CHARLOTTE, N.C.,None — There is a new concern about flood-damaged homes in the wake of Friday's record breaking storms.
Many families are doing everything they can to make sure their houses won't be condemned by inspectors.
The Red Cross said 102 occupied homes were damaged by Friday's record-breaking flooding.
The Red Cross added it helped 19 families over the weekend with emergency assistance. They handed out emergency kits, cleaning supply boxes, and provided food and overnight shelter for nine families.
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On Sunday afternoon, Maybelle Hart's family was working together to salvage items from her damaged house in northwest Charlotte.
Ninety-five-year-old Maybelle Hart has lived in her house on Seldon Drive for nearly 40 years. Family members said generations of memories were swept away in the floods.
"It's very sad. It's been very emotional the last couple of days. But we're managing. We're a family that's always stuck by each other," said Maybelle's granddaughter Cassandra Turner.
In 1973, the Charlotte Observer wrote an article about Maybelle and her 12 children. The newspaper article is still wet, but it survived the flood.
"It means a lot to know that we still have this memory of her," Turner said.
Maybelle has more than 50 grandchildren and great grandchildren, and one great great grandchild. Several generations were on hand Sunday afternoon to clean up.
But there is a fear that the house may not be safe. City inspectors visited the house over the weekend.
"They were here and they were warning us about mold underneath the home- standing water, and the devastation in the walls," Tuner said.
Turner said inspectors will return to the house this week for another inspection.
"Mold is deadly. People don't realize how deadly it is. You can clean the inside a little bit, but then they don't pay attention to the walls, the crawlspace," said David Crockett, with the Red Cross.
Volunteers with the Red Cross surveyed the damage in several Northwest Charlotte neighborhoods on Sunday.
Cassandra Turner said she's praying they'll be able to do enough to make the house safe.
Besides the mold, South Charlotte resident Cameron Walker said she's worried about the lingering smell the floodwaters left behind in her house.
"I mopped and cleaned, but as you can tell, it smells like kerosene in here. We're trying to figure out where the kerosene smell is coming from," Walker said.
Red Cross officials said it's the worst flash flooding the city has seen in three years.
The Red Cross closed their shelters Sunday afternoon.
Those still needing help can call the Red Cross at 704-378-4620.
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