The Latest on the effects of Hurricane Florence. (all times local)
6:45 p.m.
State transportation officials are reiterating that travel remains dangerous in 17 southeastern North Carolina counties where hundreds of roads remain closed and the threat of rising floodwaters continues in the wake of Hurricane Florence.
The number of closures on N.C. Department of Transportation roads dropped Friday to 650 from a peak of 1,600 on Monday. Yet the Lumber, Cape Fear and Neuse river basins will see floodwaters crest through the weekend and into next week. The department, the N.C. Highway Patrol and emergency officials are urging motorists not to travel in the state's 17 worst-hit counties where many roads are still under water.
The affected counties are Bladen, Brunswick, Columbus, Craven, Cumberland, Duplin, Harnett, Hoke, Johnston, Jones, Lenoir, New Hanover, Pender, Robeson, Sampson, Scotland and Wayne. Motorists are advised not to travel in the area south of U.S. 70 and east of U.S. 1 unless it is critical.
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6:20 p.m.
Carolina Panthers defensive end Julius Peppers, a North Carolina native and three-time All-Pro, has started a fund for hurricane relief by donating $100,000 to the cause on Friday. He also asked teammates, other NFL players and fans to step up and donate as well.
"Seeing the reality of these people affected by the hurricane made me want to do something to help," Peppers said.
The 38-year-old NFL player was born in Wilson, North Carolina and played at Southern Nash High School before attending the University of North Carolina, where he played football and basketball. Peppers was the No. 2 overall pick in the NFL draft by the Panthers in 2002.
Donations can be made through www.Panthers.com or the Foundation for the Carolinas.
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5:50 p.m.
North Carolina Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper has formally called for a special session of the legislature in October to begin dealing with Hurricane Florence relief, but Republican legislative leaders want the date moved up.
House Speaker Tim Moore and Senate leader Phil Berger wrote Cooper on Friday asking the session be called for Sept. 28, instead of Oct. 9 as Cooper announced Thursday. But Cooper's signed proclamation for Oct. 9 was received by the General Assembly minutes before lawmakers released their letter.
The General Assembly could still force the earlier start if GOP leaders got enough signatures to set their own session. Berger and Moore say lawmakers should act quickly to show Congress it's ready to cover the state's share of federal aid. They also want to pass a law making clear teachers in closed schools will get paid.
Cooper says North Carolina damage will be in the billions of dollars.
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4:45 p.m.
South Carolina's state-owned utility says it expects floodwaters to enter a coal ash pond at one of its closed power plants.
Santee Cooper spokeswoman Mollie Gore said Friday that the environmental impacts of the overtopping of Pond 1 at the Granger plant near Conway should not be significant. Gore says nearly all the ash has been removed from Pond 1 and water pumped into it to prevent the dike from breaking.
Gore said in a statement Santee Cooper has placed a 2 ½-foot (72-centimeter) high inflatable berm on top of a second pond that has more coal ash in it. She estimates 200,000 tons (180 metric tons) of ash are in a corner of the pond furthest from the rising Waccamaw River.
Gore says forecasters don't know yet if the river will top Pond 2. But she says crews have added silt fencing and a floating environmental containment boom to lessen any potential environmental impacts from the recent passage of Tropical Storm Florence.
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4:10 p.m.
Authorities say Interstate 95 is being reopened in the northern part of South Carolina.
State Department of Transportation officials said the Great Pee Dee River is receding and inspectors were able to check the I-95 bridges over the waterway and clear them for travel Friday afternoon. The bridges between Florence and Dillon were closed for two days after Tropical Storm Florence walloped the Carolinas, dumping heavy rain before weakening and moving on.
Northbound travelers won't be able to get much further on the main north-south highway on the East Coast. I-95 is closed in both directions a short distance into North Carolina at the Lumber River in Lumberton and officials say will likely remain closed until the end of the month.
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4:00 p.m.
Floodwaters have breached a dam holding back a large reservoir at a North Carolina power plant, and coal ash from an adjacent dump could be flowing into the Cape Fear River.
Duke Energy spokeswoman Paige Sheehan said the company doesn't believe Friday's breach at the L.V. Sutton Power Station near Wilmington poses a significant threat for increased flooding. Rivers are already at or near record levels a week after Hurricane Florence hit the state a week ago and weakened.
Floodwaters from the Cape Fear opened several breaches overnight in the earthen dam at Sutton Lake, a reservoir at the power plant. Water from the lake then flooded one of three large coal ash dumps lining the lakeshore. Sheehan says the company can't rule out that ash might be escaping into the river.
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3:50 p.m.
President Donald Trump says South Carolina is in for a "tough one" as flood waters continue to rise.
But Trump says federal, state and local leaders and first responders are up for the challenge.
Trump says he visited the storm region earlier in the week, and "they're really ready. They're really ready."
The president says that North Carolina is "almost at the stage where they're rebuilding." But as for South Carolina, he says, "watch tomorrow. It's going to be a tough one. "
Trump predicts that for South Carolina, the flooding "will be the biggest they've ever had."
Trump adds that officials will not rest until the region recovers.
The president spoke about the storm damage during an appearance in North Las Vegas.
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3:40 p.m.
A North Carolina university forced to shut down because of Hurricane Florence is charting a course toward resuming classes.
A statement from the University of North Carolina at Wilmington Friday said the school anticipates opening the campus to faculty and staff for a voluntary return as early as Sept. 26. It said classes will resume on Oct. 1, with residence halls opening as soon as 9 a.m. on Sept. 29, subject to the status of ongoing repairs. The school said it bases its decision on information from local and state authorities.
The school is advising against beginning travel back to Wilmington until state and local authorities announce it is safe to do so. Officials said If authorities have not announced it is safe to travel back to Wilmington with ample time before the anticipated dates for faculty, staff and students to return, UNCW will send an amended timeline.
