Clyde (NC) VFD Station Suffers Major Damage from Helene

Source: Haywood County Emergency Services.

The Clyde Volunteer Fire Department made the following Facebook post after Hurricane Helene hit:

“The fire department like many others suffered major damage. We have been fortunate to find a temporary home while we navigate this difficult path with our community. We are staffed and have and will continue to answer the calls for assistance with in our district.

“Thank you for all the support from other agencies particularly Junaluska Fire Department who spent the day with us.”

The Clyde Volunteer Fire Department services the Town of Clyde and Central Haywood Fire District.

Clyde Volunteer Fire Department, 8531 Carolina Boulevard, Clyde, North Carolina. (Google maps)

Ryan Oehrli
The Charlotte Observer
(TNS)

People in Clyde were rebuilding Saturday — again.

For many residents, it was their second time getting hit by a storm and having to start over. For some, it was the third. In 2021, Haywood County got hit by Tropical Storm Fred. Before that, Ivan in 2004.

But neither compared to what they saw after Helene, residents told The Charlotte Observer. Helene, which struck Florida as a Category 4 hurricane before dumping historic rain totals on western North Carolina as a tropical storm, washed out roads and brought untold damage to a swath of the state. Cellular networks and internet access remained limited.

The water line from flooding nearly reached the ceiling of a home on Broad Street in Clyde, where Brandon Patterson raked mud and trash out of his stepfather’s home.

Patterson’s stepfather, Tomas Quiroz, bought the house after Fred flooded it in 2021, hoping to fix it up.

Now he is back to square one, and his family says they will rebuild there.

Others on Broad Street were dealing with the same, familiar issues.

“We lost everything in the house just about,” said Denise Dean, who lived just a few doors down from Quiroz, and who’s lived on Broad Street for about eight years.

Unlike Quiroz, she’s moving somewhere with higher ground. She’s staying across the Pigeon River from her home after the storm. Her family has been in a hotel.

Nearby, husband and wife Lora and Mitch Nelson shoveled mud out of Lora’s salon and barber shop, Superior Cuts, on Depot Street.

“That building never flooded before, if that tells you anything. They said FEMA and the National Guard are coming. But people’ve got livelihoods,” said Mitch Nelson.

Lora Nelson’s shop is plastered with mud. It’s surrounded by buildings trashed by Helene. She’s not sure how she’ll be self-employed.

“It’s devastating,” she said.

There were some silver linings Saturday for people in Clyde.

Amy Russell and Lisa Monteith had about a dozen customers who, without any phone calls possible, just showed up to help.

Their pet food and dog training business flooded heavily — so much so that a bag of dog food found its way into someone’s house on another street. They had the store for about three years, and already dealt with the “little flood,” said Russell. There wasn’t so much water then.

“We weren’t expecting this,” she said. “It’s so heartbreaking.”

Russell said they’re planning to reopen the smaller shop for dog grooming and training, just around the corner, and move the retail inside that location.

Her customers helped to clean out both locations.

“Lisa says that a customer becomes a friend before a friend becomes a customer,” Russell said.

©2024 The Charlotte Observer. Visit charlotteobserver.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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