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High School Students Create Tiny Homes for Hurricane Helene Victims

North Carolina high school students built a small home in carpenter classes as part of an effort to help the victims of Hurricane Helen, left behind without a home.

Croix Silver and Hensley England, seniors at Mountain Heritage High School in Burnsville. I explained it The news on ABC11 that they can be “very proud” to build a small home for those in need, helping them to “change someone else's life.” Ta.

Silver and England are part of the teachers of Jeremy Dotz, a carpenter who builds a small home for the victims of Hurricane Helen as part of the “rebuilding high school and horror.” Organization It was created by real estate agent Stephanie Johnson in the aftermath of the storm.

“I am extremely proud to know that I can build people who can't help themselves, not just in school, but also in the lives of people who can't help themselves, and that I can help and change the lives of those who just help,” Silver said on the outlet. He spoke to.

England expressed that he “just wanted to go out and help others,” adding that this was “a great opportunity to do that.”

The outlet said one of Dotz's carpenter class projects was to turn “a wooden frame at the heart of the workshop” into a small home for victims of Hurricane Helen.

One of the projects this semester is turning the wooden frame at the heart of the workshop into a “small home” for storm victims in Yancey County who lost their home in the storm. It's all part of a new partnership between High School and the Reconstruction Horrors, a local organization that Stephanie Johnson started after the storm.

Johnson's organization purchases “home building materials” with donated funds, and the materials needed to build the house are brought to carpenter classes, while Dotz's class is “A-Frame, 650-square-foot home shell.” “We will begin to build it. To the outlet.

Dotz explained that the high school and Horrors rebuilding partnership is “a perfect marriage between the two, the perfect marriage to work with students,” and that all of his students are involved in the project. I added.

A few days after taking office, President Donald Trump visited North Carolina and made it clear that he would deploy the US Army Corps of Engineers to the state to help people rebuild riverbanks and roads.

Trump's visit to the state was a few months later when people from western North Carolina faced flooding and destruction of roads, homes and communities as a result of the storm, months later, in places such as Chimney Rock, Suwannanoa and Asheville villages.

The Biden Harris administration has previously been criticised for its response in the aftermath of Hurricane Helen, and some North Carolina residents also haven't seen any signs of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) or other government agencies This is what I am saying.

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