© 2024 WFAE

Mailing Address:
WFAE 90.7
P.O. Box 896890
Charlotte, NC 28289-6890
Tax ID: 56-1803808
90.7 Charlotte 93.7 Southern Pines 90.3 Hickory 106.1 Laurinburg
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations
Exploring how the way we live influences climate change and its impact across the Carolinas. You also can read additional national and international climate news.

The lights are out in western NC as evacuees scramble to grab the essentials

Lake Lure, N.C. on Sept. 29.
Tariq Bokhari
/
Courtesy photo
Lake Lure, N.C. on Sept. 29.

RUTHERFORDTON - One of the only remaining lights in Rutherfordton by 7 p.m. Saturday came from a floodlight next to Fly Boy Pizza food truck. The truck’s generator is one of the only sources of power in the county. It hummed loudly as essential workers, such as Aaron Logan, an ER nurse at the Rutherford Regional Medical Center, ordered food.

“We had a lot of people coming in just needing oxygen,” Logan said. “Not really wanting an ER visit, just some supplemental oxygen and then going home.”

The hospital was getting by on generator power, though communication was a struggle with no internet, cell or phone service. All around, the streets were mostly empty since the county declared a 7:30 p.m. curfew the day before.

“Just been trying to give people an option to get out of their homes a bit, get some hot food,” said Lance Cope, owner of Fly Boy.

Lance Cope parked the Fly Boy food truck outside his mother’s restaurant, Mi Pueblito.
Zachary Turner
/
WFAE
Lance Cope parked the Fly Boy food truck outside his mother’s restaurant, Mi Pueblito.

But not everyone could afford to abide by the curfew. Rutherford County Emergency Management reported rescuing over 100 people from around Lake Lure over the weekend. Residents evacuated when the dam threatened to fail during Hurricane Helene, leaving them to scramble to gather the essentials.

Jean Mick-Jollay pushed open the door of her parents' home off Highway 64 near Lake Lure. The ramp access to the house was destroyed. The cars out front had all been pushed together by the floodwaters — the interior of one vehicle was completely brown.

She stepped into the living room, and water welled up from the carpet beneath her feet. It smelled like mildew, but Mick-Jollay said it smelled like sewage earlier. A fine layer of mud covered the floor. Furniture was toppled over. Mick-Jollay’s parents had climbed the ladder to their attic to seek refuge when the floodwaters entered their home.

“They were up there maybe five or six hours in the attic,” Mick-Jollay said.

She shimmied past the hodgepodge of couches, dressers and chairs. A nearby USGS gauge recorded 10 inches of rain that day. The Second Broad River, a tributary of the Broad, surged nearly 20 feet Friday.

“He just was like, get the pills and be out of there,” Mick-Jollay said as she grabbed her father’s medication. She pried open the fridge, and condiments and produce toppled to the floor.

The waterline was clearly marked on the white refrigerator door. The kitchen rested on a 14-foot basement. The water had filled the basement, then risen 3 feet into the main floor of the house.

Jean Mick-Jollay grabbed her father’s medication and any perishables she could before leaving her parents’ home near Lake Lure.
Zachary Turner
/
WFAE
Jean Mick-Jollay grabbed her father’s medication and any perishables she could before leaving her parents’ home near Lake Lure.

Mick-Jollay left with her father’s medication and as much unspoiled food as her arms could carry.

Information and support resources for western North Carolina:

Sign up for our weekly climate newsletter

Zachary Turner is a climate reporter and author of the WFAE Climate News newsletter. He freelanced for radio and digital print, reporting on environmental issues in North Carolina.