Self-sustainability to be an important resource for upcoming Helene response

Barnardsville went through a generational hailstorm in May, making it necessary for the church to put $160,000 into repairing its roof. Thankfully, the flood didn’t touch that. But it did go about five feet up the walls in the sanctuary, kitchen, bathrooms, furnace room and the old and new fellowship halls.

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Baptist Press

By Scott Barkley, posted October 18, 2024 in Disaster Relief

BARNARDSVILLE, N.C. (BP) — Curtis showed up about two weeks ago and has been invaluable for helping Barnardsville Baptist Church after flood damage to its building. It’s what he hasn’t done, however, that may signal a key to the long-term response to Helene’s damage in the area.

Barnardsville is an unincorporated community in the mountains – about a 20-minute drive from Asheville. There is one restaurant and no hotels. Weaverville is the nearest town and has a few more options of both, but not many.

Mud coats the inside of Barnardsville Baptist Church. Photo by Robert English

 

Curtis brought refurbished chainsaws that have helped clear the debris piled up after Ivy Creek exceeded its banks by several feet. He has also fixed numerous small engines for those nearby while helping Barnardsville Baptist begin its cleanup process, including tearing out and replacing sheetrock.

At the end of the day, he sleeps in the box truck he drove from Texas. Church members help provide food, but he is largely self-sufficient.

That has been the case with others who have helped the church in recent weeks. Some camped prior to the chilly temperatures that recently arrived. Some have slept in the church parsonage.

It’s a setting Southern Baptist Disaster Relief teams and church groups should expect, said Kenton Hunt, DR director for the Baptist Resource Network of Pennsylvania/South Jersey. More Here

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