News from the South - North Carolina News Feed
Debris locations questioned? Why the Muni? Will Helene aftermath throw I-26 work off schedule? • Asheville Watchdog
Today’s round of questions, my smart-aleck replies and the real answers:
Question: Several readers have asked about the debris site that was proposed for a park near the Deaverview public housing neighborhood in West Asheville. Questions include: What will be processed there? And how can residents make the city hold true to their one year stated usage? Is this safe?
My answer: Not much humor to be found in debris, but if you thought Asheville was “Trashville” before Helene, you ain’t seen nothing yet.
Real answer: The city and county devoted a big chunk of Monday’s daily Helene briefing to debris cleanup and removal, because it’s going to be a huge subject over the coming months. And there’s a lot of debris — 10 million cubic yards in Buncombe County, including Asheville.
First, let’s get to that park near Deaverview, located at 65 Ford St.
“No additional debris will be taken to 65 Ford St., and none will be taken to the Municipal Golf Course site while we continue to look for and secure additional sites,” Asheville City Manager Debra Campbell said at the briefing. “However, security and site prep measures such as fencing and access for heavy machinery will continue on the front nine of the Municipal Golf Course and at the 65 Ford St. site, so they are ready to be reactivated if needed.”
Campbell said Roger Farmer Park was permitted to handle debris, but she said it will not be used.
“Our debris removal strategy will continue to be dynamic, and we will keep pivoting when possible, as we are able to secure additional sites,” Campbell said. “We want to have as few impacts on neighborhoods and business areas as possible. We will continue to diligently monitor the temporary sites to ensure environmental regulations are met.”
Safety remains the priority, Campbell stressed.
In introducing the topic of storm debris, Campbell acknowledged it was “another touchy subject.”
“We are aware of the concern that many have expressed about the location of sites that were initially chosen to manage storm debris,” Campbell said. “I want to emphasize that the safest thing we can do for our environment, our economy and our community is to remove storm debris from our homes and business areas as quickly and as responsibly as possible.”
A sense of urgency surrounds debris removal.
“The longer storm debris remains in our neighborhoods and business areas, the longer we are living with fire and safety hazards,” Campbell said.
Last week Campbell announced the city had activated the Muni and the park as debris sites.
“Since last week, we have secured an additional site at Enka Commerce Park in West Asheville,” Campbell said. “The Enka Commerce Park site will now be the main site where storm debris will be taken to be staged, grinded, compacted and prepared for hauling out of the city.”
At Monday’s briefing Campbell introduced Greg Shuping, a consultant now serving as the city’s deputy emergency operations center manager.
Shuping noted that Asheville, within its city limits, has 2.5 million cubic yards of debris for its contractor, Southern Disaster Recovery, to remove. Buncombe County is using the same contractor for its debris removal.
Shuping said 2.5 million cubic yards of debris translates to “in excess of 70,000 (dump) truckloads of debris” that must be taken to a processing site, then taken out of the county. The local debris will likely end up in a South Carolina landfill.
The city is also contracting with a company called Debris Tech to serve as the city’s monitoring and environmental compliance oversight to the prime contractor, Shuping said.
Vegetation debris can be ground up, and other types, including construction and demolition rubble, can be processed and compacted to take up less space.
“Another key point about our sites is that any hazardous materials would never be brought to these temporary staging areas,” Shuping said. “There are local, state and federal regulations that our contractor is held accountable to, to make sure that material does not come to our temporary staging areas.”
Shuping said the city has engaged with the EPA and the North Carolina Division of Environmental Quality, “who have a contractor to pick up those hazardous wastes at the sites along the rivers where those sites are, and take it away for us.”
The local sites will accept storm debris, including demolition materials. For less problematic hazardous household waste, such as paint and batteries, an area will be set aside within the temporary staging area “where those types of things can be properly contained, as per state and federal guidelines,” Shuping said.
The city will need more debris sites so trucks don’t have to travel as far, Shuping said. That will create a “force multiplier” on being able to remove debris.
Shuping also noted that 14 miles of river bank on the Swannanoa and French Broad, just in the city limits, will also need to be cleaned up.
