North Carolina's raging rivers from storm
Florence test beefed-up defenses
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[September 17, 2018]
By Patrick Rucker
FAYETTEVILLE, N.C. (Reuters) - Deadly storm
Florence's historic rainfall is testing the best efforts by many North
Carolina cities to bolster their defenses against flooding since
Hurricane Matthew inundated the eastern part of the state two years ago.
Since Matthew, firefighters have been trained in rapid water rescue and
are equipped with inflatable boats used to pluck people from raging
rivers and streams. More dams have been built on many of the rivers that
snake through the state, and improved forecasting tools have made it
easier to position rescue teams.
In the city of Lumberton, where the Lumber River overflowed its banks
following Matthew, the city built a berm, an earthen wall along the
riverbank to contain the rising current and prevent a repeat of the 2016
flooding.
The berm is intended to supplement a recently completed dam built across
the river to allow for a controlled release of the water flow.
"We saw what was coming, so we started building a dam to keep that area
from breaking through like it did before," said Bill French, director of
emergency services for Lumberton.
But on Sunday, the combination of the dam and berm failed to stop the
swollen river from climbing beyond its banks as it reached about 24 feet
(7.3 m), rising 17 feet (5.2 m) in two days alone.
It could get worse, with the river forecast to crest at 25.7 feet (7.8
m) late on Sunday.
Using a head start from forecasting of the slow-moving rains, French
said the city began running half a dozen pumps to clear water from
drainage canals.
"When the river gets as high as it is now, you’re kind of limited in
what you can do," he said.
Overall, Florence, a onetime hurricane that weakened to a tropical
depression by Sunday, is forecast to douse the state with record
rainfall from a single storm, surpassing the 24 inches (60 cm) that
Hurricane Floyd dropped in 1999. In some spots in the offshore Outer
Banks islands, 33 inches (84 cm) of rain were recorded this weekend.
DOOR-TO-DOOR WARNINGS
In Goldsboro, west of Fayetteville, retailers have moved inventory to
higher shelves, learning their lesson two years ago when Matthew's
floodwaters damaged goods. City officials have gone door-to-door warning
some residents they need to leave.
Similar precautions were taken in Wayne County on the banks of the Neuse
River, where a furniture store devastated by Matthew removed all its
heavy merchandise before the expected storm.
The area is made vulnerable by the flat landscape, said Scott Stevens,
the city manager in Goldsboro. "A foot of water doesn’t spread out a
foot. It spreads out a 100 feet," he said.
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Carla Ramm checks on her cat Jackjack after they were loaded onto a
boat during their rescue from rising flood waters in the aftermath
of Hurricane Florence, in Leland, North Carolina, U.S., September
16, 2018. REUTERS/Jonathan Drake
Rivers may fill up even faster now that soil is so storm-slicked and
sodden it cannot hold more water, said Drew Coleman, a professor of
geological sciences at the University of North Carolina.
"It’s not a feasible location for us to do a lot of flood proofing
on a large scale," said Stevens, the Goldsboro city manager.
Since Matthew, Goldsboro has trained firefighters in water rescues
and equipped them with additional boats, Stevens said, saying the
city was "much better prepared with equipment and training to help
people."
Federal rescue teams were also positioned before the rivers could
rise, with a search-and-rescue team based in Lincoln, Nebraska,
joining efforts in Fayetteville to make sure senior citizens were
safe ahead of the worst of the flooding.
More than 140 people were evacuated from a nursing home in
Fayetteville late on Saturday by a rescue team comprised of federal
responders, state and local emergency workers, said Maine Johnson, a
spokesman for the city of Fayetteville.
The worst may be yet to come, said Evan Duffey, a meteorologist at
Accuweather in State College, Pennsylvania. "All the water from
further upstream takes a little while to get down to them."
The Cape Fear River, with a normal depth of just 2 feet (0.6 m) near
Fayetteville, is expected to crest late on Monday at 26 feet (7.9
m), which could upend life in the city of about 200,000 people,
still recovering from a costly flood in the aftermath of Matthew two
years ago.
In towns like Lumberton, which lies just 25 feet (7.6 m) above sea
level, even the best preparations cannot protect the entire area,
said French, the emergency services manager.
"There are some areas that you simply can’t do anything about."
(Reporting by Patrick Rucker; Additional reporting by Jessica
Resnick-Ault, Devika Krishna Kumar and Gabriella Borter in New York;
Editing by Frank McGurty and Peter Cooney)
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