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South Carolina gov spots men on flooded road, summons rescue

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ASSOCIATED PRESS

South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster, right, and National Guard Lt. Col. Jay McElveen give thumbs-up to rescue workers today near Wallace, S.C.

CHERAW, S.C. >> As South Carolina continues its wait to see how the rains of Florence will impact the state’s low-lying communities, Gov. Henry McMaster’s flight over soggy parts of the state Monday turned from an observation trip to a rescue mission when he spotted two people stranded atop a flooded vehicle.

Flying with a South Carolina National Guard crew in a Blackhawk helicopter, the governor was taking a swing around Chesterfield and Marlboro County when he pointed out of the helicopter at the men, who at first looked like they were floating in a red raft.

But, as the crew swung in for a closer look, McMaster and Chesterfield County Sheriff Jay Brooks — who joined the governor for a portion of the day to view flooded areas in his county — noticed that the men weren’t on a raft but instead on the roof of what appeared to be a flooded pickup truck.

Brooks called down to dispatchers, who were able to send in a boat crew to get the men to safety. After making another pass over the men, the governor asked his pilot if the helicopter could land nearby to watch them get to land with rescuers who turned out to be a Swift Water team from Louisiana.

From the ground, McMaster watched as the men, now in life vests and helmets, boated to dry ground, flashing thumbs up to the men and their boat crew.

“It’s good they got out of the vehicle before the water came up too high for them to get out,” McMaster said, noting it looked like water in the area had risen a foot or more since he and his crew had made their first pass and noticed the men.

Brooks later told AP the men had been identified as Chesterfield County residents Joel Dixon and George Love. It wasn’t known precisely how long the men had been on the water, but dry portions of the roadway they’d been driving on were roughly several hundred yards away.

The aerial view was the governor’s first of many areas of northeastern South Carolina, where residents for days have been watching and waiting to see how much the state’s rivers would rise as they continue to fill up with waters flowing downstream from swollen banks in North Carolina.

For a week, Department of Natural Resources Col. Alvin Taylor has warned about four rivers in northeastern South Carolina, an area known as the Pee Dee. All four rivers – the Waccamaw, Pee Dee, Lumber and Black – flooded in the torrent of rain that came along with Hurricane Matthew in 2016, in part because of the same system of intertwined rivers that flow into this state from North Carolina.

During his fly-around today, McMaster said he and state officials were doing what they can to learn lessons from 2016. That includes trying to shore up several roads leading to Conway, a city inland from Myrtle Beach, where officials say rising waters could cut off the area similar to what’s happened to Wilmington, North Carolina.

“The water is not finished,” McMaster noted, gesturing to the flooded field that had spilled out onto the roadway and swept away the men’s vehicle.” You saw all that water in all those woods, there’s water everywhere. That’s what we’re preparing for, and what we’re ready for, is the worst case, and it looks like it might arrive.”

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