Flooding from Hurricane Matthew leaves 1,500 trapped in North Carolina
Flooding from Hurricane Matthew caused a levee in Lumberton, North Carolina, to break Sunday night, leaving 1,500 people stranded. "Floodwaters are rising very quickly," North Carolina Gov. Pat McCrory (R) said in a Monday press conference. "We do have people on roofs as we speak, and we have a lot of helicopters and boats that have been deployed that are, at this point in time, rescuing them."
In eastern North Carolina, where Lumberton is located, water levels have risen to heights the area hasn't seen since Hurricane Floyd in 1999, prompting authorities to order evacuations in cities along three different rivers. Though the last advisory for Hurricane Matthew was issued at 5 p.m. Sunday, North Carolina is bracing for more major flooding in the coming days.
At least 20 people died in the U.S. from Hurricane Matthew, with 10 of those deaths in North Carolina. In Haiti, where Hurricane Matthew hit first, more than 800 were killed.
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