Fires threaten old growth trees in Joyce Kilmer Memorial Forest; McDowell County fire prompts evacuation order.
Stay informed with our Friday text message roundup of regional news with a special focus on growth and recovery after Hurricane Helene.
Stay on the pulse of the decisions being made at meetings for Asheville City Council and Buncombe County Commission, with reports from BPR’s Laura Hackett.
Latest Stories
State headlines
National headlines
-
Republican Senator Josh Hawley of Missouri talks about his mission to hold tech companies accountable even as they try to align themselves with President Donald Trump.
-
The detainees were part of a group of some 300 Uyghurs who fled China and were arrested in Thailand in 2014. Thailand deported more than 100 of them to China in 2015, drawing condemnation.
More local stories
-
What you need to know from the March 18 Buncombe County Board of Commissioners meeting.
-
N.C. Superintendent of Public Instruction Mo Green visited WNC for his first stop of his listening tour. He praised educators for their work during Hurricane Helene.
-
“Farmers are small businesses. But there are other types of small businesses that also need help,” the governor said during a recent visit to Haywood County.
-
U.S. Secretary of Veterans Affairs Doug Collins visits Asheville on March 18th to discuss lay-offs, meet with local veterans, and praise staff for work during Hurricane Helene.
-
The North Carolina legislature is currently considering a fourth disaster recovery bill to fund rebuilding efforts across the region after Hurricane Helene. The latest measure is expected to be for $530 million, the largest allocation of state money so far toward WNC Helene recovery.
-
Despite higher levels of unemployment in Western North Carolina as communities recover from Hurricane Helene, the number of people facing evictions in recent months has declined, according to data from the North Carolina Housing Coalition.
-
Have questions about housing after Helene? This guide from NC Local offers answers.
-
Thursday’s event comes one week after Republican Congressman Chuck Edwards held a town hall at the same venue.
-
The “Meet, Confer, Collaborate” policy is a historic win for educators.
-
Thousands enter each week, but only one caption makes the cut. Asheville’s Thomas Roth cracked the code — on his third try.