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A new study from UNC-Chapel Hill reveals that repetitive flooding in North Carolina is far more common and more widespread ...
Climate change is making disasters more common, more deadly and far more costly, even as the federal government is running away from the policies that might begin to protect the nation.
By David Larson Carolina Journal Government has done a lot to help those in western North Carolina after Hurricane Helene. It will continue to provide vital assistance as our mountain counties face a ...
Weather warnings predicted devastation from both the Texas floods and Hurricane Helene. But in both disasters, people were ...
Tiffanie Wyatt, the aunt of the two children who died in the flooding, Charlotte and Sebastian Trotter, released a statement ...
During threatening weather, avoid camping or parking your vehicle along streams, rivers or creeks, North Carolina Emergency ...
However, locally higher amounts of rainfall, between 2 inches and more than 5 inches, could be possible anywhere in central ...
As central North Carolina braces for another round of severe weather, emergency officials are on high alert for potential flash flooding and fallen trees due to saturated soil from Tropical Depression ...
The state's urban search and rescue team is deploying five people and two human remains detection K-9 officers.
Flash floods covered roads and filled homes and businesses. As recovery efforts begin, here’s an overview of the aftermath.
Intense downpours like those in Texas are more frequent, but there’s no telling where they’ll happen
Going back through U.S. weather station records dating to 1955, Kunkel found that rain over the past 20 years has become more intense in the eastern two-thirds of the country, including the southern ...
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