Yuma Sun

Swollen rivers are near record levels as Florence looms

-

WILMINGTON, N.C. — With Wilmington cut off from the rest of North Carolina by still-rising floodwater­s from Florence, officials plan to airlift food and water to a city of nearly 120,000 people as rescuers elsewhere pull inland residents from homes threatened by swollen rivers.

The spreading disaster claimed additional lives Sunday, with at least 17 people confirmed dead, and the nation’s top emergency official said other states were in the path this week.

“Not only are you going to see more impact across North Carolina, ... but we’re also anticipati­ng you are about to see a lot of damage going through West Virginia, all the way up to Ohio as the system exits out,” Brock Long of the Federal Emergency Management Agency said Sunday on Fox News.

In Wilmington, the state’s eighth-largest city, residents waited for hours outside stores and restaurant­s for basic necessitie­s like water. Police guarded the door of one store, and only 10 people were allowed inside at a time.

County commission chairman Woody White said officials were planning for food and water to be flown into the coastal city.

“Our roads are flooded,” he said. “There is no access to Wilmington.”

About 70 miles (115 kilometers) away from the coast, residents near the Lumber River stepped from their homes directly into boats floating in their front yards; river forecasts showed the scene could be repeated in towns as far as 250 miles inland as waters rise for days.

Downgraded to a tropical depression, Florence was still massive. Radar showed parts of the sprawling storm over six states, with North and South Carolina in the bull’s-eye.

In North Carolina, fears of what could be the worst flooding in the state’s history led officials to order tens of thousands to evacuate, though it wasn’t clear how many had fled or even could.

President Donald Trump said federal emergency workers, first responders and law enforcemen­t officials were “working really hard.” As the storm “begins to finally recede, they will kick into an even higher gear. Very Profession­al!” he declared in a tweet.

The storm’s death toll climbed to 17 when authoritie­s said a 3-month-old child was killed when a tree fell on a mobile home in North Carolina. Three people died in weather-related traffic accidents, officials said.

Victor Merlos was overjoyed to find a store open for business in Wilmington since he had about 20 relatives staying at his apartment, which still had power. He spent more than $500 on cereal, eggs, soft drinks and other necessitie­s, plus beer.

“I have everything I need for my whole family,” said Merlos. Nearby, a Waffle House restaurant limited breakfast customers to one biscuit and one drink, all take-out, with the price of $2 per item.

Kenneth Campbell had donned waterproof waders intending to check out his home in Lumberton, but he didn’t bother when he saw the Coast Guard and murky waters in his neighborho­od.

“I’m not going to waste my time. I already know,” he said.

As rivers swelled, state regulators and environmen­tal groups were monitoring the threat from gigantic hog and poultry farms located in low-lying, flood-prone areas.

The industrial-scale farms contain vast pits of animal feces and urine that can pose a significan­t pollution threat if they are breached or inundated by floodwater­s. In past hurricanes, flooding at dozens of farms also left hundreds of thousands of dead hogs, chickens and other decomposin­g livestock bobbing in floodwater­s.

Some stream gauges used to monitor river levels failed when they became submerged, but others showed water levels rising steadily, with forecasts calling for rivers to at or near record levels. The Defense Department said about 13,500 military personnel were assigned to help relief efforts.

Authoritie­s ordered the immediate evacuation of up to 7,500 people living within a mile (1.6 kilometers) of a stretch of the Cape Fear River and the Little River, about 100 miles (160 kilometers) from the North Carolina coast. The evacuation zone included part of the city of Fayettevil­le, population 200,000.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A MEMBER OF THE NORTH CAROLINA Task Force urban search and rescue team wades through a flooded neighborho­od looking for residents who stayed behind as Florence continues to dump heavy rain in Fayettevil­le, N.C., on Sunday.
ASSOCIATED PRESS A MEMBER OF THE NORTH CAROLINA Task Force urban search and rescue team wades through a flooded neighborho­od looking for residents who stayed behind as Florence continues to dump heavy rain in Fayettevil­le, N.C., on Sunday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States