Flooding prevents North Carolina storm evacuees from returning home
Hundreds of people waited in long lines for water and other essentials in Wilmington, still mostly cut off by rising water days after Hurricane Florence unleashed epic floods, and North Carolina’s governor [urged] more than 10,000 evacuees around the state not to return home yet. …
Gov. Roy Cooper warned that the flooding set off by as much as 3 feet of rain from Florence is far from over and will get worse in places.
“I know for many people this feels like a nightmare that just won’t end,” he said.
Addressing roughly 10,000 people who remain in shelters and “countless more” staying elsewhere, Cooper urged residents to stay put for now, particularly those from the hardest-hit coastal counties that include Wilmington, near where Florence blew ashore on Friday.
Roads remain treacherous, he said, and some are still being closed for the first time as rivers swelled by torrential rains inland drain toward the Atlantic.
“I know it was hard to leave home, and it is even harder to wait and wonder whether you even have a home to go back to,” Cooper said.
In Wilmington, population 120,000, workers began handing out supplies using a system that resembled a giant fast-food drive-thru: Drivers pulled up to a line of pallets, placed an order and left without having to get out. A woman blew a whistle each time drivers were supposed to pull forward. …
Supplies have been brought into the city by big military trucks and helicopters, which also have been used to pluck hundreds of desperate people from atop homes and other structures.
Wilmington Mayor Bill Saffo said two routes were now open into Wilmington, which had been completely cut off by floodwaters, but those roads could close again as water swells the Cape Fear River on the city’s west side.
“We still are encouraging or asking folks not to come home,” said Woody White, chairman of the New Hanover County commissioners. “…Access to Wilmington is still very limited and is not improving as quickly as we would like.
[Crews have conducted about 700 rescues in New Hanover County, where Wilmington is located. More than 60 percent of homes and businesses were without power, authorities said. Roads are being cleared and the landfill is open to accept storm refuse.
Mayor Saffo said he was working with the governor’s office to get more fuel into Wilmington. “At this time, things are moving as well as can be in the city,” he said.
Compounding problems, downed power lines and broken trees crisscrossed many roads in Wilmington three days after Florence made landfall.]
At Fayetteville, about 100 miles inland, near the Army’s sprawling Fort Bragg, the Cape Fear River had risen about 50 feet toward a crest that was predicted to be more than 25 feet above flood level. On Tuesday, logs and other debris became trapped under a rail bridge as rushing brown water pushed against the span.
The river swallowed trees, lamp posts and a parking lot near its banks. City officials warned that still-rising water threatened some neighborhoods and businesses that seemed safe, but said the worst was nearly over and life was beginning to return to normal downtown. Businesses were re-opening and owners were removing sandbags and plywood from storefronts.
The governor said 16 rivers statewide were at major flood stage and more than 1,100 roads were closed. Emergency workers reported rescuing and evacuating more than 2,200 people and around 575 animals, he said.
In a bright spot, the Lumber River appeared to be falling in hard-hit Lumberton, about 70 miles inland. Power outages in the Southeast also were down, from a high of more than 910,000 to about 310,000, nearly all in North Carolina.
Article Source :https://www.studentnewsdaily.com/daily-news-article/flooding-prevents-north-carolina-storm-evacuees-from-returning-home/
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VOCABULARY WORDS
1.Prevent / verb : keep (something) from happening or arising.
2.Unleash/ verb : release from a leash or restraint.
3.Evacuee/ noun : a person evacuated from a place of danger to somewhere safe.
4.Particularly/adverb : to a higher degree than is usual or average.
5.Ashore/adverb : to or on the shore from the direction of the sea.
6.Treacherous/adjective : guilty of or involving betrayal or deception.
7.Torrential/adjective : (of rain) falling rapidly and in copious quantities.
8.Resemble/ verb : have qualities or features, especially those of appearance, in common with (someone or something); look or seem like.
9.Desperate /adjective : feeling, showing, or involving a hopeless sense that a situation is so bad as to be impossible to deal with.
10.Encouraging/adjective : giving someone support or confidence; supportive.
QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION
1. How much rainfall did the affected areas of North Carolina get as a result of Florence?
2. Why is North Carolina Governor Roy Cooper asking people who evacuated prior to the storm not to return home yet?
3. What warning did Wilmington Mayor Bill Saffo give after two roads into Wilmington were opened?
4. In addition to flooded roads, what other obstacles are in the way of people hoping to travel on the unflooded roads?
5. How many rivers were at flood-stage when this article was written? How many roads were closed? How much power had been restored?