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Drownings push North Carolina's hurricane death toll to 19

​Officials in North Carolina said they would go door to door on Wednesday urging people to leave low-lying areas as rivers swollen by rainfall from Hurricane Matthew continue to rise, threatening homes and to cause more drownings.

Fierce storm has already killed some 1,000 in Haiti

Eric McClary checks flood levels while checking on his home in Goldsboro, N.C. (Randall Hill/Reuters)

Rivers swollen by rainfall from Hurricane Matthew rose dangerously higher in North Carolina on Wednesday, prompting officials to go door to door urging residents to leave as a wide swath of the state faced its worst flooding in 17 years.

Floodwaters have swamped areas across the central and eastern part of the state, where drownings in recent days have brought the death toll to 19.

That figure represents more than half of the deaths in the U.S. southeast linked to the fierce Atlantic storm, which killed around 1,000 people in Haiti and displaced hundreds of thousands as it tore through the Caribbean last week.

Matthew caused an estimated $10 billion US in total property losses in the U.S., about $5 billion of which are insured, according to a preliminary estimate by Goldman Sachs.

Aerial views capture extent of North Carolina flooding

8 years ago
Duration 3:04
Thousands of people told to evacuate their homes ahead of rising floodwaters

The damage continues to mount in North Carolina. Flooding has killed up to five million poultry birds, most of them chickens, in a blow to the local economy, said North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality Secretary Donald van der Vaart.

The floodwaters have forced more than 3,800 residents to flee to shelters, closed down stretches of major interstate highways and shut 34 school systems, North Carolina Gov. Pat McCrory told reporters in Raleigh.

Emergency officials rescued dozens of people on Wednesday from flooded homes in areas including Robeson and Pender counties. There were no official estimates as to the number of people and homes still in harm's way in the state.

Quincy Crawford of West Mulberry Lane walks through the floodwaters to his home after the effects of Hurricane Matthew in Goldsboro, N.C. (Randall Hill/Reuters)

Matthew's aftermath drew comparisons to Hurricane Floyd, which triggered devastating floods in North Carolina in 1999 and caused more than $3 billion in damage in the state.

In Kinston, where the Neuse River is expected to peak on Saturday at almost twice the 4.3-metre flood stage and just shy of the Floyd record, city officials warned residents not to be fooled by the water's gradual rise.

"It's not like it's a tidal wave that's coming. It's a slow rise," city manager Tony Sears said in a phone interview.

A church member checks on St. Mark Church of Christ in Goldsboro, N.C. The storm-related death toll in the state had risen to 19, mostly due to drownings. (Randall Hill/Reuters)

But, he added, "in the next 24 hours, it's not whether I should go or not, it's when you should go."

Residents should be prepared to be out of their homes for more than a week, Sears said, with river levels expected to remain elevated into next week.

Kinston resident Toby Hatch, 60, who lived through Floyd and Hurricane Irene, which destroyed his home in 2011, heeded the city's evacuation order this week and headed to a shelter.

Two men rescue a dog from floodwaters in Lumberton, N.C. Hurricane Matthew's heavy rains have ended, but flooding is still expected for days in North Carolina. (Sean Rayford/Getty)

"I didn't really want to leave, but I was already looking at enough water that I was trapped," he said.

Evacuations also continued in Greenville, where the Tar River was three metres above flood stage and forecast to crest even higher by Friday. Flooding has forced the city's airport to close and classes were cancelled for the week for East Carolina University's 28,000 students.

In Goldsboro, where the Neuse River peaked on Wednesday at a record level, Tony Rouse, 56, had taken refuge at an elementary school with his wife. His home lost power and all the roads leading to it were inundated, he said.

"It's kind of boring," he said of life at the shelter, "but it beats not being able to eat."