Tourists bring in nearly $3 billion to Asheville per year. But when Hurricane Helene destroyed parts of the city, including ...
Blue Ridge Parkway dispatchers received a report of a park visitor in cardiac arrest while hiking on the Humpback Rocks trail ...
“It’s been 45 days since Helene hit western North Carolina. There is STILL no clean drinking water in the city of Asheville.
The citizen's board is responsible for operations of the program, fund raising, public relations, and approval of rewards.
On Wednesday, Nov. 6, 2024, the National Park Service restored access to approximately 11 miles of the Blue Ridge Parkway, ...
Tourists are staying away from western North Carolina after Helene swept through the area, leaving towns that depend on visitors bracing for big losses. Blue Ridge Public Radio’s Lilly Knoepp reports.
The new Town Hall public restrooms are now open Monday through Friday from 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM, and on weekends from 10:00 AM ...
Compounding the losses is the fact that tourism is down, even in areas ready to welcome people back, as Blue Ridge Public Radio's Lilly Knoepp reports. LILLY KNOEPP, BYLINE: Three weeks after the ...
The broadcasts can be heard on Blue Ridge Public Radio, the Asheville-based public radio station for the far western part of ...
Nearly six weeks after Hurricane Helene slammed into Western North Carolina, radio reporter Jose Sandoval's daily ...
The floods from Helene have all but wiped out Asheville's popular arts district. Now its artists are finding other ways to make up for their losses.