Buncombe County Manager Avril Pinder gave the figure of a total of 10 million cubic yards of debris in the county. Her message, in part, was to be ready for a long haul
“I know a lot of people are really stressed about getting it off their properties and getting it out of the roadways,” Pinder said, noting that 10 million cubic yards is four times the city’s total, or more like 280,000 truckloads. “So across our community, you’re talking about a long time.”
Question: I figured if anyone had as much concern about the Asheville Muni as I do, it would be John “the Bomber” Boyle. It seems to me using the Muni’s flood-damaged front nine as a debris site is penny wise, pound foolish. The damaged areas need loving care, not further damage to repair at extra cost. The Muni fairways need the silt and mud removed as quickly as possible, so the grass can recover. This is not the first flood the Muni has experienced, but the worst. Several greens need to be rebuilt, but the remaining areas can recover if treated quickly. Using the Muni as a debris site means recovery will be delayed, and more damage will be done. Very heavy trucks carrying debris will seriously damage the fairways, and not removing the sediment will mean the grass fairways will need replacement turf. The cost to repair the Muni will increase into many millions. There are several other issues:
- The Muni is a historical site. Does using it as a debris area violate the site’s historical status?
- Will the council commit to being responsible to restore the Muni to its recent Donald Ross heritage status?
- Does Dominion Golf as the leasing course management agent have to agree to this usage, or will it violate and terminate the lease?
- The many annual pass-holders have an expectation the Muni will be returned to playable conditions as quickly as possible. Using the Muni as a debris site and delaying the recovery will mean passholders’ access to the front nine will be delayed and their pass-holder fees will lose value. Will e pass-holders be reimbursed for this loss of value?
Writing to the council about these issues is probably a lost cause. So I decided sicking the big dog on them will bring public scrutiny to the issue.
My answer: It’s good to know that hitting 190-yard, badly sliced drives will earn you the moniker “The Bomber.” Flattery accepted.
Real answer: On a personal note, I do love the Muni, and while our region undoubtedly suffered much worse calamities from Helene, including 42 deaths in Buncombe alone, the damage to the golf course is depressing.
The city over the past year or so secured nearly $3 million for repairs and upgrades to the historic course, and it had spent hundreds of thousands of dollars to put in new bunkers and tee boxes, fix greens, trim and remove trees, and redo the 16th hole’s fairway. The course was looking the best it has in the three decades I’ve lived here.
Then Helene came and did a number on it, particularly the front nine, which runs along Swannanoa River Road.
Chris Corl, the City of Asheville’s director of community and regional entertainment facilities, explained the thinking behind using the front nine for debris storage. But keep in mind what Debra Campbell said above — no additional debris will be taken to Muni for now.
Corl answered this question last week, so obviously some things have changed. But he still provided a lot of excellent information about the Muni.
The front nine has “significant damage from wind and flood as a result of Hurricane Helene,” Corl said.
“With the exception of hole No. 9 and the green of hole No 1, the entirety of the front nine will need to be completely rebuilt from underground up,” Corl said. “Stormwater and irrigation pipes have been exposed and broken; greens, tees, and bunkers washed away, and fairways covered in feet of silt. Not to mention the many downed trees, netting and debris from upstream.”
The bathroom house was washed away.
“The extent of the damage is so significant that simply uncovering and trying to bring the turf back is not realistic,” Corl said.
Corl said before the decision was made to designate the site as a debris sorting location, the city inquired with the North Carolina Department of Natural and Cultural Resources “to ensure that using the location would not have an adverse effect on the location’s historic status,” and that agency provided suggestions “to minimize any adverse effects to the course.”
“The contractor managing the debris site is able to meet all of the recommendations that are applicable,” Corl continued.
The plan was for the contractor to use roughly five acres, covering most of hole number 8 and parts of hole number 4, Corl said.
Regarding the contract with the course operator, Corl said the city had to enact a “force majeure” clause within the management and operations services licensing agreement with Commonwealth Golf Partners. Force majeure is legal speak for unforeseeable circumstances that prevent an entity from fulfilling a contract.
