Asheville’s iconic Biltmore slowly returns to normal post-Helene
After seeing a 30% reduction in guests over the summer, it is now approaching its pre-Helene numbers with about 330,000 visitors expected this holiday season.
As western North Carolina continues to recover more than a year later from Hurricane Helene, Gov. Josh Stein’s office has released several announcements in recent days detailing funding for infrastructure repairs.
Stein touted future economic growth after record announcements of over 33,000 new positions and nearly $23 billion in overall project investments, in 2025.
Grants totaling $13.8 million through the NC Department of Commerce’s were recently awarded to 19 new small business recovery projects in western NC.
Western North Carolinians whose homes were damaged by Hurricane Helene and are seeking assistance in rebuilding have until Dec. 31 to apply for the state’s Renew NC Single-Family Housing Program (SFPH).
As the one-year anniversary of Hurricane Helene approaches, the US Department of Homeland Security announced earlier this week that western NC has been approved for more than $12 million in FEMA grant disbursements.
As western North Carolina continues to recover from the damage done by Hurricane Helene over eight months ago, the Western North Carolina Chamber Business Coalition has declared this week “WNC Open for Business Week.”
Six months after Hurricane Helene hit western North Carolina, the North Carolina Department of Transportation (NCDOT) has made significant progress in repairing roads and bridges that were damaged in the storm.
The Federal Emergency Management Agency announced Thursday that North Carolinians whose hotel vouchers are running out Friday can have an extra 24 hours of shelter there, due to the impending snow this weekend. The announcement has caused uproar on social media from users angry that the extension was limited to one day.
Brooke Medina, John Locke Foundation vice president of communications, discusses the impact of Hurricane Helene on North Carolina’s 2024 elections. Medina offered these comments during the Oct. 4, 2024, edition of PBS North Carolina’s “State Lines.”
This week on the Debrief, the latest in rescue and recovery from Hurricane Helene, including how the North Carolina State Board of Elections will handle the upcoming election in WNC. A hearing is scheduled in Republican’s lawsuit over thousands of voter registrations that they argue violate federal election law. Plus, North Carolina ports stop work...
The death toll from Hurricane Helene has risen as of Wednesday morning to more than 200 deaths, 97 of them in North Carolina. As those hardest hit by the storm figure out how piece their businesses and lives back together, the Biden administration has some bad news: FEMA is going to run out of money after Helene.