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Social Rundown: Grain mill explosion, students build hope, Vanilla Ice in downtown Wichita Falls
Social Rundown: Grain mill explosion, students build hope, Vanilla Ice in downtown Wichita Falls

Yahoo

time31-03-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Social Rundown: Grain mill explosion, students build hope, Vanilla Ice in downtown Wichita Falls

WICHITA FALLS (KFDX/KJTL) — Welcome back to the Social Rundown, where you can learn about the online trends happening globally and in Texoma, too! Want to get the latest tea or news on what's trending on social media? Tune in daily! Grain Elevator Explosion In Sunray, Texas, a massive explosion took place at a grain mill where five people were injured, according to officials. Students help build hope. Students from Mountain Heritage High School in Yancey County, North Carolina, are in an advanced carpentry class and helping build tiny homes for the victims of Hurricane Helene. Vanilla Ice in Wichita Falls Wichita Falls had a live performance from the only vanilla ice. A pretty good crowd enjoyed the on-tour-live outside venue on Saturday, where people could watch the live performance close up to the stage or enjoy in the comfort of their lawn chairs a few hundred feet back. The show openers were DJ Tito Productions, who blended all sorts of 2000s hits before the Ice Ice Baby singer popped off on stage.e Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

North Carolina students building tiny home for Helene victim
North Carolina students building tiny home for Helene victim

Yahoo

time31-03-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

North Carolina students building tiny home for Helene victim

BURNSVILLE, NC (WGHP) — At Mountain Heritage High School in Yancey County, the sounds of saws and hammers fill the air. To those in that part of Yancey County, it's the sound of hope. Students in Jeremy Dotts' Advanced Carpentry class are building a tiny house that will go to help a victim of Hurricane Helene. Find out What's Right With Our Schools! Says Dotts, 'We literally started in January on the very first house and that's what you see right over there.' This house is special for a number of reasons. Hurricane Helene hit their community hard, so they all felt and saw the loss firsthand. According to Dotts, 'The floodwaters were really what hit me and see more than anything because we have really two major rivers that flood that come through. Yancey County, that just wiped-out whole areas. So it's been it's been devastating.' Jesse Taylor, a senior advance carpentry student, remembers it well. 'There was trees down all over the roads. Driveways were destroyed. A lot of my neighbors' driveways . We live next to a Creek, rocks everywhere in the yards. Just a lot of damage. It was really sad to see,' he said. But knowing they are a part of the rebuilding and healing process helps. 'They (the students) have bought in completely to what they're doing. Their hearts are in it. They know who this house is going to. They know that the foundations that they're working with, like rebuilding hollers is, you know, their hearts in the right place with doing this to help our community members,' said Dotts. And while they are raising the walls, their level of experience has gone up as well. 'I have 18 kids in here building 3 individual projects, so they're not always able to get to me right away,' Dotts says. 'They have to figure that out and make those mistakes and in the process of making those mistakes, they really learn.' Plus, he says they are also learning something that can't be taught in any book: empathy and compassion. 'That is something that you it's very difficult to teach kids to do, but if you instill it in them. They really get it. And they love it. They really do buy into it.' For the students it makes them feel useful in the clean up and rebuilding. 'It's great being able to get the experience and give back to the community just to help someone that's needing it,' said senior Carter Tabor. Jesse Taylor added, 'Yeah, it's brought back, you know, lot of hope getting back in here after the hurricane. It's pretty nice getting able to work and give back to the community.' A community that recognizes and needs their help. This house was paid for with donations to the Rebuilding Hollers Foundation. They are hoping to build many more homes in the future as they try to regain what once was. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Yancey County high school students build tiny home for Helene survivor
Yancey County high school students build tiny home for Helene survivor

