26 people remain unaccounted for in North Carolina following Hurricane Helene

Helene is the deadliest storm in North Carolina's history.

October 21, 2024, 3:41 PM

Twenty-six people remain unaccounted for in hard-hit North Carolina, weeks after the devastation unleashed by Hurricane Helene, officials said Monday.

Last week, 92 people were unaccounted for, officials said.

Hurricane Helene made landfall in Florida on Sept. 26, wreaking havoc across the Southeast from Florida to Virginia. Helene destroyed homes and roads, stranded residents without cellphone service and water, and claimed the lives of nearly 250 people throughout the Southeast.

Tammie Mance (R) hugs her boss Liesl Steiner, whose home was destroyed, as they see each other for the first time since the storm in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene flooding, Oct. 3, 2024, in Black Mountain, North Carolina.
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At least 95 of Helene's fatalities were in North Carolina, officials said. Gov. Roy Cooper called Helene "the deadliest and most devastating storm" in the state's history.

After misinformation spread about recovery efforts and the availability of Federal Emergency Management Agency funds in North Carolina, Cooper stressed at Monday's news conference that the "deliberate disinformation and misinformation ... needs to stop."

"It hurts the very people we are all trying to help," he said. "It discourages and makes people fearful of signing up for help. It enables scam artists and it hurts the morale of government officials, first responders and soldiers who are on the ground trying to help."

Damage to homes and vehicles along with evidence of re-routed streams can be seen, Oct. 2, 2024, in Black Mountain, North Carolina.
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Cooper, speaking hours before former President Donald Trump's visit to Asheville to survey storm damage, urged the former president to "not share lies or misinformation while he is here."

But Trump continued to push false claims about the allocation of FEMA assistance, telling the North Carolina crowd incorrect information, claiming money dedicated to hurricane relief was going to offer assistance to migrants unaffected by the storm.

"FEMA has done a very poor job. ... They had spent hundreds of millions of dollars doing other things, things that I don't think bear any relationship to this money. There was, they were not supposed to be spending the money on taking in illegal migrants, maybe so they could vote in the election," Trump falsely said.

An aerial view of people clearing away debris in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene flooding, Oct. 2, 2024, in Asheville, North Carolina.
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An aerial view of flood damage along the French Broad River in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene on Oct. 2, 2024, in Asheville, North Carolina.
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Cooper said the White House "responded quickly and positively to our request from FEMA, which has had 1,400 staff on the ground and has registered 206,000 people for individual assistance, and distributed $124 million directly to people who need it."

"As for long-term recovery, state and local government will be all in, along with the federal government," Cooper said. "This will take billions of dollars and years of bipartisan focus from everyone working together to make it happen -- from new roads and bridges to public building to water supplies to people's homes."

An aerial view of flood damage wrought by Hurricane Helene along the Swannanoa River, Oct. 3, 2024, in Asheville, North Carolina.
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FEMA is now launching a "new initiative" to hire community liaisons in North Carolina's impacted counties, FEMA Administrator Deanne Criswell announced Monday.

"We know that so many people have temporarily lost their jobs. We know that others just want to be able to give back, and we want to help keep people in these communities while they recover," she said. "So these new community liaisons are going to work alongside us at FEMA to make sure that they are the local voice, the trusted voice in their community, and that they can share with us the local considerations and the concerns, so we can include them as part of this recovery. They're going to be embedded in every county, working directly with county administrators, mayors and community leaders, bridging their concerns with our FEMA staff. And these jobs are available for people to apply right now."

ABC News' Lalee Ibssa contributed to this report.

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