More than 100,000 residents in western North Carolina are now allowed to drink and bathe with water from their home faucets.
Neng Jr.'s in Asheville was riding a wave of acclaim. Then Helene hit—and devastated much of western North Carolina. A candid ...
The event is one of Western North Carolina's first signal of a return to the traditions and routines families took part in before Helene's deadly floods Sept. 27. According to Drake Fowler ...
During a community briefing Sunday, Asheville Water Resources Department spokesperson Clay Chandler announced that the boil ...
We received quite a bit of damage, but nothing like people east of Cherokee,” Anthony Sequoyah, the Eastern Band’s secretary ...
The physical damage from Tropical Storm Helene may be slowly disappearing, but some worry another disaster looms on the ...
Novant Health, nonprofit health system, is seeking state approval to open a diagnostic center on Hendersonville Road in South ...
Appalachia is not ready to be a climate refuge. While I was at a luncheon on rural advocacy in Morgantown recently, the topic ...
According to FEMA, more than 320,000 pounds had already been removed as part of the project, including 65 truckloads at the ...
the executive director of the Economic Development Coalition of Asheville-Buncombe County. Buncombe County makes up half of ...
Chuck Edwards and Tom Cole along with other prominent figures, arrived in Asheville on Nov. 16 to tour the heart of the storm ...
ASHEVILLE - City Council's second formal meeting since Tropical Storm Helene focused on recovery ... It's been more than six ...