“We are currently renegotiating an agreement for (Commonwealth) to continue operating the course on our behalf as a nine-hole course for this interim period,” Corl said, noting the annual passholder program runs on a calendar year. “With a nine-hole course ahead of us for at least the next year or so, I anticipate that we will need to pause the annual passholder program for the time being.”
As I mentioned, the city had just completed an enormous amount of work at the Muni, so the prospect of having to completely rebuild the front nine is daunting. And it will be expensive.
“We are exploring all opportunities towards rebuilding the course; however, no specific funding stream has been identified in the short period of time that we have been able to start working on this next phase of response after the storm,” Corl said.
“On a positive note, multiple foundations and associations have already reached out to me asking how they can help and contribute towards the future of Muni.”
Question: Will the current I-26 work be delayed/crews repurposed to help with Helene damage? Will this affect the I-26 connector project timeline?
My answer: The Connector will now be completed in 2597, not 2596.
Real answer: NCDOT spokesperson David Uchiyama said the department and its contractors “are currently concentrating on immediate recovery and repair.
“It’s critical that we provide access to all residents, make temporary repairs to provide at least emergency access before beginning long-term permanent replacements,” Uchiyama said. “Our I-26 widening contractors, including Fluor-United, have been part of the emergency response. They will likely transition back to interstate construction in the next few weeks.”
The $531 million I-26 widening project, which started in October 2019, is supposed to wrap up in 2025, a year later than originally predicted.
The Connector project is totally separate. The project, which will connect Future I-26 north of Asheville to I-26 south of Asheville, has been talked about and planned since the late 1980s.
In May, the NCDOT awarded a $1.15 billion contract for the project to Archer Wright Joint Venture for the two main sections, which the NCDOT collectively calls the north section. It will involve new bridges over the French Broad River and new sections to connect I-26 above and below Asheville, as well as improvements to Riverside Drive.
Right of way acquisition has been ongoing, and the State Transportation Improvement Plan has said construction could begin this year.
“As for the Connector, the design firms continue developing the plans,” Uchiyama said. “The long-term impact of Helene on the Connector is yet to be determined. It’s doubtful to have a significant impact on the end date.”
Asheville Watchdog is a nonprofit news team producing stories that matter to Asheville and Buncombe County. Got a question? Send it to John Boyle at jboyle@avlwatchdog.org or 828-337-0941. His Answer Man columns appear each Tuesday and Friday. The Watchdog’s reporting is made possible by donations from the community. To show your support for this vital public service go to avlwatchdog.org/support-our-publication/
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News from the South - North Carolina News Feed
Poll: Robinson did not hurt other candidates | North Carolina
SUMMARY: A recent poll indicates that nearly half of respondents believe Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson’s issues did not affect their voting choices. Robinson lost the gubernatorial race to Democratic Attorney General Josh Stein, with his campaign suffering from a CNN report linking him to a past porn chat room. Despite this, 50.1% of voters now feel America is on the right track, an increase from previous months. Stein holds a 53.2% approval rating, and other elections resulted in a split of statewide positions between Democrats and Republicans. The poll included 615 responses with a margin of error of +/- 3.94%.
The post Poll: Robinson did not hurt other candidates | North Carolina appeared first on www.thecentersquare.com
News from the South - North Carolina News Feed
Helene: Assistance of $227M overshadowed by authority changes | North Carolina
SUMMARY: The North Carolina General Assembly has passed legislation providing $227 million in fiscal recovery aid for Hurricane Helene, totaling $1.1 billion in assistance for various disaster relief efforts. The bill also includes significant changes to authority for state leaders, such as placing the State Board of Elections under the State Auditor’s office and restricting the attorney general’s ability to challenge the General Assembly. Critics, predominantly Democrats, argue these modifications serve Republican interests and compromise election integrity. The legislation reflects ongoing political tensions, exacerbated by recent court challenges and contentious executive actions during COVID-19.
