Drinkable water is now running from faucets, and roads are reopening but many people in Asheville still have nowhere to live.
Sarah Honosky is the city government reporter for the Asheville Citizen Times, part of the USA TODAY Network. News Tips? Email
[email protected] or message on Twitter at @slhonosky.
Water Resources Department spokesman Clay Chandler delivered the good news on Monday, Nov. 18: the City of Asheville's water ...
More than 100,000 residents in western North Carolina are now allowed to drink and bathe with water from their home faucets.
Ready your wands, Potterheads. Here are 15 of the best Harry Potter-inspired Airbnbs, from an apartment in Edinburgh on a ...
ASHEVILLE, Ga. — Dozens of people are living in the one remaining emergency shelter in Asheville, North Carolina. Some of them are families with children. The shelter is providing warmth from the ...
ASHEVILLE, N.C. (WLOS) — Water is deemed safe and drinkable at UNC Asheville from a temporary water treatment facility on ...
Channel 2′s Bryan Mims was in Asheville on Wednesday at the hard-hit River Arts District, where several buildings housing art ...
This has been a trying fall for the UNC Asheville women’s basketball team, which will visit Virginia Tech on Wednesday.
ROANOKE, Va. – A piece of Asheville’s art community has found a temporary home in Roanoke, where artists whose studios or art ...
McDowell’s boys and girls basketball teams will hit the hardwood at two jamborees this Saturday for preseason scrimmage ...