High school students give Hurricane Helene survivor fresh start by building her new home

Sherry Housley said she evacuated during Helene, which left her home in shambles. She's been living in an RV ever since.

BURNSVILLE, N.C.– A North Carolina woman who lost her house in Hurricane Helene nearly eight months ago is finally getting a new place to call home. 

Sherry Housley said Friday during an interview with FOX Weather that she is doing well. 

"I am phasing out of the fight or flight mode," Housley said.

Housley has been living in an RV since the hurricane destroyed her home.

"I'm just counting the moments for my little house," she said. 

A group of high school students partnered with a nonprofit called Rebuilding Hollers, and together, they are building a tiny house for Housley. 

She said she got a call from Stephanie Johnson, the founder of Rebuilding Hollers, who told her she would be getting a house, and the first one. 

"I was just blown away," Housley said. "I thought I was going to live in an RV for the rest of my life." 

Housley said she struggles to come up with words to express how she's feeling, knowing she'll have a real home again. 

"What they're doing is just beyond anything I've ever experienced in my life as far as someone coming to my rescue," she said. 

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Housley evacuated her home during Helene. She and her family had gotten several warnings that it was going to be bad, and she knew she couldn't stay. 

She went to stay with her sister who lived nearby. She said she was stranded there for a week. 

"I walked the 3.5 miles off the mountain, and came and saw that my little house was gone," Housley said. 

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She said her home and studio were destroyed. 

"Everything you can imagine was picked up and churned inside my workspace," Housley said. 

The tiny house is being built at the school, and will be moved to where her home used to be. 

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Housley said she was born and raised on the property she lived on. She inherited it from her parents. 

"To be able to rise back up here, at my roots, in my beautiful mountains … I am part of these mountains," she said. 

Despite the mud and debris still left behind, Housley said she couldn't imagine living anywhere but her property.

"I can see beauty here already," she said. "It's already blooming, and things are greening up." 

Housley said she's excited to get into her new home and start planting, too. 

Her tiny house is expected to be completed and moved by the end of May. 

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