The post Helene: Assistance of $227M overshadowed by authority changes | North Carolina appeared first on www.thecentersquare.com
News from the South - North Carolina News Feed
At least 3 of 43 fatalities in Buncombe were unhoused people • Asheville Watchdog
Asheville Watchdog is bringing you the stories behind the staggering loss of life from Helene, the children, parents, grandparents, multiple generations of a single family, all gone in one of the worst natural disasters to hit the mountains of western North Carolina. This is the seventh installment.
Buncombe County’s homeless advocates feared the worst: Helene would be deadly for the dozens of unhoused people living along the banks of rivers and streams that turned into raging floodwaters.
“We thought that the death toll just in this population was going to be up in the 20s, 30s, just because of how many people camp on the rivers,” said Alanna Kinsella, homeless services director at Homeward Bound.
Read previous installments of The Lives We Lost.
Asheville Watchdog has identified three unhoused people of the 43 who perished in Buncombe from the Sept. 27 tropical storm: Jody Henderson, an Air Force veteran described by his sister as extremely loving, Calvin “Michael” McMahan, who liked to travel and preach to people he met, and Lisa Plemmons, a cook at an Asheville nursing home who was living in her car and had been featured in a previous installment of The Lives We Lost.
About five unhoused people remain unaccounted for, Kinsella said.
“Did they leave town before? Do we have their legal name? It’s really hard to know,” she said. “It could only be one or two people that are really actually missing.”
The toll on Asheville’s homeless community turned out to be lower than feared. The Asheville-Buncombe Homeless Coalition called a Code Purple beginning the morning of Sept. 26, opening shelter space for anyone who needed it and providing free bus transportation.
Teams that included community paramedics and outreach workers visited homeless encampments to warn people near water and urge them to seek shelter. Advocates were also able to spread the word about Code Purple early because of the persistent rains ahead of the storm.
At AHOPE, a day shelter run by Homeward Bound, “so many people were coming in here at that time because people needed to get dry, they needed to get supplies,” Kinsella said. “We were really able to disseminate that information really quickly.”
Many went to shelters, “and a lot of our campers really moved into the core of town,” Kinsella said.
In the weeks after the storm, advocates have been attempting to account for everyone. Asheville’s 2024 Point-In-Time count identified 739 people without housing, most in emergency shelters or transitional housing, but 219 were camping, sleeping in cars or on the street.
The task has been difficult because some homeless people were known only by aliases or street names.
“It really took an entire community of us to come together and say, ‘Okay, I know that person’s legal name,’ or ‘I only know them by this,’“ Kinsella said. “It was a lot of really having to piece things together.
“It may be a while before we know the full scope of who all from our community, of people experiencing homelessness, have been lost.”
Here are two of their stories.
Jody Henderson
Jody Henderson’s life never was easy, but he “was one of the most loving people you would ever meet,” said his sister, Kathy Henderson Cook.
Her younger brother struggled with bipolar disorder and was often homeless and unable to work. Henderson had a high IQ and was good looking, she said, but the disease kept him hamstrung for most of his adult life.
“He had so much going for him, but he just couldn’t put that grasp on things and just stay with it,” Cook said. “He would float off, and then he would just get kind of loopy.”
Henderson, 63, died Sept. 27, swept away by Helene’s floodwaters, according to his death certificate.
He had been staying at the Veterans Restoration Quarters on Tunnel Road in East Asheville, but Cook said he’d spent a couple of weeks at the VA hospital for mental health treatment.
On the day before Helene, Henderson was on a “weekend pass” from the VRQ and rented a cabin along the Swannanoa River at the KOA Campground. He needed a space that would accept dogs, as he didn’t want to go somewhere without his beloved mutt and emotional support dog, Bullet.
Cook said that on Sept. 27, as the river breached its banks and the water rose, her brother was standing on top of the cabin. An evacuation team had just arrived. As he often did when his situation was dire, Henderson called his sister.
“He called me at 9:17,” Cook said.
Their conversation was short.
“He said, ‘Sis, I love you. The evac team just arrived. I’ll call you,’” Cook said. “He hung up, and he was gone.”
A witness at the campground said “it was around 10 o’clock when the building collapsed and everything went crazy,” Cook said.
