South Carolina Storm Victims Return Home to Heartbreak
The pungent stench of mildew greeted Asiah Lewis when she came home to her South Carolina apartment, her footsteps making squishing sounds on the carpet as she picked through soggy clothes and a lifted a moldy shoe from the floor.
Three days after Lewis, her four children and her mother fled the Meadowfield Apartments in chest-deep floodwaters, she returned Wednesday only to realize that – for now, at least – her family is homeless.
As floodwaters recede across the state, residents are coming home to the heartbreaking reality of just how much they have lost.
“Pictures on the walls we’re going to try to get. Other than that, it’s a loss. Now I’m basically going to have to start over with four kids,” said Lewis, 28, who grew up in the same three-bedroom apartment in Summerton, a tiny town southeast of Columbia.
It could take until the weekend for the threat of flooding to ease. People in four coastal counties were warned Thursday that there may be new evacuations near two rising rivers, the Waccamaw and Edisto.
In the capital city, officials sought to dispel rumors the Columbia was on the verge of running out of water. Despite a setback involving efforts to plug a breached dam near the main water treatment plant, workers had already been working on an alternative plan to pump water directly from another location on the river, Assistant City manager Missy Gentry said.
Officials said efforts to secure the city’s water supply will succeed.
“There are no plans to shut off the water system,” Mayor Steve Benjamin said. “Zero plans.”
And just a day after the governor praised residents for resisting the temptation to loot, two people were arrested on felony charges of taking items from people’s front yards and stealing street signs. Richland County Sheriff Leon Lott said “we have zero tolerance” for looting.
U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham said there could be a potential billion-dollar cleanup bill and the University of South Carolina moved its home football game against LSU some 700 miles away to Baton Rouge, Louisiana.
In another image of the storm’s otherworldly toll, state officials said caskets have popped out of the ground in 11 instances in six counties.
South Carolina’s top agriculture official said he estimates the state may have lost more than $300 million in crop losses to the flooding. Commissioner Hugh Weathers said he flew over flooded areas several times this week and his initial estimate is conservative.
At least 19 people in South Carolina and North Carolina have died in the storm.
The Federal Emergency Management Agency said at least 16 counties had been declared disaster areas.
Residents of Summerville, northwest of Charleston, are wondering how long it will be before their lives return to normal. Dorchester Road, a main thoroughfare, remained impassable Wednesday in some spots. Amanda Perez and other residents used canoes and stand up paddle boards to assess the damage to their homes.
My house “is smelly. And, it’s wet. And, even though it’s showing some improvement today, I know I’ve lost at least two cars,” Perez said. “How am I going to fix this? How am I going to get my kids to school? My cars are under water.”
Running a generator borrowed from a friend to pump out murky water still standing in his basement on Thursday, Walt Oliver pulled waterlogged belongings out of his house after it was flooded with 6 feet of water from nearby Gills Creek. Like some in his Columbia neighborhood, Oliver doesn’t have flood insurance.
Oliver woke up Sunday morning to his cat running around the house. As he swung his legs onto the floor, he hit a puddle. Minutes later, he was dashing out of the house, carrying his cat over his head, with the water up to his chest and rising.
“You prepare yourself mentally for a great loss, but once you start plowing through things … basically you see the contents of a life irretrievably ruined,” Oliver said. “The long and short of it is, my friends and I, people on the block, we’re all safe and I’m happy the house is salvageable. Material goods can be replaced, maybe, but the memories of course, cannot.”
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Reeves reported from Columbia. Also contributing were Alex Sanz in Summerville; Jeffery Collins, Jack Jones, Meg Kinnard, Juliet Linderman and Susanne M. Schafer in Columbia; and Bruce Smith in Conway.
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