Stabroek News Sunday

Florence punishes Carolinas with torrential rain, flooding

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WILSON, N.C., (Reuters) - Tropical Storm Florence dumped “epic” amounts of rain on North and South Carolina as it trudged inland yesterday, triggering dangerous flooding, knocking out power in nearly 900,000 homes and businesses, and causing at least eight deaths.

Florence’s intensity has diminished since it roared ashore along the U.S. mid-Atlantic coast on Friday as a hurricane. But its slow march over the two states, crawling west at only 2 miles per hour (3 km per hour), threatens to leave large parts of the region deluged in the coming days.

“This system is unloading epic amounts of rainfall, in some places measured in feet and not inches,” North Carolina Governor Roy Cooper told a news briefing. His state has already endured record rainfall totals, with much more expected to come from the storm that forecaster­s said was 300 miles (480 km) wide.

“This is a hurricane event followed by a flood event,” said South Carolina Governor Henry McMaster.

With flood waters rising rapidly in many communitie­s, stranded people were being rescued by boat and by helicopter, while tens of thousands of others hunkered down in shelters. Numerous roads were closed, and authoritie­s warned of potential landslides, as well the possibilit­y of flood waters imperiling dams and bridges as rivers and creeks swelled.

Utility crews worked to restore electricit­y even as flood waters inundated whole communitie­s. As of Saturday afternoon, about 752,000 people remained without power in North Carolina, along with 119,000 in South Carolina.

In Wilmington, a city of about 120,000 on North Carolina’s Atlantic coastline, along the Cape Fear River that is home to historic mansions, streets were strewn with downed tree limbs and carpeted with leaves and other debris. Electricit­y remained out for much of the city, with power lines lying across many roads like wet strands of spaghetti.

“The fact that there haven’t been more deaths and damage is amazing and a blessing,” said Rebekah Roth, walking around Wilmington’s Winoca Terrace neighborho­od.

At 2 p.m. EDT (1500 GMT), the hurricane center said Florence had maximum sustained winds near 45 miles per hour (75 km per hour) and continued to produce catastroph­ic flooding in the Carolinas. It said it was located about 50 miles (65 km) west of Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, and forecaster­s predicted a slow westward march.

The National Hurricane Center said the storm would dump as much as 30 to 40 inches (76-102 cm) of rain on the southeaste­rn coast of North Carolina and part of northeaste­rn South Carolina, as well as up to 10 inches (25 cm) in southweste­rn (Reuters/Jonathan Drake)

Virginia.

Fayettevil­le, a city of about 210,000 people about 90 miles (145 km) inland, issued a mandatory evacuation order for thousands of residents near Cape Fear River because of flooding. Fort Bragg, a sprawling U.S. Army base, is just west of Fayettevil­le.

Governor Cooper advised North Carolina residents inland that rivers will rise days after the rain has stopped. Officials said there had been at least seven storm-related fatalities in the state.

Authoritie­s in South Carolina reported one death, saying a woman was killed when her vehicle struck a fallen tree.

Florence already has set a North Carolina record for rainfall totals, exceeding that of Hurricane Floyd, which struck in 1999 and caused 56 deaths. Floyd produced 24 inches (61 cm) of rain in some parts of North Carolina while Florence already has dumped about 30 inches (76 cm) in areas around Swansboro.

 ??  ?? A tree rests on a newly-constructe­d house in Belville, North Carolina in the aftermath of Hurricane Florence.
A tree rests on a newly-constructe­d house in Belville, North Carolina in the aftermath of Hurricane Florence.

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