A former JROTC instructor was arrested and charged with indecent liberties with a student Nov. 18, according to the Buncombe County Sheriff's Office.
Drinkable water is now running from faucets, and roads are reopening but many people in Asheville still have nowhere to live.
Tropical Storm Helene brought unprecedented flooding to western North Carolina, devastating communities and breaking historical records.
Asheville, North Carolina, residents now have safe drinking water after a boil notice was lifted Monday, more than seven weeks after Tropical Storm Helene struck on September 27.
ASHEVILLE, N.C. (QUEEN CITY NEWS) — After 53 days without clean water, more than 100,000 people in western North Carolina are ...
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 ...
The town of Black Mountain, North Carolina, also lifted its boil water notice Monday afternoon for all town customers.More ...
ASHEVILLE, N.C. — During a community briefing Sunday, Asheville Water Resources Department spokesperson Clay Chandler ...
Rain arrives this week bringing possible snow flurries in the mountains as a cold front pushes through our area.
In an open letter addressed to Governor Roy Cooper, the Council of State, Chief Justice Paul Newby, and members of the North Carolina General Assembly, over 400 elected officials, clergy, business and ...
The water in Asheville is officially safe again. Buncombe County Government officials confirmed the boil water advisory in Asheville has been lifted 53 days after Hurricane Helene. Clay Chandler, ...
Replacing roads wrecked by Helene has been an unprecedented challenge for the North Carolina Department of Transportation ...