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A loyal Carolina Panthers fan, a worker who loved helping others, a Fairview woman who loved Buc-ees, a victim of Craigtown landslide • 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 eighth installment.
Asheville native Norman McGahee’s home, just two houses from the Swannanoa River, had only minor flooding in the more than 20 years he’d lived there.
But Tropical Storm Helene on Sept. 27 caused the river and a nearby creek to combine into a torrent.
Read previous installments of The Lives We Lost.
“The flooding wasn’t up to the point that it had overtaken the home,” said his daughter, Kanita McGahee of Charlotte. “Then there was an overflowing rush of water that pushed him out.”
His son, Amaand, made it to safety. A rescue team attempted to reach McGahee, 73, “but the water basically pushed him away,” his daughter said. “Our home was washed away.”
McGahee’s body was found five days later on Oct. 2. The cause of death was “landslide injury,” according to his death certificate.
McGahee’s modular home was one of 10 on his block in Swannanoa. “Most of them are washed away, but [Norman] was the only one that didn’t survive,” said his sister, Jacqueline McGahee.
“Norm,” as he was known, was one of six children who grew up in the Burton Street community of West Asheville and later lived in Montford. A graduate of Asheville High School, McGahee enlisted in the U.S. Navy, assigned to the USS John F. Kennedy.
He served in the Vietnam War and was awarded the National Defense Service Medal, according to his obituary. McGahee suffered hearing loss aboard the aircraft carrier, his sister said, and was honorably discharged.
He returned to Asheville and started a flooring business, specializing in tiling and grout work.
“He did the floors for the Asheville Mall,” his daughter said.
“There are many people in the community and other surrounding areas that have come to me and told me that he retiled their kitchen or retiled their bathrooms,” said his sister, Jacqueline.
McGahee also worked as the maintenance supervisor at the Vanderbilt Apartments in Asheville until his retirement in 2017.

“He was naturally gifted with flooring, woodwork, art, and music skills,” his obituary said.
McGahee’s extensive collection of albums and CDs covered all genres and included Earth, Wind & Fire, Eric Clapton, John Coltrane, George Benson, Stevie Wonder and Aretha Franklin, his daughter said.
He played guitar and joined his brothers when they were young in impromptu neighborhood performances. “That’s how we grew up, listening to music,” Kanita McGahee said.
McGahee loved the Carolina Panthers. After he retired, he helped take care of his mother and enjoyed gardening.
“He did it all: flowers, plants, vegetables,” his daughter said. “He was definitely a green thumb.”
McGahee helped his sister, Jacqueline, raise her grandson.
“He was just a great person,” she said. “All my life, we’ve been together.”
In recent years, McGahee suffered from dementia, his family said.

He had five children, including a son, Norman Jr., who preceded him in death. “Norman achieved many accomplishments, but the one he was most proud of was being a dad,” his obituary said.
– Sally Kestin, Asheville Watchdog
Bobby Stokely
Bobby Stokely died doing what he loved – helping people.
Stokely, 57, was struck by a falling tree Oct. 28 while working to clear brush from the storm. His death certificate listed “Hurricane Helene” as a contributing cause.
Stokely was operating heavy machinery in a wooded residential area just east of The Omni Grove Park Inn in north Asheville on the day he died. According to the North Carolina Forest Service, about 40 percent of trees in Buncombe alone were damaged or downed by unforgiving winds.

Stokely’s employer called his wife and told her that her husband had died but did not provide details, according to Stokely’s son, Robert.
Early in November, Robert Stokely talked to the North Carolina Occupational Safety and Health Administration, which had opened an investigation into his father’s death.
“They explained to me that they had been working, and something happened,” Robert Stokely said. “Dad’s boss had went to haul off a load of brush, and evidently dad had got off the machinery… for some reason… and started using a saw, and from my understanding, a piece of wood or something, come off the saw, and got him in the face.
“And when he kind of stopped sawing for a minute, the tree cracked and broke and twisted on him and squished in between a rock and the tree. And so, from my understanding, it killed him instantly.”
Stokely’s death certificate listed the cause as “blunt force injury of head and neck.”
The family held a private service after Stokely was cremated.
Stokely lived in Maggie Valley with his wife of five years, Linda. He lost his previous wife to COVID, Robert Stokely said.
Stokely enjoyed hunting and fishing with his grandson, David, and childhood friend Alan Parker, according to his obituary.