Yahoo

time28-03-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

Yancey County high school students build tiny home for Helene survivor

BURNSVILLE, N.C. (QUEEN CITY NEWS) – The carpentry program gives Mountain Heritage High School students a building block for their future. But because of urgent circumstances, their help is needed right now. 'Most of them have already been accepted to a college for project management. Several want to become contractors,' says instructor Jeremy Dotts. Long before the chorus of power tools begins on each project, the foundation of construction is planning. But what they're working on is in response to something catastrophic that no one in western North Carolina could've planned for: Hurricane Helene. Nearly six months after Helene slammed into the mountains, causing historic flooding, mudslides and loss of basic resources, many people are still without homes. The class is pitching in by hammering away at a vital project. 'I like seeing the project go to someone that has lost a house,' said student Hensley England, who has seen so much suffering since last September. 'All of the students have been impacted some way by this storm,' Dotts told Queen City News. The storm left hundreds of houses in Yancey County unlivable. At a time of such enormous need, it takes many hands to do the work needed to help the area recover. That's where Mountain Heritage comes into play. The teens are building a 600-square-foot tiny home for a woman who lost everything. It's a partnership with Rebuilding Hollers, which continues to raise money to cover construction costs. 'Right now we're putting in the walls, we already have the floor system done,' says senior Sawyer Silver. 'One bedroom, one bath with a loft,' Dotts said, describing the structure. 'It's going to have a good-sized living room. It's going to be plenty of space for one person.' With more donations, the nonprofit wants to work with Mountain Heritage on more small homes. 'So, I think it's the perfect blend, because we need these kids to learn everything and build,' says founder Stephanie Johnson. 'And they'll be rebuilding our community for years to come.' 'It's really amazing to be able to supply for the community the way we are, especially at a time of need,' Silver said. The tiny home is part of a bigger mission to not only teach job skills but also give back. 'The mission statement for this program has always been to build a house and donate a house,' explained Dotts. The carpentry program earns revenue through contract work. Dotts says the idea is to invest the cash earned back into the community. 'We have built the house, sold it, taken the proceeds from that house and donated it to someone in need,' he said. The blueprint that was in place long before Helene, now gives the Cougar Carpenters something to build upon. 'Not only are we learning along the way, but we're also driven because we're helping someone,' Silver says. 'Knowing that they are participating in the rebuilding process of their community is absolutely something that they bought into and are thrilled to be a part of,' said Dotts. The goal is to finish the tiny home by this fall. With additional funds, Dotts hopes the carpentry class can build several more. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

‘We need help': Western N.C. family struggles to rebuild months after Helene
‘We need help': Western N.C. family struggles to rebuild months after Helene

Yahoo

time27-03-2025

  • Climate
  • Yahoo

‘We need help': Western N.C. family struggles to rebuild months after Helene

In a heart wrenching video from September of last year, the rushing waters of the Cane River nearly drown out the sobs of the Pogalz family as they watch Hurricane Helene wash away their home on a rural road in Yancey County. Six months later, you can barely hear water trickling down the mountainside, and the occasional work truck navigating what's left of that road that cuts deep into the earth – symbolizing the scars the storm left on the land and the people. 'This is what used to be our house, right behind the big tree is where our house stood and the where the river took it in. Helene just picked it up as a whole, and down the river it went,' Ashley Pogalz told Channel 9′s Hannah Goetz. ALSO READ: Helene 6 months later: Asheville businesses work to bring back visitors Channel 9 met up with Ashley near where her house once sat. The base of their bridge and roof of their barn are now on the other side of the river – fossils of their life up until six months ago. We first met the Pogalz family in November when they shared their story on the Mountain Heritage High School football field. 'We are still alive, so that's the most important thing,' dad, Danny Pogalz, said last fall. During that interview, Danny told Channel 9 about the day Helene hit: 'Picture everything you have gone.' Danny's truck was mangled and the family had to hike to safety after watching their community wash away. That first interview was just a few weeks after the storm. Their oldest son, Nick, was trying to find a new normal on the football field and all four kids were trying to return to school while the family of six was living out of campers. Ashley said the kids would say what everyone was thinking: 'I want to go home. They say that a lot, but I just say, 'I'm doing the best I can. I'm trying.'' Desperate to go home, with no way to get there. Helene destroyed their private bridge – the only way to get to the property by car. Ashley has discovered it's hard to get funding for a private bridge like theirs was. She said it's an estimated $500,000 project. 'We can't afford to do the bridge and our home. We can't afford to rebuild everything,' Ashley said. 'We've tried to get money through FEMA. I've sent estimates to them with no result.' She added, 'They've not denied us but they haven't approved us either for funding. I've tried to get help through Samaritan's Purse, which is still in process, waiting on legislatures to pass funding. There's been programs that the county has that work for smaller bridges, but ours is large.' Ashley is a teacher's assistant and Danny is a heavy equipment mechanic. She said they make just slightly too much to qualify for many assistance programs. No home, no bridge to get there, and no help. She wants people to know that families in western North Carolina are still suffering – including hers. 'Help,' Ashely said through tears. 'We're in a place where we've been forgotten. We make too much money for help and that's not fair because the hurricane didn't ask us how much money we made before it took everything. So why? Why does it matter how much we make? We need help.' WATCH BELOW: Western N.C. family recovering from Helene left waiting for home from FEMA

Western NC seniors build homes for Helene victims
Western NC seniors build homes for Helene victims

Yahoo

time17-02-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

Western NC seniors build homes for Helene victims

North Carolina high school students are using their carpentry skills to build tiny homes for Helene survivors. Mountain Heritage High School in Burnsville has a carpentry class where students are busy building a home for a family who lost everything. The project is part of a new partnership with the Rebuilding Hollers Foundation. ALSO READ: Undefeated western NC football team uplifts community hit hard by Helene Their teacher said they embraced the opportunity to give back. 'It makes me feel very proud knowing that I am able to help and change someone's life that is in need through not only school but building and just helping out those that can't really help themselves,' Croix Silver, a senior at Mountain Heritage High School, said. The high school hopes to continue to build two to four tiny homes a year. WATCH BELOW: Eric Church to build 40 homes in WNC county impacted by Helene

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