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Death toll rises amid rescue efforts

Death toll rises amid rescue efforts

ASHEVILLE, N.C. − More than 100 people were dead and over 1.7 million homes and businesses remained in the dark Monday across the Southeast, the region under siege from historic flooding driven by Hurricane Helene and its remnants.

President Joe Biden said he would travel to hard-hit North Carolina on Wednesday for an aerial tour of the damaged areas, and would head to Florida and Georgia “as soon as possible” afterward.

Hundreds of water rescues have taken place across Florida, Georgia, the Carolinas, Tennessee and Virginia since Helene’s brutal landfall in Florida’s Big Bend area late Thursday. 

Atlanta totaled more than 11 inches of rain in 48 hours, smashing a record that stood for almost 150 years. Western North Carolina took the brunt of the devastating rains, and more than 30 inches was recorded in some areas. Houses floated away from subdivisions, bridges crumbled, semi-trucks were tossed into mangled piles. Mud, tree branches and food from local grocery stores flowed into the streets.