Fears of major flooding in Fayetteville, N.C., as Florence menaces East Coast

“Even though the heavy rains have ended, the flood hazard to life and property is real,” city officials said.

Rain-swollen rivers won’t stop rising in North Carolina.

Several of them teetered at record levels Tuesday as officials warned of relentless flooding and hazards in areas already swamped by historic rainfall produced by former Hurricane Florence.

The storm heaped misery as a Category 1 on Friday before it was downgraded. Now its remnants are lingering along the East Coast days later, spawning deadly tornadoes in Virginia and threatening downpours through the Northeast.

In Fayetteville, about 100 miles from the North Carolina coast, the Cape Fear River was anticipated to crest by early Wednesday, reaching nearly 62 feet — about 4 feet higher than during Hurricane Matthew in 2016 and close to double its flood-stage level.

The Cape Fear River is expected to remain at flood stage through the weekend, deluging Fayetteville, a city of 204,000 near the home of the Army base Fort Bragg.

“Even though the heavy rains have ended, the flood hazard to life and property is real,” city officials said in a statement Tuesday. “Do not become complacent.”

A mile-long stretch of people living along the banks of the Cape Fear River was evacuated as a precaution.

Forecasters said the Little River in neighboring Manchester, a tributary of the Cape Fear, was expected to crest Tuesday at more than 35 feet — surpassing the record 32.2 feet and the flood level of 18 feet.

More than 80 rescues have already occurred along the river in the past two days.

Meanwhile in Lumberton, the Lumber River was projected to crest at 25 feet, remaining at a major flood stage through next week, reported NBC affiliate WRAL.

At least 31 people have died, mostly in North Carolina, amid Florence, which is now a post-tropical cyclone.

Even before the storm made landfall, forecasters warned that intense flooding rather than destruction from the winds would burden the region for the days and weeks ahead. With rivers at varying stages of rising and receding, whole communities have been cut off and highways have been awash in floodwaters.

Across North Carolina, officials reported at least 2,600 rescues from the storm on Monday.

Soldiers from Fort Bragg were among those conducting high-water rescues. Helicopters were ready to assist in bringing much-need supplies as well.

While the skies were sunny Tuesday over North Carolina, waterlogged communities — from Wilmington to New Bern to Crusoe Island — grappled with the fallout from Florence.

“In Lumberton, we watched the town start to flood out,” Jason Murphy, a Coast Guard machinery technician told NBC News. “Everywhere we go it’ll be hit or miss. There’ll be spots where it’s high and dry and then that.”

About 21 million people remained under flash flood watches or warnings Tuesday, with a line of storms from Washington, D.C., up through New England, including Boston. Areas around the city could get hit with up to a half-inch to an inch of rain an hour in some locations, forecasters said.

At least one person was killed in Virginia after a building collapsed Monday in Chesterfield, south of Richmond, officials said. Powerful tornadoes left debris across an 18-mile stretch of the state.

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