Rescuers fanned out across the mountains of southern Appalachia on Tuesday, scouring the region for missing people and rushing supplies to communities still in dire need of food, water and power after Hurricane Helene.
“The challenges are immense,” Gov. Roy Cooper of North Carolina said at a news conference, adding that 92 search-and-rescue teams were working across the state.
More than 130 people across six states died as a result of the storm, and the toll was expected to rise. Almost a third of those killed were in the county surrounding Asheville, North Carolina, where an unknown number of people were still unaccounted for Tuesday.
The military has joined the relief and rescue efforts across the Southeast. Maj. Gen. Todd Hunt, the head of the North Carolina National Guard, said 800 soldiers were on duty as of Tuesday morning, pushing into more cutoff parts of the state.
In South Carolina, nearly 1,000 National Guard soldiers were on the ground, along with 18 chain-saw teams, Gov. Henry McMaster said at a news conference. “Things are getting better,” he said, “but we’re not out of the woods yet.”
Persistent power outages caused by toppled trees were still a “choke point,” he added.
Rescue efforts were complicated by the many roads that had, until recently, served as lifelines for small mountain towns. Hundreds were flooded, destroyed or blocked by debris. In some parts of the Carolinas, power remained scarce after flooding from the storm submerged electrical substations, and cellphone service was spotty or nonexistent in some places.
President Joe Biden plans to visit North Carolina and South Carolina on Wednesday. He also said he planned to visit Florida and Georgia as soon as possible.
Helene made landfall in northwestern Florida late Thursday as a Category 4 storm, with winds of 140 mph. It caused record-breaking storm surges in the Tampa Bay region, flash flooding in Atlanta and power outages as far north as Cincinnati.
Across the South, strong winds toppled trees. Tornadoes destroyed homes. Flash floods overwhelmed entire neighborhoods, and landslides destroyed public infrastructure, including for drinking water, which remains a key concern for emergency workers.
Water systems in the rapidly growing city of Asheville were badly damaged, and officials said that restoring the full system could take weeks. Emergency crews were trucking in drinkable water for the city’s 94,000 residents.
“This crisis will likely be a sustained crisis because of water system issues,” Cooper said Tuesday.
The Gilded Age-era Biltmore Estate in Asheville, one of the region’s best-known landmarks and tourist attractions, was closed indefinitely to assess property damage, its owners said Monday. But commercial air travel had resumed at the Asheville Regional Airport as of Tuesday morning, though there were still some cancellations.
In an sign of just how long recovery efforts might take, the University of North Carolina Asheville said Tuesday that classes there would not resume until Oct. 28. The university’s buildings were not badly damaged, according to a statement from the school, but the campus has been without power, water and internet service since last week.
More than 1.5 million electricity customers from Florida to West Virginia were still without power Tuesday afternoon, according to the tracking site poweroutage.us.
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.
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