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2:50 p.m.
Kevin Tovornik is tearing up the house he has owned for 20 years in Conway, South Carolina, to try to save it.
He used a flatbed hay trailer to take all the furniture to a donated warehouse Thursday. Tovornik said Friday he was trying to get back to the house to tear out the carpet so it would not sit wet on his subfloor for days or weeks.
Tovornik's neighborhood already flooded early Monday because of Florence's heavy rain. He lost his wife's car.
Floodwater after Hurricane Floyd in 1999 and Hurricane Matthew in 2016 made it to the steps just below his front door. With the Waccamaw river forecast to slowly rise to a crest 4 feet (1.2 meters) above its previous record in those storms around Tuesday, Tovornik says he knows his house is doomed this time.
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2:30 p.m.
The biggest South Carolina city in the way of flooding from Hurricane Florence is in gridlock.
Rising water from the Waccamaw River and smaller creeks have started to close bridges around Conway, backing up traffic to the few roads left open.
Some drivers in Conway have reported it has taken three hours or more to make it across the city of 23,000 people.
Traffic is further snarled by a project on U.S. Highway 501 to build a wall to keep the river from overtopping a bridge that serves as the main link to Myrtle Beach.
State troopers are asking anyone who doesn't need to drive in the area to stay home.
The gridlock is part of the lingering effects of Hurricane Florence, which made landfall last Friday.
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2:10 p.m.
Benetta White, David Lloyd and their four children have had their fill of shelter life after being evacuated twice in the last week.
The Kelly, North Carolina residents first evacuated last Thursday as Hurricane Florence first made landfall. They returned this weekend, had their power turned back on and thought everything was fine.
But that changed last night when the Cape Fear River came rushing onto their property. They were given short notice to evacuate and had to slog through a foul-smelling soup to get to a neighbor's pickup.
From there they went to the town's fire department, and were taken out of town by an Army truck.
Now they're in a shelter at West Bladen High School, sitting outside with no shoes as their clothes and boots dry off.
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2:00 p.m.
While the numbers of people living without power or staying in shelters following Hurricane Florence continue to fall in North Carolina, road flooding remains stubbornly high.
North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper said Friday that power outages are now down to about 56,000 homes and businesses in the state a week after Florence's eye made landfall. And the shelter population —once over 20,000— is now down to 3,700.
Still, Cooper is asking displaced residents to resist the urge to go home if they know their region lacks electricity or other basic necessities. He also says major flooding continues and could cut off roads quickly.
There were more than 600 road closures Friday morning, including Interstates 40 and 95.
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1:30 p.m.
Rescuers used helicopters, boats and high-wheeled military vehicles to evacuate about 100 people from a southeastern North Carolina county where high water caused by Hurricane Florence breached a levee and flooded a town.
The N.C. National Guard and the U.S. Coast Guard "flying with night vision goggles, heroically saved lives," Gov. Roy Cooper said at news conference Friday, describing what happened as the Cape Fear River flooded the town of Kelly in Bladen County
The mandatory evacuation issued Thursday for Kelly, population about 800, was the third for the town, said Bradley Kinlaw, the county's director of emergency management.
In a phone interview Friday, Kinlaw estimated 100 people were evacuated Thursday night and that about 50 people remain in the town. He said fire department authorities and N.C. National Guardsmen were in the town Friday, trying to get people to leave.
The evacuations are part of the continuing effects of Hurricane Florence, which made landfall one week ago.
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1:15 p.m.
Officials in Florence County, South Carolina, are ordering nearly 2,000 more people to leave their homes and get out of the way of the rising Lynches River.
Florence County emergency management officials issued a second order Friday after asking about 500 people near the river to leave earlier in the day.
The National Weather Service says the Lynches River could reach record flood levels late Saturday or early Sunday.
Emergency officials say it will be a close call if the river tops U.S. Highway 52, the main north-south highway through the county and its connection to Charleston. They also warn more evacuations are possible as forecasters get a better idea how high the river will get.
Florence County has opened several emergency shelters.
Tropical Storm Florence, which made landfall as a hurricane before being downgraded, battered the Carolinas for days, claimed dozens of lives and sent rivers to record or near record flood levels.
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12:35 p.m.
North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper says about 100 people were evacuated by boat and air after the Cape Fear River breached a levee and flooded a town.
Cooper said at a news conference Friday that the National Guard and the U.S. Coast Guard "heroically saved lives" when they rescued the people in the town of Kelly in Bladen County on Thursday night.
The rescuers used night vision goggles during the rescue.
Cooper warned that flooding from Hurricane Florence will continue into next week and will continue to put lives at risk.
He says first responders "continue to show unflinching courage in the face of danger."
Officials said 33 animals also were rescued.
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12:35 p.m.
South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster says a health care company has donated $500,000 to a fund created to help people in the state during disasters.
McMaster said Friday he hopes United Health Group's generosity inspires other companies across the state to donate to the One SC Fund to help the recovery from Hurricane Florence's floods.
McMaster also says while the sun is shining and the rain is over, the worst is still to come.
New evacuations were ordered in Florence County, and the Waccamaw River in Conway is predicted to set a record level Saturday and keep rising through next Tuesday.
The Little Pee Dee River and the Lumber River have started to drop near Nichols, where the whole town of 360 was under water for the second time in two years.
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9:20 a.m.
Officials have ordered evacuations along the Lynches River in eastern South Carolina because of flooding from Hurricane Florence.
Florence County emergency management officials issued the order Friday morning for about 500 people along 58 roads and streets in the area.
The National Weather Service says the river could reach record flood levels late Saturday or early Sunday.
The county has opened emergency shelters in Florence, Lake City, Johnsonville and Coward.