The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

WHAT PROMPTED CALL FOR MORE EVACUATION­S IN S.C.

Rivers continue to rise in Carolinas; dams imperiled.

- By Alan Suderman and Alex Derosier

WILMINGTON, N.C. — A new round of evacuation­s was ordered in South Carolina as the trillions of gallons of water dumped by Hurricane Florence meanders to the sea, raising river levels and threatenin­g more destructio­n.

With the crisis slowly moving to South Carolina, emergency managers on Friday ordered about 500 people to flee homes along the Lynches River.

The National Weather Service said the river could reach record flood levels late Saturday or early Sunday, and shelters are open.

Officials downstream sounded dire alarms, pointing out the property destructio­n and environmen­tal disasters left in Florence’s wake.

“Although the winds are gone and the rain is not falling, the water is still there and the worst is still to come in the Pee Dee,” South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster said Friday, referring to the eastern part of the state.

Georgetown County Administra­tor Sel Hemingway warned the area may see a flood like it has never seen before. “We’re at the end of the line of all waters to come down,” he said.

In North Carolina, where about 100 people were evacuated by boat and air after the Cape Fear River breached a levee and flooded the town of Kelly on Thursday night, a familiar story was unfolding as many places that flooded in Hurricane Matthew in 2016 were once again inundated.

Two years ago, flooding ruined the baseboards and carpet of the Presbyteri­an Church of the Covenant in Spring Lake. The congregati­on rebuilt. This year, water from the Little River broke the windows, leaving the pews a jumbled mess and soaked Bibles and hymn books on the floor.

“I’m so sad just thinking about all the work we put in. My gut is turning up,” church member Dennis DeLong said. “We put a lot of heart and soul into putting it back up.”

Gov. McMaster estimated damage from the flood in his state at $1.2 billion in a letter that says the flooding will be the worst disaster in South Carolina’s modern history. McMaster asked congressio­nal leaders to hurry federal aid.

North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper said he knows the damage in his state will add up to billions of dollars, but said with the effects on the storm ongoing, there was no way to make a more accurate estimate.

Duke Energy said a dam containing a large lake at the Wilmington power plant had been breached by floodwater­s from Florence, and it was possible that coal ash from an adjacent dump was flowing into the Cape Fear River.

Meanwhile, the National Hurricane Center said it was monitoring four areas in the Atlantic for signs of a new tropical weather threat. One was off the coast of the Carolinas with a chance of drifting toward the coast.

About 55,000 homes and businesses remain without power, nearly all of them in North Carolina, and down from a high of more than 900,000 in three states.

Florence is blamed for at least 42 deaths in the Carolinas and Virginia, including that of an 81-year-old whose body was found in a submerged pickup truck in South Carolina. Well over half the dead killed were in vehicles.

Potential environmen­tal problems remained. Officials warned human, hog and other animal waste were mixing in with floodwater­s in the Carolinas.

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 ?? JOE RAEDLE/GETTY IMAGES ?? A U.S. Army helicopter carrying Lt. Gen. Jeffrey S. Buchanan, U.S. Army North commanding general, flies over homes and businesses flooded by Florence’s heavy rains at Lumberton, N.C.
JOE RAEDLE/GETTY IMAGES A U.S. Army helicopter carrying Lt. Gen. Jeffrey S. Buchanan, U.S. Army North commanding general, flies over homes and businesses flooded by Florence’s heavy rains at Lumberton, N.C.

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