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Line technician Clint Ray at work Apr. 24, 2025

Lineman who lost home in tornado finds joy in job

GoFundMe Campaign

With a tornado speeding straight for their home in Ash Flat, line technician Clint Ray and his wife gathered their two children and fled to safety just 30 minutes before the twister tore their house to pieces March 14.

An hour later, with his family safe at the house of his sister-in-law and brother-in-law, Ray headed off to his job at North Arkansas Electric Cooperative, stopping at the wreckage of his home just long enough to shut off the water and electricity.

The 33-year-old line technician said restoring power for his fellow co-op members brought him peace, despite his own enormous loss. He worked 18-hour shifts as a “bird dog,” leading a crew of lineworkers from Carroll Electric Cooperative’s Berryville and Bentonville offices who rushed in to help NAEC.

“It’s a joy to be able to spread light to a dark world,” Ray said. “I’m blessed to be able to do that as my job, and I try to also do that by staying positive. I hope it will help show other people going through disasters that we are stronger than the storm.”

Ray said it’s also his way of giving back to a community that has rallied around him and his family in the wake of the tornado, which ripped through the co-op’s territory March 14 as part of a devastating storm system that brought twisters, fierce rains and windstorms to parts of the Midwest and South.

Ray, wife Hannah, 8-year-old son Baylor and 7-year-old daughter Haisley are living in a two-bedroom, one-bath trailer home donated by a couple who stocked the place with provisions and told the family they could stay there for free as long as it takes to rebuild their house.

Other members of the community — including people from the church where Ray serves as assistant pastor — helped Hannah gather clothes and other belongings from what was left of their flooded house. Volunteers even helped with the family’s laundry, Ray said.

The co-op has also stepped up. Employees donated to the Ray family, and NAEC created a GoFundMe campaign to raise money from a wider audience to help the Rays rebuild their home and replace their possessions. Ray said he’ll take only what the family needs and pass on any excess donations to other people in the community who need help.

“It’s unreal how kind and generous people have been,” he said. “We have really felt so loved and cared for. That’s why I want to keep working to help others. I want to go make a difference in somebody else’s life when so many people are making a difference in mine.”

That doesn’t mean there haven’t been moments of heartbreak. At one point, Ray said, he and Hannah hugged each other and wept while looking at the debris from the home they built with their own hands and the labor of family and friends.

“I stopped by for a few minutes to see the house for the first time in the daylight,” he said. “My wife was there with a bunch of other people, working to save what possessions they could. My wife has been so much stronger than me, but when she saw me, she lost it. We kind of had a moment just crying together.”

But they both know how blessed they are, Ray said.

“It could have been so much worse,” he said. “Everything at our house with a heartbeat survived, including our three dogs and my daughter’s two kitties. That’s all that really matters. God has been good to us.”

Ray has no doubt that any lineworkers who found themselves in the same situation would stay on the job, just as he did.

“I’m nobody special,” he said. “I’m not doing anything they wouldn’t do.”

Ray said his spirits were raised by co-op members who thanked him and the rest of the crew for restoring their power.

“Yesterday, as we were finishing up in the dark, the lights kicked on in the area we had spent the day working,” he said. “We were driving down the road, seeing the lights on in all the houses because of what we did together. That’s the most satisfying feeling there is.”

— Erin Kelly/NRECA

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