Florence flooding spreads; rescues continue


Rain from storm stops in Valley this morning

Associated Press

WILMINGTON, N.C.

Throwing a lifeline to a city surrounded by floodwaters, emergency crews delivered food and water to Wilmington on Monday as rescuers picked up more people stranded by Hurricane Florence and the storm’s remnants took aim at the densely populated Northeast.

The death toll from Florence rose to at least 32, and crews elsewhere used helicopters and boats to rescue people trapped by still-rising rivers.

“Thank you,” a frazzled, Willie Schubert mouthed to members of a Coast Guard helicopter crew who plucked him and his dog, Lucky, from atop a stranded van encircled by water in Pollocksville. It was not clear how long he had been stranded.

The rain that drenched the Carolinas from Florence is supposed to stop in the Mahoning Valley early this morning with accumulations between a quarter inch and a half-inch, said Karen Clark, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Cleveland.

It will be dry Wednesday and Thursday, Clark said, with a 50-percent chance of showers and thunderstorms Friday. There’s also a 40-percent chance of showers Saturday and Sunday.

Wilmington’s entire population of 120,000 people was cut off by flooding Sunday. But by midday Monday, authorities reopened a single unidentified road into the town, which stands on a peninsula. But it wasn’t clear if that the route would remain open as the Cape Fear River kept swelling. And officials did not say when other roads might be clear.

In some places, the rain finally stopped, and the sun peeked through, but North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper warned that dangerously high water would persist for days. He urged residents who were evacuated from the hardest-hit areas to stay away because of closed roads and catastrophic flooding that submerged entire communities.

“There’s too much going on,” he told a news conference.

About two dozen truckloads of military MREs and bottled water were delivered overnight to Wilmington, officials said.

The chairman of New Hanover County’s commissioners, Woody White, said three centers would open by this morning to begin distributing essentials to residents.

“Things are getting better slowly, and we thank God for that,” White said.

Mayor Bill Saffo said he was working with the governor’s office to get more fuel into Wilmington.

Crews have conducted about 700 rescues in New Hanover County, where more than 60 percent of homes and businesses were without power, authorities said.

Compounding problems, downed power lines and broken trees crisscrossed many roads in Wilmington three days after Florence made landfall. The smell of broken pine trees wafted through damaged neighborhoods.

At the White House, President Donald Trump said almost 20,000 military personnel and federal workers were deployed to help with the aftermath.