WYLIE -- Todd Emery is patching up what Mother Nature undid.
"Pretty much every house in this neighborhood has been broken through. Probably around 50 to 60 holes per house," said Emery, who works for Blue Tungsten General Contractors.
He's back on a roof in Wylie, less than two weeks after the last hail storm hit North Texas.
"It happens and you think it won’t happen again and then a week later, here we are and people have rain coming inside their home. It’s pretty sad," he said.
Emery is visiting more than 20 homes alone on Tuesday. The city of Wylie keeps getting pelted.
Jessica Lynn Johnson posted this video on Facebook. Watch as her front yard gets covered in golf ball-sized hail.
Excuse the video-but this is and was so crazy!
Posted by Jessica Lynn Johnson on Monday, April 11, 2016
The storm Monday was so severe, it whipped up winds that peeled apart an industrial building off State Highway 78. Countless cars have holes larger than the size of a fist.
More than 100 mobile homes at Glen Knoll now look like Swiss cheese. You can actually feel the insulation where hail punched through the siding.
"It’s pretty much just like a big glass party, trying not to cut yourself," resident Thadeus White said.
All 19 schools in the Wylie Independent School District are closed.
"The good news is no one is hurt," Superintendent David Vinson said. "The bad news is we got a lot to do today."
A trail of glass was found inside Akin Elementary. Windows were busted out and ceiling tiles littered the ground. There's water damage and mechanical issues at other schools.
The problems are now stacked on top of $20 million worth of devastation from our last round of wild weather.
"We just got finished replacing 30 plus HVAC units on the top of a building that are brand new that are completely destroyed," Vinson said.
"It was ice tumbleweeds basically coming through the city, damaging cars, windows, homes. Very extensive damage," Craig Kelly with the City said.
Kelly is now surveying the damage and says it's the worst he's seen in his eight years of employment.