On Sunday September 16, The official Twitter feed of the N.C. Department of Transportation — NCDOT (@NCDOT) post the following message and image:
We know you’re worried about property in eastern NC.
-Every major route, and those around them, to the coast is flooded.
-This isn’t over. Water will rise for several days.
-Few routes open, help keep them clear for emergency personnel.
-Dangerous power lines and trees down pic.twitter.com/qf8cgd4etF— NCDOT (@NCDOT) September 16, 2018
FEMA has Hurricane Florence Rumor control page: https://www.fema.gov/florence-rumors
As 11 a.m. Sunday September 16, the Advisory Number 69 of the National Hurricane Center, said that Tropical Depression Florence continues to produce widespread heavy rains over much of North Carolina and Northern South Carolina…
As 5 p.m. ET Florence has become in a Tropical Storm, nevertheless Storm-Form wind guts still in South Carolina as well as catastrophic freshwater flooding expected over portions of North and South, said National Hurricane Center.
As 1 p.m. ET the National Hurricane Center Advisory; Doppler weather radar data and surface observations indicate that the center of Hurricane Florence has continue to move slowly westward toward the North Carolina-South Carolina Border.
As 11 a.m. ET Florence just inland neat Cape Fear North Carolina… Life Threatening storms surges and Hurricane-force wind guts continue, the National Hurricane Center said.
As of 9 a.m. ET the EYE of Florence wobbling slowly southwestward near the coast of Southern North Carolina… go to National Hurricane Center.
As of 7:05 a.m. ET Friday September 14, the center of the EYE of Florence about to make landfall near Wrightsville Beach NC, the National Hurricane Center said.
As of 8 p.m. ET Thursday, the center of Florence was about 85 miles east-southeast of Wilmington, North Carolina, the National Hurricane Center said. It was moving to the northwest at 5 mph.
If you need further information please go to the official accounts: