The Commercial Appeal

EAST COAST FLOODING:

Heavy rains batter South Carolina.

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COLUMBIA, S.C. — Hundreds were rescued from fast-moving floodwater­s Sunday in South Carolina as days of driving rain hit a dangerous crescendo that buckled buildings and roads, closed a major East Coast interstate route and threatened the drinking water supply for the capital city.

The rainstorm dumped more than a foot of rain overnight on Columbia, swamping hundreds of businesses and homes. Emergency workers waded into waist-deep water to help people trapped in cars, dozens of boats fanned out to rescue others in flooded neighborho­ods and some were plucked from rooftops by helicopter­s.

With so much water, officials said it could take weeks or even months to assess every road and bridge that’s been closed around the state. Several interstate­s around Columbia were closed, and so was a 75-mile stretch of Interstate 95 that is a key route connecting Miami to Washington and New York.

“This is different than a hurricane because it is water, it is slow-moving and it is sitting. We can’t just move the water out,” Gov. Nikki Haley said at a news conference.

One weather-related death was reported in the area on Sunday. The system drenching South Carolina was part of an unusual combinatio­n of weather conditions involving a slow-crawling low-pressure system meteorolog­ists called unusually deep for this time of year.

People were told to remain indoors until floodwater­s recede, and an overnight curfew was issued for Columbia and across two surroundin­g counties. The capital city told all 375,000 of its water customers to boil water before drinking because of water-line breaks and the threat of rising water to a treatment plant. Emergency officials said customers may have to go without drinking water for three or four days. Meanwhile, nearly 30,000 customers were without power at one point.

Local officials counted several hundred water rescues by midmorning before Columbia Fire Chief Aubry Jenkins said in an interview that there were too many rescues to keep count.

“We’re just trying to get to everyone,” Jenkins said. “But there are places we just haven’t gotten to.”

One of the hardest-hit areas in Columbia was near Gills Creek, where a weather station recorded more than 18 inches of rain — more than a third of the city’s average yearly rainfall — nearly all of it in 24 hours. The creek was 10 feet above flood stage, spilling floodwater­s that almost reached the stoplights at a four-lane intersecti­on.

State forecaster­s said another 2-6 inches could fall around the state, and it could be Tuesday before skies are sunny.

At least seven weather-related deaths have been reported since rain began spreading over the Eastern Seaboard, which appeared to dodge the brunt of Hurricane Joaquin as the storm veered out to sea.

The latest death reported was a woman killed when her SUV was swept into floodwater­s in Columbia. Richland County Coroner Gary Watts said the woman’s body was found Sunday afternoon, about 12 hours after she disappeare­d.

 ?? CHUCK BURTON/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Jordan Bennett, of Rock Hill, S.C., paddles up to a store in Columbia, S.C. The rainstorms drenching the East Coast cut power to thousands, forced hundreds of rescues and closed many roads because of floodwater­s on Sunday in South Carolina. One death...
CHUCK BURTON/ASSOCIATED PRESS Jordan Bennett, of Rock Hill, S.C., paddles up to a store in Columbia, S.C. The rainstorms drenching the East Coast cut power to thousands, forced hundreds of rescues and closed many roads because of floodwater­s on Sunday in South Carolina. One death...

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