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“We’re going to get hammered,” said Kevin Arata, spokesman for the city of Fayetteville, North Carolina. “The worst is still yet to come.”

Never mind that Florence weakened to a tropical depression Sunday morning. That just means the wind speeds calmed down slightly. The real dangers are Florence’s relentless rainfall and historic flooding, which keep getting worse.

Florence has already killed 14 people in two states. Volunteer rescue groups such as the Cajun Army and emergency workers are scrambling to save hundreds of people still trapped by rising floodwater.

“We actually just rescued over 200 people, and we’ve got about another 300 to 500” left to rescue, Cajun Army President Todd Terrell said Sunday. “The water is coming up really fast.”

And in Lumberton, North Carolina — a city submerged by Hurricane Matthew in 2016 — residents are bracing for potential disaster as the Lumber River threatens to burst through a recently patched-up gap in the levee system.

Latest developments

• Storm victims report price gouging: The North Carolina attorney general’s office has received more than 500 complaints of price gouging — including for hotel rooms, gas and water. Authorities have already launched investigations.

How to help Hurricane Florence victims

• Widespread power outages: About 703,000 customers in North Carolina and 61,000 in South Carolina don’t have power. But the number of actual people without power is far greater, since a single customer can represent an entire family.

• Florence is lingering in the Southeast: As of Sunday morning, Florence was centered about 20 miles southwest of Columbia, South Carolina, the National Hurricane Center said. It was moving west at 8 mph, whipping 35 mph winds.

• Much more flooding to come: Florence is expected to leave a total of 40 inches of rain in North Carolina and the northeastern tip of South Carolina, the hurricane center said. Some other parts of South Carolina will be left with 15 inches of rain.

• Watch out for landslides, too: “In addition to the flash flood and flooding threat, landslides are possible in the higher terrain of the southern and central Appalachians across western North Carolina into southwest Virginia,” the hurricane center said.

‘Let’s get in the truck and get out of here’

Residents in Lumberton watched nervously as the Lumber River swelled 10 feet deeper than flood stage. The city was submerged for days after 2016’s Hurricane Matthew.

Volunteers and city workers worked feverishly to fill sandbags, trying to plug a low point in the levee system before the river crests.

Bobby Hunt’s house is still damaged from Matthew. As the river kept rising Sunday, he knew it was time to flee.

Coast Guard members help a stranded motorist Sunday in Lumberton, North Carolina.

“Let’s get in the truck and get out of here,” Hunt said as his family quickly left their boarded-up home.

Hunt said Matthew caught them by surprise with flooding in the middle of the night. He’s not waiting for that to happen again.

The Lumber River is rising faster than expected, officials said. It’s likely to reach 24 feet by midday Sunday — 11 feet beyond flood stage.

100 volunteers scramble to protect Lumberton from flooding

And once the river reaches 26 feet, authorities predicted, the barriers will be overwhelmed.

The fear of sudden, massive river flooding isn’t limited to Lumberton.

North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper said many rivers across the state still haven’t crested. Some of the bloated rivers won’t crest until late Sunday or Monday.

Cooper said it’s not too late to go to an emergency shelter. More than 15,000 people are staying at 150 emergency shelters. And if those shelters fill up, he said, the state will open up more.

Wilmington is basically cut off

The coastal North Carolina city of Wilmington, population 117,000, is so deeply submerged that no one can get in.

Part of downtown Wilmington, North Carolina, is inundated by water from the swollen Cape Fear River.

“Any direction you try coming into the city, from 20 to 40 miles out, roads are impassable,” Mayor Bill Saffo said. “Anyone trying to get in here — don’t try, you will be turned away. Highway Patrol won’t let you.”

That means fuel and other critical supplies can’t get in, either.

The Wilmington-based Cape Fear Public Utility Authority urged residents to fill bathtubs and containers with water in case the utility doesn’t have enough fuel to keep its water treatment plants running.

Causes of death include electrocution and fallen trees

The death toll from Florence rose Sunday, with authorities saying 14 deaths have been linked to the storm:

— A man who drowned in an overturned vehicle on a flooded road in Georgetown County, South Carolina.

The staggering numbers behind Florence's wrath

— Three people who died in flash flooding or swift water on roads in Duplin County, North Carolina

— Two people who died in a storm-related fire in Cumberland County, North Carolina

— A mother and a child who were killed when a tree fell on their house in Wilmington, North Carolina

— Two people who died from carbon monoxide poisoning in Horry County, South Carolina.

— A woman in South Carolina who struck a downed tree while she was driving.

— A woman who suffered cardiac arrest in Hampstead, North Carolina. When emergency responders tried to reach her, their path was blocked by fallen trees.

— A man who was killed while checking on his dogs in Lenoir County, North Carolina.

— Another man in Lenoir County who was electrocuted while trying to connect two extension cords.

As much of North Carolina faces flooding for days, Gov. Cooper said the risk of more deaths is quite real.

“Remember: Most storm deaths occur from drowning in fresh water, often in cars,” he said. “Don’t drive across standing or moving water.”

Cassie Spodak reported from Lumberton, and Kaylee Hartung reported from Wilmington. CNN’s Jeremy Harlan, Susannah Cullinane, Steve Almasy, Jennifer Duck and Jamiel Lynch contributed to this report.

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