Coastal cities often bear the brunt of hurricanes. But as Hurricane Helene showed, extreme rainfall can be life-threatening ...
Hurricane Helene raged through western North Carolina, destroying homes, local businesses and thriving tourist areas from Asheville to the town of Chimney Rock.
Reservoirs made a life-or-death difference in some spots, bottling up floodwater behind dams, even as those dams spilled ...
We’re gathering what we know of the damage in each county in Western North Carolina. Here is an evolving snapshot of Helene’s ...
A preliminary analysis from Lawrence Berkeley National Lab suggested rain totals in the western Carolinas were about 10 ...
Many in Western North Carolina remained without fresh water, internet or cell service. Seven water plants in Avery, Burke, ...
Relief efforts continue in Asheville and Western North Carolina following the devastation caused by Tropical Storm Helene.
Douglas Dam was spilling a record amount of water, 450,000 gallons a second. The Nolichucky Dam withstood twice the water flow of Niagara Falls.
North Carolina election officials say they will do everything in their power to ensure that voters in the crucial ...
The towns of Boyd's Creek, Kimberlin Heights, Kodak, Sevierville and Seymour were at particular risk of flooding from the French Broad River. At the flooded Deerfield Mobile Home Park, the county EMA ...
Some areas of Sevier County remained flooded Tuesday as the French Broad River was slowly receding after record rainfalls, but the damage to interstates in other areas will ...
Hurricane Helene's destruction in North Carolina's Asheville lays bare the growing threat that inland communities face as ...