The Palm Beach Post

New rains likely on Carolina coast amid Florence flooding

- By Jeffery Collins

GEORGETOWN, S.C. — Eleven days ago, Lee Gantt was at a Hurricane Florence party in her neighborho­od in Georgetown, where the story goes that some houses haven’t flooded from the Sampit River since they were built before the American Revolution.

She spent Tuesday with sandbags, watching the nearby river rise from Florence’s heavy rains and seeing if the luck finally runs out on her home built on Front Street in 1737.

“We thought this might be coming. We just left everything up above the floor just like from the hurricane. I’m nervous. Can’t you see me shaking?” she said, stretching her arms out.

The Sampit is one of five rivers that reach the Atlantic Ocean in and near Georgetown on the South Carolina coast. And Florence — which arrived as a hurricane dumping record rainfall in North Carolina — is expected to cause record flooding downriver in Georgetown County as its final act. So much water is coming that it is backing up other rivers that aren’t even flooding.

And still more is coming: The National Hurricane Center said a broad area of low pressure about 260 miles south of Cape Hatteras, North Carolina, is producing showers and thundersto­rms on its north side. Forecaster­s said it could become a tropical depression as it approaches the coast, and will dump rain regardless on coastal areas of North and South Carolina.

The county has recommende­d almost 8,000 people leave their homes — more than 10 percent of the population. Officials expect floodwater­s to top several bridges, nearly cutting Georgetown County in two and leaving only one highway out during the expected crest early Thursday.

The deluge has made its way so slowly down the Lumber, Pee Dee and Waccamaw rivers that the state last week released detailed maps on where it expects flooding. Upstream in Horry (OR-ee) County, the floodwater­s have invaded close to 1,000 homes near Conway as the Waccamaw River was slowly making its way to a crest a full 4 feet over its record level set just two years ago after Hurricane Matthew.

But in North Carolina, Gov. Roy Cooper said it was time to start concentrat­ing on recovery. “Florence is gone but the storm’s devastatio­n is still with us,” Cooper said at a news conference.

About 400 roads across North Carolina remained closed due to the storm that’s claimed at least 46 lives since slamming into the coast Sept. 14. Crews have reopened the major highways closed in the storm. Interstate 95 was reopened to all traffic Sunday night for the first time since the floods, and Cooper said Monday that a previously closed portion of Interstate 40 had reopened sooner than expected.

Power outages and the number of people in shelters also were declining. Around 5,000 people were without power, down from a peak of about 800,000, and about 2,200 people were in shelters, compared with a high of around 20,000, the governor said.

In Washington, lawmakers considered almost $1.7 billion in new money for disaster relief and recovery. And the economic research firm Moody’s Analytics estimated that Florence has caused around $44 billion in damage and lost output, one of the 10 costliest U.S. hurricanes.

The worst disaster, Hurricane Katrina in 2005, cost $192.2 billion in today’s dollars. Last year’s Hurricane Harvey cost $133.5 billion.

Down in Georgetown County, it is a disaster nearly two weeks in the making. Georgetown County spent days under hurricane warnings before Hurricane Florence made landfall about 110 miles up the coast near Wrightsvil­le Beach, North Carolina.

The worst of the storm stayed well north, causing only minor flooding in Georgetown and some downed limbs.

“We had a hurricane party,” Gantt said. “Now I don’t know what to do.”

 ?? SEAN RAYFORD PHOTOS / GETTY IMAGES ?? Jason Johnson (left) and homeowner Archie Sanders work to build a temporary levee Sunday to hold back rising floodwater­s caused by Hurricane Florence near the Waccamaw River in Conway, S.C.
SEAN RAYFORD PHOTOS / GETTY IMAGES Jason Johnson (left) and homeowner Archie Sanders work to build a temporary levee Sunday to hold back rising floodwater­s caused by Hurricane Florence near the Waccamaw River in Conway, S.C.

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