Jody Nyle Henderson grew up with Cook in Chesnee, South Carolina, and had lived in California, Utah, Nevada, North Carolina and Texas before returning to Chesnee in 2018, according to his obituary. He attended Chesnee High School and Spartanburg Community College before joining the U.S. Air Force.
He is survived by three children, Cook and another sister, Kristi Henderson Walker. A brother, Michael Kenneth Henderson, died previously.
“His final days were in a log cabin with his beloved dog Bullet by the Swannanoa River with a view of God’s beautiful creation surrounding him as he made new friends,” his obituary states. “Bullet was adopted by one of those new friends, Chelsea of Maryland, who rescued Bullet from the flooding.”
Cook said her brother easily made friends, including Chelsea, whom he met at the campground. She did not want her last name published.
“He’d never met her. Didn’t know her, but of course, you know — two hours with Jody — best friends,” Cook said.
Cook, who called her brother “Bo,” said his death has been difficult, and she still has “moments where I tend to struggle with emotional issues.
“But as a whole, I know this was a blessing from God,” Cook said, explaining that she always worried about her brother, especially when he stopped his medications and was unhoused.
He would end up in need and then call to come stay with her, she said.
“He would do anything for me — he just didn’t have the ability to fight the disease,” Cook said. “And I don’t hold that against him.”
She noted that her brother suffered from “tall tale syndrome,” exaggerating facts or making up stories.
She and her sister take comfort knowing that Henderson went out with a story that would normally be hard to believe, one involving a historic storm that showed immense power and swept away entire buildings.
They’ve also taken comfort in the outpouring of support from the community, from churches to governmental agencies.
“It was a blessing to have to lose somebody and be as fortunate as we are in a community like we live in, to have people come together,” Cook said.
– John Boyle, Asheville Watchdog
Calvin “Michael” McMahan
Calvin McMahan’s sister feared the worst after Helene when she did not hear from the big brother who never went more than a few weeks without checking in.
The last she knew, McMahan, who went by his middle name, Michael, had been in Asheville, said Pamela Douthit of Bryson City. “I was wondering where he was, hoping he was okay, worried to death,” she said.
Douthit said police told the family that McMahan had drowned in the storm. His body was found Sept. 30 on Glendale Avenue along the Swannanoa River in one of the areas hardest hit by flooding.
The official cause of death was “landslide injuries,” according to his death certificate.
McMahan, 63, was the oldest of 10 children and had been unhoused for the past 15 to 20 years, his sister said.
“He lived everywhere,” she said. “He had property here in Swain County, but he wanted to travel. He wanted to visit different places, so he decided being homeless was his choice.”
McMahan liked to preach to the people he met. “He testified to people,” Douthit said. “He talked about God and how free we are and how thankful we are.”
McMahan visited his sister and her husband in Bryson City from time to time and would stay for a couple of weeks. “He said he had to do God’s work, so he went on out down the road,” she said.
McMahan had been staying under a bridge near the Swannanoa. His sister said he frequented homeless shelters in bad weather and must not have known about the dangerous flooding predicted in Helene.
“I guess it just snuck up on him. He was asleep or something,” she said. “I hate that he had to go the way he did.”
McMahan had a son and a daughter in Florida, she said. He had been a house painter and loved the guitar, though he did not know how to play.
“Like anyone else, he made mistakes, but he tried to do the best he could do for other people,” Douthit said.
McMahan had “some trouble with the law…He changed his life, and he started working for the Lord and doing what the Lord said to do. I was proud of that,” his sister said.
“I loved him. He was a good person,” she said. “He will be missed.”
– Sally Kestin, Asheville Watchdog
Asheville Watchdog is a nonprofit news team producing stories that matter to Asheville and Buncombe County. John Boyle has been covering Asheville and surrounding communities since the 20th century. You can reach him at (828) 337-0941, or via email at jboyle@avlwatchdog.org. Sally Kestin is a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative reporter. Email skestin@avlwatchdog.org. The Watchdog’s local reporting during this crisis is made possible by donations from the community. To show your support for this vital public service go to avlwatchdog.org/support-our-publication/.
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