South Carolina Flooding: Residents Warned Flooding Could Worsen Downstream; State's Death Toll Rises to 17
Published Oct 7 2015 01:39 PM EDT
Damage after Dam Breech
If there's one video that shows the scope of the Carolina
flood damage, it's this new drone video. Look at all the debris after
the Lexington Mill Pond dam breach.
Residents in South Carolina's Lowcountry were
being warned that water from days of flooding across the state was
moving in their direction, and it was going to have major impacts.
Near
the coast, residents were seen sandbagging around homes, businesses and
tourist attractions as they prepared for the surge of water that was
headed their way. Though some areas have already dealt with flooding
from the initial event, authorities said some areas that didn't see
flooding may get swamped before all that water moves out to sea.
"We are going to be extremely careful. We are watching this minute by minute," said Gov. Nikki Haley.
South Carolina Rain Totals
Although the bulk of the rain has ended, high
waters are still a very dangerous reality after the historic flood event
in South Carolina. Rescue crews went door to door in South Carolina's
capital city of Columbia as officials continued to free residents that
were trapped by severe flooding that swamped virtually the entire state.
“I believe that things
will get worse before they get better,”
Columbia Mayor Steve Benjamin said Monday. “Eventually the floods will
abate, but then we have to access the damage, and I anticipate that
damage will probably be in the billions of dollars, and we’re going to
have to work to rebuild. Some peoples’ lives as they know them will
never be the same.”
Wednesday morning, Williamsburg County
officials were asking some residents south of the Black and Santee
rivers to evacuate as the two waterways overflowed their banks.
Officials expected to see river flooding in the area, and they're
hopeful that
some controlled dam releases will alleviate the flooding, Live 5 News reported.
Dam
failures were a constant concern for thousands of residents, days after
the rain ended. Residents near one Columbia, South Carolina, dam were
told to flee Wednesday morning, as it was believed to be near its
breaking point, potentially putting thousands in the path of millions of
gallons of water.
(INTERACTIVE: Columbia Report and Recover Map)
Those
new evacuation orders were issued after concern that the Beaver Dam at
Pebble Creek could breach. All residents were ordered to evacuate the
area, asking that they go to A.C. Flora High School.
"Move to
higher ground now. Act quickly to protect your life," wrote the National
Weather Service's Columbia office in an alert sent to the area
Wednesday morning.
According to the Richland County Sheriff's
Department, the dam was stabilized at about 8:30 a.m. local time
Wednesday morning. Authorities kept a voluntary evacuation notice in
effect for residents living downstream of the dam.
During a
Wednesday afternoon press conference, Gov. Haley said the state is
monitoring 62 of South Carolina's thousands of dams. Thirteen dams have
failed, she also said.
At least 17 people have died from the
floods in South Carolina since the rain began to fall days ago. In the
wake of the disastrous flooding event, President Barack Obama signed a
disaster declaration for the state of South Carolina, ordering federal
aid to supplement state, tribal and local recovery efforts.
Obama's
action makes federal funding available to affected parties in
Charleston, Dorchester, Georgetown, Horry, Lexington, Orangeburg,
Richland and Williamsburg counties. Forms of assistance included are
grants for temporary housing and home repairs, low-cost loans for
uninsured property losses and other programs to help individuals and
business owners recover.
The rain event has set records all over
the state, flooding entire towns. For some locations, this historic
rainfall qualifies as a 1,000-year rain event, meaning in a given year
there is a 1 in 1,000 chance of observing rainfall totals of this
magnitude.
"The flooding is unprecedented and historical," said
Dr. Marshall Shepherd, a meteorologist and director of the atmospheric
sciences program at the University of Georgia, in an email to The
Associated Press.
(INTERACTIVE: Charleston Report and Recover Map)
The University of South Carolina announced Tuesday
classes will be canceled for the rest of the week due to the floods. A
football game between USC and Louisiana State University was scheduled
to be played in Columbia on Saturday, but it will instead be played in
Baton Rouge.
Parts of Columbia, including the USC campus, lost
water service. Bottled water and portable restrooms were delivered to
the students Monday morning.
As a result, officials are begging
residents from other areas to donate water for Columbia residents who
lack running water. Collections have been set up all over the state for
citizens to bring extra bottled water that will be delivered to the
Midlands, according to the AP.
Columbia city officials have
released a statement
issuing a boil water advisory to all 375,000 of its water customers,
advising them to vigorously boil their water for at least a full minute.
Any ice made from water that was not boiled beforehand should also not
be used.
On Wednesday, the Saluda County Emergency
Management Division lifted the boil water advisory for
Batesburg-Leesville, Monetta and Ridge Spring.
Swift-water rescue teams plucked hundreds of residents from stranded cars and flooded homes all over the state.
Officials say it may take weeks or months to assess all of the closed roads and bridges.
Interstate 95 remains closed from Exits 119 to 132, but the rest of the
freeway was reopened on Wednesday. For days, a stretch of more than 70
miles of I-95 was closed from I-20 to I-26.
Hundreds of roads will remain shut down across the state Tuesday; the South Carolina Department of Transportation
has a full list here.
(MORE: How You Can Help the Victi