Pro-Hamas Thugs Tried to Storm the Met Gala
If This Is True About the Failed Gaza Ceasefire Talks, Biden Is Truly...
Go Home, You Terrorist Pieces of Trash
You Can See Why This Photo of a Pro-Hamas Supporter Went Viral. It's...
A Quick, Telling Little Internet Search
Republicans Have a Chance to Fight Back Against Biden’s War on Small Business
The Right Sort of Nostalgia Makes Democracy Work Better
The Powerless Church
Jewish Students Are Facing Threats to Their Existence. Will We Stand By Them?
Here’s How Harvard University Will Respond to Pro-Hamas Student Protesters
Another Female Athlete Just Boycotted a Competition Against a ‘Trans Women’
These Democrats Refused to Stand by Israel in Face of Antisemitic College Protests
A Jewish Primer
The Hope and Hopelessness of Holocaust Memorial Day
As Jewish Heritage Month Begins, Let's Recognize Donald Trump's Achievements
Tipsheet

NC Officials: 'Worst Is Yet to Come' from Florence

The storm itself may be over, but Carolinians will be feelings its after effects for quite some time. 

"The worst is yet to come," warned Fayetteville, NC Mayor Mitch Colvin of Hurricane Florence over the weekend.

Advertisement

Other officials had similar forebodings.

“The storm has never been more dangerous than it is now,” North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper said. “Many rivers are still rising, and are not expected to crest until later today or tomorrow.“

"If the levee fails, all bets are off," Mayor Bruce Davis eerily said about his city of Lumberton. 

Florence has been blamed for 18 deaths so far. One of the casualties was a 3-month-old baby. Thousands of people have been placed in shelters and hundreds of thousands are without power. Elsewhere in the state, the storm has caused coal ash spill. That ash could contain toxic heavy metals like lead and arsenic. Other breaches could contaminate drinking water. The catastrophic floods will last for days and get worse, forecasters predict. The waters are so bad in Wilmington that it has trapped residents in the city. It is currently "an island cut off from the rest of the world," Washington Post reports.

Advertisement

Finances are less important than lives, but the storm has thus far cost the state of North Carolina billions of dollars, explained Sen. Thom Tillis.

There is some good news. Hundreds of people and animals have been rescued from the floodwaters.

"Eventually the skies will clear and the floodwaters will recede," Cooper said this weekend. "When they do, we're ready to take on the challenge of rebuilding our communities."

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement