(CNN)Rescue crews in the Carolinas worked methodically throughout the day on Monday, plucking people to safety from the flooding left by Hurricane Matthew’s deadly haymaker.
Responders pulled people from their submerged homes, situated them in rafts or choppers and whisked them to safe and dry ground.
The storm’s US death toll climbed to 21 on Monday, with North Carolina reporting 11 deaths, Florida reporting four, and three each in South Carolina and Georgia.
President Obama on Monday declared a major disaster in North Carolina and ordered federal aid to supplement state, tribal and local recovery efforts.
Federal funding is available to people in Beaufort, Bladen, Columbus, Cumberland, Edgecombe, Hoke, Lenoir, Nash, Pitt, and Robeson counties.
More than 469,000 South Carolina customers didn’t have power Monday, Gov. Nikki Haley said. She said 8,000 linemen were working to get electricity restored.
And Florida, the first state thrashed by Matthew, still had 169,000 customers without power Monday, Gov. Rick Scott’s office said.
Matthew also played havoc with the state’s voter registration process. On Monday, a court extended the voter registration deadline because evacuations.
Meanwhile, the state is working to get back to normal. The Kennedy Space Center will reopen on Tuesday at 6 a.m. Employees are being asked to report to work at their regular times. At the same time, recovery operations are continuing and people are asked to be careful on their return.
Dead and missing
The 11 deaths in North Carolina included some victims who drowned after driving onto flooded roads.
Forecasters warned of more “catastrophic flooding” as North Carolina residents braced for swollen rivers to top their banks in the next few days.
“River levels will rise above major flood stage this morning and remain elevated well into next week,” the National Weather Service said.
What to do next
As more storm victims return to their homes from Florida to North Carolina, it’s critical to know how to come back safely.
In addition to avoiding all flooded roads, keep an eye out for downed power lines and weakened bridges and roads that look like they might collapse, the National Weather Service said.
Once back home, “walk carefully around the outside of your home to check for loose power lines, gas leaks and structural damage,” the NWS said. “Stay out of any building if you smell gas.”
The agency said carbon monoxide poisoning is one of the leading causes of death after storms involving power outages.
“Never use a portable generator inside your home or garage,” the NWS said. “Use battery-powered flashlights. Do not use candles. Turn on your flashlight before entering a vacated building. The battery could produce a spark that could ignite leaking gas, if present.”
North Carolina’s Department of Public Safety offers additional tips on how to safely remove trees and limbs from homes.
Beach house turns into a beach
Grant Lynch garnered national attention last week when he posted video of Matthew’s mammoth waves clobbering his Florida beach house.
He returned to his Palm Coast home over the weekend to find the house filled with beach sand.
“The whole yard is now a beach,” Lynch said.
He tried to walk inside the house, whose floors were covered by what looked like more than a foot of sand.
“My head’s almost hitting the roof,” he said.
Read more: http://www.cnn.com/2016/10/10/us/weather-matthew/index.html