“He liked watching John Wayne movies on TV,” Robert Stokely said. “That was like his Western hero. He liked Western films. He liked listening to old music on the radio on the weekend, too.”
Robert Stokely posted a picture on Facebook of his father grinning for the camera, one arm on a steering wheel.
The post garnered more than 1,000 likes as love from neighbors and friends poured into the comments.
“Dad was the kind of person he would help anybody do anything they needed,” Robert Stokely said. “And everybody knows that. I mean, everybody knew. And he was just helping most people get back into their homes.”
– Andrew R. Jones, Asheville Watchdog
Kim Kutscher Stepp
Kim Kutscher Stepp, 65, drowned when Helene’s floodwaters swept away her Fairview home.
Her body was found Sept. 30, in the Cane Creek Road area nearly two miles from her home, according to her death certificate.
Her grandson Langdon Stepp, who lived with her, escaped death by clinging to a tree amid the flooding.
“My family needs your prayers,” her brother, John Kutscher, posted on Facebook just after Helene struck. “This Storm has caused so much pain and destruction to buildings and people. One being my oldest sister Kim. Her and her Grandson got swept up by the river Garren creek i think Miller Rd Fairview. Her grandson Langdon was caught by a tree. Kim was not so lucky. Her and her house were swept away and she is still missing. Please hold the ones you love close u really never know. Please pray for everyone we all need it.”
A friend of Stepp’s also posted on Facebook about her being swept away.
“This is my best friend, Kim Kutscher Stepp,” Nicole Tedder Rask posted Sept. 30, including a picture of Stepp. “She has been missing since Friday 9/27/24. She was last seen in her home on Miller Road in Fairview when she was swept away with her home. Her grandson was found clinging to a tree after 3 hours. Her family, friends and search teams have been looking for her. Her car was found but she was not with it. The home has been found and she was not there either. Please, if anyone finds her let me know. The picture is a post from her brother. Her family is devastated and would greatly appreciate all your prayers.”
Rask updated the post later that day to say that Stepp’s body had been found.
Asheville Watchdog reached out to Stepp’s friends and family. Most did not respond and those who did declined to speak about her death.
A Buncombe County native, Stepp worked as an office administrator for Asheville Cardiology, according to her obituary.
She was “a 1976 graduate of Asheville High School and remained a cougar fan all her life,” her obituary said. “She loved Buc-ee’s, her dogs and family, and was a very compassionate person.”
– Andrew R. Jones, Asheville Watchdog
Marsha Ball
Marsha Ball is the final victim to be identified from devastating landslides in Fairview that killed 13.
Ball, 40, lived in the Garren Creek community that was virtually obliterated by landslides from Tropical Storm Helene. A debris flow carrying trees and boulders down a mountainside and into a valley known as Craigtown for the family that settled there crumpled nearly everything its path.

The landslides, among the deadliest in North Carolina history, killed 11 members of the Craig family and two others, including Ball.
Attempts to reach Ball’s family were unsuccessful. Her mother’s maiden name is Craig, according to her death certificate, but Ball was not related to the Craigs, said Jesse Craig, whose parents and nine other family members died in the landslides.
Ball’s house was just across the Fairview line in Black Mountain.
Ball was a graduate of T.C. Roberson High School’s Progressive Education Program, serving students with physical and intellectual disabilities, according to her obituary.
“Her hobbies included coloring on her iPad,” the obituary said.
Ball’s body was found Sept. 27. The cause of death was “landslide injuries due to Hurricane Helene,” according to her death certificate.
– Sally Kestin, Asheville Watchdog
Asheville Watchdog is a nonprofit news team producing stories that matter to Asheville and Buncombe County. Sally Kestin is a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative reporter. Email skestin@avlwatchdog.org. Andrew R. Jones is a Watchdog investigative reporter. Email arjones@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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The post A loyal Carolina Panthers fan, a worker who loved helping others, a Fairview woman who loved Buc-ees, a victim of Craigtown landslide • Asheville Watchdog appeared first on avlwatchdog.org
News from the South - North Carolina News Feed
Raleigh City Council discusses transforming area near Lenovo Center, hears concerns
SUMMARY: Raleigh City Council is considering a major redevelopment project near the Lenovo Center that would create a new sports and entertainment district with high-rise buildings, restaurants, shops, and upgraded arena facilities. The proposal, supported by city leaders and the Carolina Hurricanes—who agreed to stay for 20 more years—has drawn both excitement and concerns. Students and staff from nearby Cardinal Gibbons High School support the project but worry about pedestrian safety and construction impacts. City leaders suggested annual reviews to address ongoing issues. The council postponed rezoning decisions until April 15 to allow for more discussion and public input.

