scheduled to visit the state on Wednesday to survey the damage.
CHUCK LIDDY/RALEIGH NEWS & OBSERVER Boxes of tarps for victims of the storm are unloaded Tuesday in Wilmington, N.C. President Donald Trump is scheduled to visit the state on Wednesday to survey the damage.

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