'Worst yet to come' as Florence continues to drench US cities

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Worst yet to come as Florence continues to drench US cities
A firefighter holds on to two patients as his partner drives his truck during the evacuation in Lumberton, North Carolina.

The most rain so far from Florence was 33.9 inches in Swansboro, North Carolina, a new record for a single hurricane in the state.

By Reuters

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Published: Sun 16 Sep 2018, 10:07 PM

Last updated: Mon 17 Sep 2018, 12:11 AM

Florence kept dumping rain on North Carolina on Sunday and officials warned residents that "the worst is yet to come" from a storm that has already killed at least eight people, as rivers inland were likely to flood.
Florence, which crashed into the state as a hurricane on Friday, had weakened to a tropical depression by Sunday morning but was forecast to drop another 5 to 10 inches of rain in North Carolina, bringing rainfall totals in some inland areas to 15 to 20 inches, according to the National Hurricane Centre.
The most rain so far from Florence was 33.9 inches in Swansboro, North Carolina, a new record for a single hurricane in the state. The previous record was 24 inches, set by Hurricane Floyd, which killed 56 people in 1999, said Bryce Link, a meteorologist with DTN Marine Weather, a private forecasting service.
In Fayetteville, a North Carolina city of about 210,000 people some 145km inland, authorities told thousands of residents near the Cape Fear River and Little River to get out of their homes by Sunday afternoon because of the flood risk.
"If you are refusing to leave during this mandatory evacuation, you need to do things like notify your legal next of kin because the loss of life is very, very possible," Mayor Mitch Colvin said at a news conference on Saturday.
"The worst is yet to come," he added.
A total of about 761,000 homes and businesses were without power on Sunday in North and South Carolina and surrounding states, down from a peak of nearly 1 million.


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