Drinkable water is now running from faucets, and roads are reopening but many people in Asheville still have nowhere to live.
ASHEVILLE, N.C. — During a community briefing Sunday, Asheville Water Resources Department spokesperson Clay Chandler ...
The physical damage from Tropical Storm Helene may be slowly disappearing, but some worry another disaster looms on the ...
ASHEVILLE, N.C. (QUEEN CITY NEWS) — After 53 days without clean water, more than 100,000 people in western North Carolina are ...
Water Resources Department spokesman Clay Chandler delivered the good news on Monday, Nov. 18: the City of Asheville's water ...
It has taken more than seven weeks, but the City of Asheville has lifted the boil water advisory put in place after Hurricane ...
Dozens of people are living in the one remaining emergency shelter in Asheville, North Carolina. Some of them are families ...
More than 100,000 residents in western North Carolina were allowed to drink and bathe using water from their home faucets on Monday, nearly two months after Hurricane Helene destroyed much of the ...
Data visualization designer David McConville lived in Asheville for about 20 years, before moving to California. “Watching people idealize Asheville was a little bit crazy-making,” McConville says.
For over seven weeks, Asheville businesses have been unable to pour water from the faucet and serve it to customers.
Tourists bring in nearly $3 billion to Asheville per year. But when Hurricane Helene destroyed parts of the city, including ...
ASHEVILLE - Bustling crowds gathered at the River Arts District on Saturday, Nov. 9, to celebrate the soft reopening of the ...