Looming Florence heaps despair on rural
U.S. towns ravaged by 2016 storm
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[September 13, 2018]
By Patrick Rucker
FAIR BLUFF, N.C. (Reuters) - When Hurricane
Matthew submerged the small town of Fair Bluff, North Carolina, two
years ago, Eve Waddell thought she had witnessed a once-in-a-lifetime
disaster.
"You'll never see that again," she reassured her daughter Ella, then 4,
after floodwaters surged over the banks of the Lumber River, inundating
Fair Bluff with several feet of water and damaging her house.
As Hurricane Florence barreled toward the state on Wednesday, Waddell
packed up her family to seek shelter with relatives and said she was
ready to leave town for good - just as many businesses and hundreds of
residents did after Matthew in 2016.
"This old town's had it," said her husband, Anthony Spivey, the police
chief in a nearby municipality.
Meteorologists warn the menacing storm could stall out over the
Carolinas, dumping enormous amounts of rainfall and creating massive
flooding.
That was the case with Matthew, a less powerful hurricane that did most
of its damage inland, producing catastrophic levels of flooding
throughout low-lying eastern North Carolina and causing billions of
dollars in damages.
Rural, low-income communities like Fair Bluff - already beset by
economic difficulties - were hardest hit and remain most at risk this
week.
Approximately 125 miles (200 km) south of Raleigh, Fair Bluff is 38
percent white and 60 percent African-American, with a median household
income of $17,000, according to state figures.
Its downtown district has been a virtual ghost town since Matthew, with
a dozen empty storefronts still bearing the marks of the storm's fury.
A grimy scar cuts across retail windows, marking the height of the
flooding. In a furniture shop, neatly arranged bedroom sets moldered; an
abandoned hardware store was still stocked with ovens, washing machines
and refrigerators.
Before the storm, Fair Bluff had nearly 1,000 residents, said Al
Leonard, the town's part-time administrator. He estimated more than a
quarter left and have not returned since Matthew.
"We base our calendar on B.C. or A.D.," Leonard said. "In Fair Bluff,
they base their calendar on Before Matthew and After Matthew. Matthew
changed everything."
RURAL DEVASTATION
Other rural communities around the state's eastern half tell a similar
story.
Lumberton, a larger nearby town of approximately 21,000 people along the
Lumber River, saw nearly 900 homes severely damaged by Matthew,
including hundreds of low-income renters who lost their residences,
according to a state report.
In Princeville, known as the oldest community settled by freed slaves in
the United States, hundreds of homes were severely damaged by flooding
from the Tar River.
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Town manager Al Leonard surveys the Fair Bluff River Walk
overlooking the Lumber River in Fair Bluff, North Carolina, U.S.,
September 12, 2018. REUTERS/Patrick Rucker
The agricultural community of Goldsboro, along the Neuse River, saw
hundreds of homes and substantial livestock destroyed.
Many low-income communities were already buffeted by a decline in
manufacturing and agriculture, as well as the aftermath of the
2007-09 recession, according to Barry Ryan, vice president of the
nonprofit NC Rural Center, which helps support rural counties.
"These communities are aging rapidly," he said. "There's been a
general market downturn - somewhat driven by population loss,
somewhat driven by economic restructuring."
Jeff Axelberg, a member of Fair Bluff's Chamber of Commerce who
markets sweet potatoes, said the farmers he works with are worried
because Florence is arriving so early in the season, with only about
10 percent of the crop in.
"They're working day and night to get what they can out of the
ground," he said.
Long-term solutions are elusive. Some in town have suggested
recruiting a canoe operator or other tourist draw to Fair Bluff,
turning the river from a liability into an opportunity, Axelberg
said.
Residents and business owners have often found it challenging to
navigate state and federal bureaucracies in search of recovery and
repair funds.
In many communities, homeowners are only now starting to receive
money through the state's hazard mitigation grant program to sell,
elevate or rebuild their homes.
The smallest towns are also hamstrung by a lack of administrative
capacity. Leonard, Fair Bluff's administrator, also serves as the
town's water system supervisor, town planner and budget director.
He spends one day per week in Fair Bluff because he also holds the
position of town administrator for four other nearby municipalities.
On Wednesday, he watched as laborers laid brick for a police office
extension off the back of Fair Bluff's town hall, which officials
moved to just outside the flood zone after Matthew.
"Last time, this was high ground," Leonard said. "We'll just have to
wait and see."
(Reporting by Patrick Rucker in Fair Bluff, North Carolina;
Additional reporting and writing by Joseph Ax in New York; Editing
by Colleen Jenkins and Lisa Shumaker)
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