Hurricane Florence brought record amounts of rainfall to parts of North Carolina, and over 1 million people lost power across the state. Many in the hardest hit areas need food and water, and they're getting that help courtesy of Operation Blessing.
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Forecasters say at least six rivers in North Carolina could overflow their banks this week and devastate surrounding communities. Many are still evacuating and praying that the worst will not come.
As the remnants of Florence continue to dump inches of rain, still-rising floodwaters are prompting emergency situations across the Carolinas. "This storm has never been more dangerous than it is right now," warned North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper.
Operation Blessing is bringing immediate relief to those in need in the wake of Hurricane Florence, providing water, food, hygiene kits and flood buckets.
The powerful storm and heavy rain have left more than 500,000 in the dark and prompted hundreds of water rescues, including 455 people rescued in the city of New Bern alone.
Catastrophic flooding from Florence spread across the Carolinas on Sunday, with roads to Wilmington cut off by the epic deluge and muddy river water swamping entire neighborhoods miles inland. “The risk to life is rising with the angry waters,” Gov. Roy Cooper declared as the storm’s death toll climbed to 17.
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The Marines, the Coast Guard, civilian crews and volunteers used helicopters, boats and heavy-duty vehicles Saturday to rescue scores of people trapped by Florence’s shoreline onslaught, even as North Carolina braced for what could be the next stage of the disaster: widespread, catastrophic flooding inland.
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