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Alabama 2019 tornado survivor gets new house thanks to a nonprofit
Updated Mar 06, 2021;
Posted Mar 06, 2021
Carol Dean stands in the master bedroom of her new home on Wednesday, March 3, 2021, in Beauregard, Ala. Her home was built by MEND and The Chattahoochee Fuller Center. Dean lost her husband David (Road Dog) Dean on March 3, 2019, in an EF-4 tornado. (Sara Palczewski/Opelika-Auburn News via AP)AP
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By Mike Eads | Opelika-Auburn News
BEAUREGARD (AP) Carol Dean has a new house. It’s not the one she shared with her late Road Dog, but she’s sure he’s at least there in spirit.
BEAUREGARD, Ala. (AP) Carol Dean has a new house. It’s not the one she shared with her late Road Dog, but she’s sure he’s at least there in spirit. Road Dog was her husband David, who perished in the tornado that hit Beauregard on March 3, 2019. The house they shared was destroyed, so the Fuller Center built her a new one on the same spot. She and Fuller officials unveiled the brand-new, bright, two-bedroom home March 3 two years to the day.
BCB – Making Bradford Sparkle!
You may have seen this but if not, a few weeks ago BCB was featured in Sparkling Bradford. We’d been nominated as an organisation that makes Bradford Sparkle so well done to us! Click here to read more
BCB – becoming an anti racist organisation
At BCB we have been committed for over 25 years to creating a platform for many different people to have a voice and share their stories, passions and experiences. We pride ourselves on the wide range of voices we hear on our airwaves, and the people we welcome into the building.
Our vision for BCB is one where we want everyone to feel valued and central to all the work we are doing. We know from the Black Lives Matter Movement that not all black people and people of colour feel valued or central in the workplace or in society as a whole. As an organisation that has strived for 25 years to reach out to the many diverse communities, we care about the impact of racism on our staff and volunteers an