Bracing: Shelters opening Saturday
Published 2:28 pm Friday, October 7, 2016
Forecasters believe eastern North Carolina will get more rainfall from Hurricane Matthew this weekend than predicted early Friday, posing an increased flooding threat, according to the National Weather Service office in Newport.
“This could be the worst flooding event the area has faced since Hurricane Floyd,” according to a NWS briefing issued Friday.
Floyd’s rainfall in 1999, combined with rainfall left by Hurricane Dennis a few weeks earlier, caused catastrophic flooding, especially in the Pamlico-Tar River Basin. Floyd dropped about 17 inches of rain during its trek over eastern North Carolina.
“The rainfall forecast has further increased to 6 to 12 inches with local amounts up to 15 inches. This is a dangerous and life-threatening flooding event this weekend,” reads the briefing on Matthew. “The combination of abnormally high coastal water levels, additional storm surge and extremely heavy rainfall will produce increased dangerous flood levels, from flash flooding and storm surge combined.”
Locally, anywhere from 4 to 7 inches of rainfall are expected this weekend.
Forecasts earlier this week had Matthew hooking the east once it reached waters off South Carolina. “But if you look at the last four tracks, they’ve all brought (the storm) closer to us,” said John Pack, Beaufort County’s emergency-management director, said Friday.
Beaufort County and counties in the coastal area remain under a tropical-storm warning today. “We’re now in tropical storm-force winds for 13 hours,” Pack said Friday afternoon. “So we have flooding plus storm surge plus wind. The whole shebang.”
The Beaufort County Emergency Operations Center activates at 8 a.m. Saturday, said Pack. In Beaufort County, shelters open at 10 a.m. Saturday at P.S. Jones Middle School in Washington and Southside High School east of Chocowinity, Pack said. Transportation (school buses) to the shelter will be provided, beginning at 8 a.m. Saturday. People wanting to go to the shelter at Southside should meet at the parking lot of the former Piggly Wiggly in Aurora. People wanting to go to the shelter at P.S. Jones Middle School should gather at the parking lot at Food Lion in Belhaven.
Anyone needing special assistance t — people in wheelchairs or with physical disabilities — to leave their homes should call the Emergency Management office at 946-2046 to arrange transportation, which will be provided by the Beaufort Area Transportation System. “We will coordinate getting them to the shelters,” Pack said.
“If winds reach 45 mph or more, we cannot guarantee that emergency responders will be able to respond if people don’t leave,” Pack said. “If they stay, I can’t guarantee them, for at least the period of the high winds, any assistance. There’s going to be trees coming down — ain’t no doubt in my mind now.”
At noon Friday, the Pamlico River at Washington was 2.87 feet above normal. Flood stage at Washington is 4.5 feet.
Swift-water rescue teams are stationed in Craven, Martin, Onslow, Pitt, Wilson and other counties in eastern North Carolina. The National Guard has high-water vehicles on standby in New Bern and Williamston.