FEMA Abandons Devastated North Carolina Town Due to ‘Road Closed’ Sign

Kamala Harris at a FEMA meeting.

By Jack Morphet and Chris Nesi

FEMA abandons devastated NC town residents because it can’t drive around ‘Road Closed’ sign: ‘Nobody’s been bringing in supplies except civilians’

BAT CAVE, North Carolina — Residents of a tiny North Carolina town that was almost totally destroyed by Hurricane Helene have been fending for themselves after FEMA told them that a “Road Closed” sign is an insurmountable obstacle for the agency to navigate.

“FEMA called me and told me they wanted to inspect my house, then called me back to say they couldn’t drive around the ‘Road Closed’ sign. They weren’t allowed,” local Chelsea Atkins, 38, told The Post.

“You can drive it by car for sure, it’s not that bad, you just have to drive around the ‘Road Closed’ sign. I explained that to them. They said they couldn’t,” she said, recounting her maddening exchange with the embattled federal agency.

Left to fend for themselves, Bat Cave residents banded together — opening the roads and starting the arduous work of cleanup and recovery. Residents told The Post that they don’t need FEMA now — and at this point, they don’t even want the disaster relief agency to come.

While the sick and elderly residents of Bat Cave were airlifted to safety a week ago, those left behind have seen virtually no sign of government agencies, save for a handful of Louisiana state troopers “keeping an eye on everything,” who locals say haven’t done much of anything.

The intermittent whir of military Chinook helicopters buzzing over the town serves as a reminder that people in the devastated west of the state are getting help — just not in Bat Cave.

Here, apple orchard workers armed with chainsaws worked with a local grading contractor to clear the roads well before the Department of Transportation arrived to help, although they were grateful for the assist when it finally showed up.

Helene’s path of destruction

  • Helene slammed into Florida’s Big Bend coastline Thursday night as a Category 4 hurricane, pounding the state with 155-mph gusts and killing at least 13.
  • Helene moved northeast into Georgia, where it was downgraded to a tropical storm by Friday morning, but winds and floods left 25 dead in the state.
  • By Friday afternoon, Helene had moved over parts of Tennessee, Virginia, North Carolina and South Carolina, where at least 29 died.
  • Relentless rain drenched Appalachia Friday night, sending floodwaters and mudslides crashing through mountain towns.
  • In North Carolina, at least 35 people died in the Asheville area, and a tornado injured 15 in Rocky Mount.
  • Over the weekend, rescuers struggled to clear roads and recover bodies. The death toll is 192 and counting.

The few remaining locals have scavenged building supplies to shore up homes teetering on the edge of the Broad River, which is now 10 times wider than it was before Helene carved its path of destruction.

Atkins, a health researcher, originally from Buffalo, NY, said she thought she was going to die when the storm hit Bat Cave. She and her husband, Andy Wells, 40, sought shelter Friday morning in the foyer of a small white brick post office across Highway 64 with neighbors Kendall and her fiancée, Curtis McCart, 58.

“It was wild,” Atkins said.

When floodwaters started to deluge their makeshift refuge, the displaced locals made their way to empty houses on higher ground, trudging up the side of a mountain in a desperate attempt to reach safety. The first home they tried had a gas leak, and the ground beneath the porch of a second slipped out from under them.

“At first we thought we’d be fine waiting out the storm in the post office for a couple of hours and then walk back home. With every minute that went by, the situation got more and more dire,” she said.

“The post office flooded and that’s when we realized the s—t was really hitting the fan.”

Atkins says she’s not usually frightened by weather, but admits that at that point, she genuinely feared for her life.

“I’m not very ruffled by nature, I can really handle a lot, but I looked at my neighbor and asked, ‘Are we going to die?,’ like real talk ‘Are we going to die?’”

The next cabin the group tried had a screened-in porch and provided them with the shelter they had sought.

Atkins said FEMA called her to arrange an inspection of her house on the Broad River that was rendered uninhabitable by the storm, but that the agency never showed up because the road was closed — the very same road The Post traversed on its way into Bat Cave.

The road is treacherous but navigable. It’s littered with downed power lines, and whole sections have collapsed. One portion of Highway 9 is entirely washed away, forcing traffic to navigate a huge chasm through someone’s front yard.

“FEMA hasn’t been here,” Atkins said.

“The DOT’s been here, and random fire departments, like Kannapolis. They were great. But nobody’s been bringing in supplies except civilians,” she shared.

At this late stage in the recovery effort, Atkins said, there are concerns that FEMA showing up at this point could do more harm than good.

“It’s been a civilian-run operation since day one. You can’t ask the authorities for help — they’ll say you need to leave,” she said, calling Bat Cave a “country boy can survive” kind of place.

“We’re handling it. Leave it to us and we’ll get it covered.”

Her neighbor McCart, a retired Los Angeles fire captain and paramedic, estimates a dozen houses along his stretch of the winding Highway 64 were washed away in the storm.

The town itself has been ripped in half — a 15-foot segment of bridge connecting the two halves of the town was destroyed. Though the gap is now spanned with pieces of sheet metal, they can’t support a car’s weight, forcing residents to traverse the span only on foot.

The Broad River was only 10 yards wide in front of McCart’s home before the hurricane. Now it’s a 100-yard-wide morass strewn with trees, concrete slabs, twisted tin and powerlines with their transformers still connected.

“We had huge, 60-feet-tall sycamores in front of the house, which must have been 100-and-something years old, that are all gone. Because of their age, they must have been here in the 1916 flood, which I heard was 27 to 30 feet. This flood must have been worse, I heard this flood was 40 feet,” he said.

McCart hasn’t seen anyone in Bat Cave wearing a FEMA uniform, and like Atkins, he worries about what will happen if the agency shows up as he works to buttress the third floor of his home to stop the attic roof from toppling.

“At this point, I don’t care if FEMA comes by. I don’t want somebody to pull me out of here, saying I’m working in an unsafe spot,” he said. “I’m wondering if Big Brother is going to allow us to rebuild.”

The unincorporated community — with a population of just 180 residents — is about 30 miles southeast of Asheville.

At least 232 people in the Southeast have lost their lives in Hurricane Helene so far, with hundreds still reported missing.

The Category 4 storm was the deadliest mainland US hurricane since Katrina rocked the Gulf Coast in 2005.

[…]

Via https://nypost.com/2024/10/06/us-news/fema-abandons-residents-of-devastated-nc-town-because-of-road-closed-sign/

7 thoughts on “FEMA Abandons Devastated North Carolina Town Due to ‘Road Closed’ Sign

  1. FEMA is a creation of Baby Bush, whom some have dubbed “shrub”, during his eight-year presidency, with FEMA created after Katrina, I believe. FEMA funded lots of trailers, one of which I acquired later for my traveling locum tenens assignment in Columbus, GA. It was a shady deal from the get-go, but I was too naive to recognize at the time the trailer dealer was a crook. I only pieced it together later, when I found he had registered the sale and Alabama license tag in his name and tracked his activities through trying to get a GA license plate.

    Liked by 1 person

    • Me, too. The US federal government is trying and has been trying, but, like sorcerers, their results are erratic. I’m not sure their skills are good enough to direct weather events precisely. Richard Thornton, of The Americas Revealed, provided more regional and precise explanations on his blog, in the aftermath of the storm.

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  2. Pingback: FEMA Abandons Devastated North Carolina Town Due to ‘Road Closed’ Sign | Worldtruth

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