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New state program will help Helene survivors relocate during home repairs

A home repair in Gastonia.
Renew NC
A home repair in Gastonia.

A new state program will help some Hurricane Helene survivors pay for a temporary place to live while their damaged homes are repaired.

The $40 million for the Temporary Relocation Assistance Program was included in the new state budget. It is designed to help eligible applicants, often low-income homeowners, who need a place to stay while construction is underway.

Gov. Josh Stein said the money will help speed up the state’s broader home repair effort.

“You need to have somewhere to live temporarily while the construction's going on. And the legislature did what we asked them to do and gave us the money,” Stein said. “They didn't quite give us everything we asked for, but they certainly gave us some money that will help us accelerate this home reconstruction program.”

The program is tied to Renew NC, the state’s $807 million repair program for single-family homes damaged by Hurricane Helene.

Statewide, Renew NC has completed 92 repairs, including two in Asheville. Hundreds of applicants have been pre-approved and are in the pre-construction phase, which is the time when contractors are assigned, permits and utility shutoffs are arranged and relocation is confirmed if required.

In April, Stephanie McGarrah, the head of Renew NC, warned that the lack of funding for temporary housing was a “chokepoint” and had forced some applicants to withdraw from the program and others to delay construction.

“What's happened is we've started to have applicants who just won't move. They don't have anywhere they can go, so they won't move and we can't repair or rebuild their homes,” she said, adding that some contractors and nonprofits have stepped in to fund relocations in order to start construction.

BPR asked the North Carolina Department of Commerce to provide data on how many applicants have been delayed or withdrawn due to a lack of housing assistance. The department did not immediately have any data to share.

The budget stipulates that the $40 million in relocation assistance is meant to help applicants who have demonstrated hardship acquiring housing and exhausted other housing options, including staying with family, friends or volunteer organizations.

The program can cover temporary housing for the standard length of a repair or rebuild project, plus 21 days for moving in and out.

Gerard Albert III contributed to this report. 

Laura Hackett is an Edward R. Murrow award-winning reporter for Blue Ridge Public Radio. She joined the newsroom in 2023 as a Government Reporter and in 2025 moved into a new role as BPR's Helene Recovery Reporter. Before entering the world of public radio, she wrote for Mountain Xpress, AVLtoday and the Asheville Citizen-Times. She has a degree in creative writing from Florida Southern College, and in 2023, she completed the Craig Newmark Graduate School of Journalism at CUNY's Product Immersion for Small Newsrooms program.