Massive Response Follows Hurricane Helene’s Gut Punch
Samaritan’s Purse is responding to both Hurricane Helene and Hurricane Milton, with multiple disaster relief bases in North Carolina and Florida.
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Historic Destruction Across Western North Carolina
Helene tore a deadly path through the mountains of western North Carolina, dumping extreme rainfall and causing catastrophic flash flooding. Numerous locations received from 12 to 31 inches of rain between Sept. 25–27. Some towns are in ruins. Toppled trees cover the landscape. Roads and bridges are washed out. Homes and businesses were destroyed by flooding and landslides. Many homes remain without power or running water.
We are bringing generators and other emergency supplies to help communities in the region’s remote mountainous terrain. We are using ground transportation currently, and previously coordinated hundreds of relief flights using our own helicopter and the fixed-wing assets of partnering organizations. We airlifted many tons of food, water, generators, fuel, Starlink systems, heaters, solar lights, and blankets.
We are providing relief throughout Watauga County—home to Samaritan’s Purse international headquarters in the town of Boone—and in neighboring counties around North Carolina’s high country and into Tennessee. Southwest of Boone, rivers raged outside their banks causing widespread destruction in and around Asheville, North Carolina. Our relief response there extends around Buncombe County, which includes Asheville, Black Mountain, Montreat, and Swannanoa. More recently, we opened a third base in the hard-hit town of Burnsville, to include Mitchell and Yancey counties, also in western North Carolina.
At our sites across North Carolina, we are doing tree work, mudding out homes, removing debris, and tarping roofs. Heavy equipment is being used to clear private driveways and private roads. In some areas, we are also offering water and potable water to the community.
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Volunteers are also hard at work at our bases in Tampa and Charlotte County, Florida, and in Valdosta, Georgia.
More than 200 Helene-related deaths have been reported, a mainland U.S. death toll second only to Hurricane Katrina in the past 50 years.
Read More
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- Finding Joy in Jesus After the Storm
- An Orange Wave of Help Arrives for Swannanoa
- Water Filtration Systems Deployed to the Asheville Area
- Samaritan's Purse Starts Five-Site Response to Hurricane Helene
- Volunteers Help Lift Heavy Burden for Hurricane-Hit Couple
- Helpful Information for Volunteers (Asheville Base)