CNN —Aid to several communities impacted by Hurricane Helene was temporarily paused in parts of North Carolina over the weekend due to reports of threats against Federal Emergency Management Agency responders, amid a backdrop of misinformation about responses to recent storms.
Some FEMA teams helping disaster survivors apply for assistance in rural North Carolina are currently working at secure disaster recovery centers in counties where federal workers are receiving threats, a FEMA spokesperson told CNN on Monday.
More than 100 people were killed in North Carolina and thousands of others were left grappling with catastrophic damage.
There were more than 1,200 FEMA staff providing support in North Carolina as of Saturday, according to an update from the agency.
FEMA officials have received threats before, but the difference is the magnitude of threats received in the wake of Helene’s devastation in North Carolina, the FEMA spokesperson told CNN.
Persons:
Hurricane Helene, It’s, Helene, Phil Howell, Howell, we’ve, Hurricanes Helene, Milton, Joe Biden, ”, Kerry Giles, CNN’s Jalen Beckford
Organizations:
CNN, Federal Emergency Management Agency, FEMA, National Guard, Washington Post, Sheriff B, Facebook, Rescue, Hurricanes, Biden, Senior
Locations:
Hurricane, North Carolina, Rutherford County, Asheville, Florida, Ashe County, Tennessee, Virginia, ”, ” Rutherford