- Eric Tulsky comfortable, confident and going for the Stanley Cup in 2nd year as Hurricanes GM
- 5 homes collapse into the surf of the Outer Banks as hurricanes rumble in Atlantic
- As hurricanes pass offshore, more Buxton homes collapse into the sea
- Central Texas floods reveal need to shore up disaster response in unincorporated areas
- Latest: Tropical Storm Imelda will pull away from East Coast, expected to become a hurricane
NC communities still recovering from hurricanes feel forgotten as state turns attention future storm preparations

Some people who are still trying to recover from Hurricanes Matthew and Florence, though, feel left behind.
‘Help us please’ is what one participant wrote on a note and held up during the citizen advisory committee meeting Tuesday morning. The committee is an arm of the North Carolina Office of Recovery and Resilience comprised of members from areas most affected by natural disasters. They met online Tuesday discussing the action plan.
“These adjustments would not only seek to bridge historic gaps for communities that were impacted by hurricanes Matthew and Florence but also help incorporate community development opportunities and build up long term resilience of those communities and address future climate change impacts down the line,” said Edgar Gomez, a committee member.
The focus on the future upset some of the people sitting in on the meeting.
A state reanalysis shows 89% of the unmet recovery needs are related to owner-occupied housing, rental housing and the economy.
“There are some people who need urgent help for over half a decade,” wrote Virginia Radcliffe through a public comment in chat. “The homeless, struggling homeowners are the past to Ms. Hogshead and the Rebuild NC program and this is unacceptable.”
While the committee is accepting public comments until January 23rd, they didn’t open the mics to the general public today.