Admin

Email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Nantahala Racing Club’s “superior performance and program development” earned it recognition as the American Canoe Association’s 2016 Stroke of Achievement Award winner. 

Comment

The Haywood Community College Woodsmen’s Team took second place at the 2016 John G. Palmer Intercollegiate Woodsmen’s Meet this month, with students placing in 14 of the 16 events held that day.

Comment

Even as Eastern North Carolina is reeling from flooding caused by Hurricane Matthew, