Speaking in Southport, Roy Cooper said it was like "a firehose concentrated right here in Southeastern North Carolina." ...
The beaches where swimmers should avoid are in New Hanover, Carteret and Brunswick counties after areas were heavily flooded ...
On Tuesday, Gov. Roy Cooper declared a state of emergency for Bladen, Brunswick, Columbus and New Hanover counties. The storm dropped over 18 inches of rain in less than a day in some locations.
It never became a tropical depression, but Potential Tropical Cyclone Eight brought rain totals like North Carolina hasn't ...
The beaches where swimmers should avoid are in New Hanover, Carteret and Brunswick counties after areas were heavily flooded ...
You can see the latest outages using the StarNews' outage map. You can search by county or view the entire state. As of 10:45 ...
"In one of the areas, with the amount of rainfall we got so fast, it was described as a one in a thousand year event," ...
The area was hit by an unnamed storm — known as Potential Tropical Cyclone Eight — which brought more than 20 inches of rain to Brunswick and southern New Hanover counties, which flooded homes ...
A State of Emergency has been issued for four counties in southeast North Carolina after Potential Tropical Cyclone Eight ...
The North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality advised against swimming at several beaches. Those beaches are in New Hanover, Carteret and Brunswick counties. The agency’s Division of ...
North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper expanded the state of emergency to include Pender, Onslow, Carteret and Dare counties. The declaration was made Tuesday for Brunswick, New Hanover, Columbus and Bladen ...