Las Vegas family rebuilding after losing home day before Thanksgiving, ‘Can’t let it crack me’

LAS VEGAS (FOX5) — Sixteen people are out of their homes after an apartment fire in east Las Vegas the day before Thanksgiving.

Trayvon Johnson still cooked a turkey for his four kids on Thanksgiving, just one day after a fire destroyed their apartment. Clark County Fire says a tree ignited, spreading to the roof. It collapsed into Johnson’s unit, wiping out nearly everything.

“The furniture, the beds, the food. It was just a total loss,” Johnson said.

By Friday, Johnson started replacing the basics—clothes and shoes for the kids—stretching every dollar after losing so much overnight.

“Oh, yeah, I had spent, like, $97 at the Goodwill,” Johnson said. “And then I spent $170 at Ross.”

Family focuses on rebuilding

Their new place isn’t furnished. For now, the family sleeps on blow-up mattresses, focusing on what comes next.

“And we barely got anything here. So, you know, we’re trying to focus on tomorrow,” Johnson said.

With Christmas around the corner, Johnson hopes to replace what fire and water ruined—TVs, gaming systems and laptops—so the kids can get back to normal.

“Uh, yeah, it’s Christmas time. My kids want to watch TV, you know? So, there’s a lot of pressure, but I can’t let it crack me, you know what I mean?” Johnson said.

Through it all, he’s choosing optimism.

“I just realized, like, you either have two options, be happy or sad, you know what I mean?” Johnson said.

Despite the losses, Johnson maintains perspective.

“We can’t complain. We have air mattresses. We got covers. Everybody’s here. Everybody’s safe. You know, so it’s been pretty good,” Johnson said.

Johnson says they will have to give away one of their dogs because the new place they moved into has a different pet policy.

Red Cross provides assistance

The American Red Cross of Southern Nevada is helping the six displaced families with immediate needs—temporary shelter, financial assistance, essentials and support.

“We also provided spiritual care, so some counseling,” said Jeremiah LaFranca, executive director of the American Red Cross Utah-Nevada Region.

From here, caseworkers connect families with nonprofits, faith groups and government partners for longer-term solutions.

The Red Cross says it’s continuing to support all six families with housing, essentials and casework in the days ahead. A GoFundMe page has been set up to help Johnson’s family.

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