蝌蚪直播

Public Service

Alternative spring break teams help in Helene recovery

APPLES Service-Learning students traveled to the mountains and Charlotte to work on rebuilding and other projects.

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Along with many fellow Carolina students, Jillian Joyce and Anna Routh spent their spring break soaking in the sun鈥檚 rays. But instead of splashing waves and setting up beach chairs, they were unearthing bricks and pushing wheelbarrows.聽聽

鈥淚t feels good to be here and representing UNC,鈥 said Routh, a junior public policy and history major. 鈥淭he work we鈥檙e doing is so important, and I feel like I鈥檓 really able to contribute to something valuable while on break.鈥澛

Routh helped lead a group of 11 classmates to clean up debris from flooding caused by Hurricane Helene in the town of Marshall, about 20 miles north of Asheville. Their work is part of the Alternative Spring Break, an annual program offered through Carolina鈥檚 Center for Public Service that鈥檚 designed to connect academic learning and public service.聽聽

鈥淭here鈥檚 not many opportunities where you can go somewhere and be able to help a community out,鈥 said Suchi Kona, a first-year biology major. 鈥淎nd not only are we helping 鈥 the community is also helping us learn, and it鈥檚 such a rewarding experience.鈥

Service-learning students pose in Marshall, North Carolina, in between clean-up tasks.

The APPLES Service-Learning Alternative Spring Break program is designed to connected academic learning and public service. (Rob Holliday/UNC-Chapel Hill)

With the French Broad River once again flowing at normal levels behind them, a group of six students dug through a pile of dirt, rocks and other items left in Helene鈥檚 wake with an eye toward rebuilding.聽

鈥淲e鈥檙e taking all of the bricks that are still whole so they can rebuild the wall and the buildings that were torn down by the storm,鈥 said Jillian Joyce, a junior 蝌蚪直播 science major and trip co-leader. 鈥淪eeing other UNC students in our group of 12 鈥 everyone decided to come here. No matter how individualist people can be, it says that people still care about their community and want to get out there and help.鈥澛

The work in Marshall was one of several Helene-related projects the students tackled during their week in the mountains. They also spent time volunteering with a group fighting poverty, working at a veterans鈥 healing farm and helping with Helene recovery in other mountain communities. A separate APPLES Alternative Spring Break team of students completed a week鈥檚 worth of service projects in the Charlotte area.聽

鈥淚 think the biggest challenge is knowing that you can only do so much within a week, knowing that we鈥檙e going to have to go back to Carolina at the end of this week,鈥 said Raegan Murphy, a sophomore community and global health major. 鈥淚 think it just reminds us to continue to support the North Carolina community.鈥澛

Mayor Aaron Haynie saw his town endure nine times the level of flooding expected by Hurricane Helene in September. As he and local business and community leaders to get the town of Marshall back up and running, they鈥檙e grateful for the legions of volunteers who have made their way to the North Carolina mountains to lend a hand.聽

鈥淚t鈥檚 a great thing for the town and to know that we haven鈥檛 been forgotten, especially almost going on six months in that people still care,鈥 Haynie said. 鈥淲e really want to spread the word that Marshall will be open for business again.鈥