New details are emerging about the bold new development that could transform the area around Raleigh’s Lenovo Center, creating a new entertainment district around the arena in west Raleigh.
More: https://abc11.com/post/raleigh-city-council-will-discuss-future-including-wake-bus-rapid-transit-project-housing-security/16114907/
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News from the South - North Carolina News Feed
Asheville has North Carolina’s worst unemployment rate, state says
Six months later and still out of a job. That’s the reality for nearly 13,000 Asheville residents half a year after Tropical Storm Helene struck Western North Carolina.
In the wake of the historic storm, hundreds of businesses closed. The region’s multibillion dollar tourism sector took a devastating hit. Thousands of people were severed from their jobs. Many have not returned to the workforce.
Asheville, a city of roughly 95,000 people, typically boasts the lowest unemployment rate of North Carolina’s municipalities.
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But not now. Not after Helene.
As of January, the most recent figures available, Asheville had a 6% unemployment rate — the state’s highest — according to the N.C. Department of Commerce.
Clark Duncan, director of the Asheville Chamber of Commerce, calls the ranking a “new and unwelcome accolade.”
Help wanted in Asheville
Rocky Mount and Fayetteville, each hovering around 5% unemployment, are giving Asheville a run for its money.
The capital city of Raleigh is home to North Carolina’s lowest jobless rate at 3.2%.
And statewide, that number is a respectable 4%.
But Asheville’s high rate of unemployment doesn’t necessarily mean there aren’t jobs in the region, according to one expert.
“Buncombe County certainly does not have a jobs problem,” said Andrew Berger-Gross, a senior economist for the N.C. Department of Commerce. “What they have is an unemployment problem. We see employers hiring, but there is a large contingent of workers who have not returned to work.”
First, there is what economists call a “matching problem.” Meaning, the jobs that need to be filled do not match the skills and interests of the unemployed.
There are 20,000 job openings in the region, according to Nathan Ramsey, director of the Mountain Area Workforce Development Board. Sectors like health care and manufacturing are on track for normal hiring numbers. Plus, Helene actually created jobs in certain industries, such as construction and debris removal.
“You may be the best bartender in the world, the best server, the best cook — but does that mean you want to drive an 18-wheeler up mountain roads?,” Ramsey asked. “Does that mean you can do — or want to do — construction? Probably not.”

Second: Just because someone needs a job doesn’t mean they are ready or able to get one.
“It is safe to assume that a lot of those unemployed workers might be facing barriers to re-employment — like losing your home or losing your car,” Berger-Gross explained. “Frankly, some people might still be struggling with the emotional trauma of the hurricane’s destruction.
“A lot of these people may need help putting their lives back together before they are ready to return to the workforce.”
Though unemployment rates rose in Asheville and Buncombe County in winter months, the amount of open positions in the region is a positive sign for an economic rebound, as are increased retail sales and hotel occupancy.
But there are concerns that the state’s disaster unemployment program might not be working as it should.
“I get a lot of emails from folks who are kind of struggling with getting unemployment assistance,” state Sen. Julie Mayfield, D-Buncombe, told Carolina Public Press. “Either they’ve applied for it and they haven’t gotten it or they’ve been turned down because they’re back at work a little bit, but not full time.”
Mayfield is hopeful that tourists will arrive to watch wildflowers bloom across the Appalachians this spring.
But wildfires across Western North Carolina may jeopardize those plans.
Smoke signals
Closed trails and roads, mandatory evacuations and poor air quality have scared off springtime tourists and kept locals from their typical routines.
Adventure tourism businesses in the area aren’t operating, putting tour guides and other personnel out of work, said Brevard Mayor Maureen Copelof. Evacuation orders in her county were lifted early this week, but Brevard’s annual bike race — Assault on the Carolinas — was canceled due to the fires.
While most economic indicators in Western North Carolina have been trending positive, an additional natural disaster, such as these fires, threatens to stall recovery before the region can fully rebound.
There is an emotional impact of the wildfires as well. The din of helicopters above the mountains is a painful reminder of the panic and trauma of Helene. Plus, the downed trees and mangled forest floors from the storm make the blazes worse.
“Some people were really triggered by the fact that there was another threat to their home and their health on the six-month anniversary of Helene,” said Leah Matthews, a UNC-Asheville economics professor. “You have people thinking: ‘I’m just starting to rebuild this house and now I need to evacuate again.’”
In the wake of wildfire and flood, economic recovery in the mountains will require patience and a willingness to adapt. The community is wrestling with fundamental questions about its identity and future.
“The elephant in the room is that the region suffered a historic tragedy, and you can’t push rewind on the VCR of life,” Berger-Gross said. “You can’t go back to a time before the disaster hit — that is why it is a tragedy. All of us are trying to move to a better future for Asheville and for Western North Carolina more broadly. But will things be exactly like they were before the hurricane? No, they can’t be.”
This article first appeared on Carolina Public Press and is republished here under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
The post Asheville has North Carolina’s worst unemployment rate, state says appeared first on carolinapublicpress.org
News from the South - North Carolina News Feed
Fixing the DMV: Latest on commissioner search, technology upgrades
SUMMARY: In response to significant issues such as long wait times and appointment shortages, North Carolina’s DMV is seeking improvements by partnering with Arizona, which ranks fourth nationally for DMV efficiency. Governor Josh Stein and Transportation Secretary Joey Hopkins highlighted ongoing leadership changes, including the search for a new commissioner after Wayne Goodwin’s departure. Current challenges stem from staffing shortages and outdated technology. Governor Stein’s proposed budget includes funding for over 100 new positions to alleviate these issues. The state plans to adopt Arizona’s software to enhance service efficiency and customer satisfaction, with leadership decisions expected in the coming weeks.

North Carolina is partnering with Arizona to improve its struggling Division of Motor Vehicles, aiming to reduce long wait times and make more appointments available.
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