North Carolina
'We just felt called': Local volunteers travel to North Carolina to help with hurricane devastation
LACEY LAKEVIEW, Texas (KWTX) – A local group is now sharing their stories from eastern North Carolina after recently driving up to help people rebuild their lives after the devastation of Hurricane Helene.
Charles Fisher, the pastor at New Vision Family Fellowship, says when he saw what was happening in North Carolina he knew he had to do something.
“We just felt called… we saw it, my son called me on the phone and said, ‘dad what do you think about North Carolina’ and I said ‘I’m thinking about North Carolina’,” Charles shared.
And so, Charles, along with his son Caleb Fisher and Logan Selman, drove 18 hours to eastern North Carolina two weeks ago and stayed five days to help however they could.
But nothing could have prepared them for what they would see and the stories they would hear.
“You could see trees that were just layed over, brough from further up in the mountain down the river and… you know houses that had been basically demolished if not completely wiped off their foundations,” Selman explained.
Charles shared that “there was one family we heard of that lost 13 members of their family.”
While there they worked with the Red Truck Men, a nonprofit organization out of North Carolina, who sent them out wherever help was needed.
“A lot of tree removal, getting sometimes up to three feet of mud out of houses… we built a bridge,” Charles said.
But they say there’s still so much work to be done, and it will likely take years for North Carolina to recover from this.
“It’s not so much that they’re still in the shock of it, but there’s such a long road for them to recovery because they don’t have the same resources, they don’t have the houses that are built for that,” Caleb explained.
According to Caleb, what they need most right now is volunteers.
“They need manpower, they need machines, heavy equipment, even smaller sized heavy equipment… they need volunteers like crazy,” he said.
They also still need donations, such as “water bottles, buddy burners, monetary,” Caleb explained, “and especially prayers for everybody there.”
Caleb himself will soon be headed back to North Carolina with his family and their camper to continue their work.
“If that’s for three weeks, three months, three years… either we’re going to run out of work or we’re going to run out of money,” Caleb shared.
To sign up to volunteer or make monetary donations you can visit the Red Truck Men website.
They also need physical donations such as bottled water, green propane tanks, buddy heaters, and hand warmers. Those can be brought to the New Vision Family Fellowship at 665 New Dallas Hwy, Waco, TX, 76705.
Monetary donations for Caleb Fisher while he continues missionary work in the field can be sent through Venmo at Caleb-Fisher-17, Cashapp at $cowboymonney, or checks made out to New Vision Family Fellowship.
Copyright 2024 KWTX. All rights reserved.
North Carolina
North Carolina man found dead after falling overboard in East TN lake: TWRA
HAMPTON, Tenn. (WVLT) – The Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency said its wardens are investigating the eighth boating death of the year following an incident on Watauga Lake.
At around 7 p.m. on Friday, the TWRA was dispatched to a boating incident at Rat Branch boat ramp after the caller said the operator had fallen overboard in the no-wake zone and did not resurface.
The victim, identified as 36-year-old Alexander Luster, of Boone, North Carolina, was participating in a bass tournament and fell overboard prior to the start of the event, TWRA officials said. First responders recovered his body shortly after 11:30 p.m.
TWRA said an autopsy has been ordered, and the incident, which is the eighth boating death in Tennessee this year, remains under investigation.
Copyright 2026 WVLT. All rights reserved.
North Carolina
Families locked out of NC State graduation ceremony: ‘Ridiculous’
RALEIGH, N.C. (WTVD) — A graduation ceremony for NC State University’s Department of Biological Sciences at Reynolds Coliseum on Friday night left hundreds of family members outside, frustrated and emotional after they were not allowed into the building.
Inside, graduates were met with pomp and circumstance as they walked across the stage to accept their degrees.
Outside, people shouted in confusion as they realized they would not be permitted to enter.
“I’m hurt. She’s hurting. We’re hurt,” said Dr. Darlene Jackson, a grandmother from Winston-Salem. “They’re asking, can’t we get here? But this is ridiculous. Ridiculous.”
We get here, and we are turned away. That’s BS. It shouldn’t be happening like this. They did not plan this well,
– Sally Charlet, NCSU grandparent
Families said they arrived about an hour before the 7:30 p.m. ceremony, only to find a line wrapped around the building. Many said they were eventually told the venue had reached capacity.
“They are saying the fire marshal shut it down because it’s too crowded,” Jackson said. “They should have known how many occupy this. They should have had it in a different place.”
Sally Charlet said she flew in from Florida earlier in the day to watch her granddaughter graduate.
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“We get here, and we are turned away,” she said. “That’s BS. It shouldn’t be happening like this. They did not plan this well, and they should have tickets. That would have made a lot of sense.”
According to GoPack.com, Reynolds Coliseum seats about 5,500 people.
Some families said they were especially devastated after years of supporting their students’ work.
This is awful, and it needs to be made right.
– Eddie McFall, NCSU parent
“It’s very disheartening,” said Rhonda Bartone, whose son earned his Ph.D. In toxicology. “He did a five-year program getting his Ph.D., and we have no family. And they’re seeing him get his Ph.D. right now. We had to text his professor and ask him to please take some pictures of him. It’s hard not to cry.”
Several people outside shared photos sent by students inside showing empty seats.
“There was unfortunately not better planning for the hundreds of students, maybe even thousands of students, and, of course, thousands of students, even more people, parents, siblings, loved ones,” said Julia Norton, whose fiancé earned his Ph.D.
One father, Eddie McFall, who is also an alumnus of NC State, said he has three children at the university, including a senior graduating Friday.
“His mother was five feet from the door when they shut it down,” he said. “Won’t let anybody in there.”
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About 45 minutes after the ceremony began, someone came outside to address the remaining crowd. Families were told their only option was to watch a livestream from the student union or on their phones.
“I can go to my house and watch the livestream,” McFall said. “Who’s the event coordinator? Who from the school did this? This is awful, and it needs to be made right.”
NC State did not respond to questions about how the situation unfolded or why the event was not ticketed. The university said it provided a livestream for those unable to attend in person and had posted earlier in the week advising visitors to expect delays around the coliseum.
Copyright © 2026 WTVD-TV. All Rights Reserved.
North Carolina
Fifteen North Carolina co-op lineworkers help electrify rural Guatemala village
NORTH CAROLINA — Fifteen lineworkers from North Carolina’s electric cooperatives recently traveled to Guatemala to help bring first-time access to electricity to a rural village.
The group spent three weeks working in El Plan Nuevo Amanecer.
Crews constructed three miles of line, bringing power to more than 50 homes, a school, two churches and the community’s only health clinic.
Photo: North Carolina’s Electric Cooperatives
Without access to bucket trucks or heavy machinery, volunteers worked by hand across rugged terrain.
The project helped bring light to the village, creating new opportunities for education, economic growth and safer everyday life for the community.
The effort was done alongside NRECA International.
Volunteer lineworkers represented several North Carolina electric cooperatives, including EnergyUnited, Union Power Cooperative, Cape Hatteras Electric Cooperative, Jones-Onslow EMC, Edgecombe-Martin County EMC, South River EMC, Surry-Yadkin Electric Membership Corporation and Rutherford EMC.
Photo: North Carolina’s Electric Cooperatives
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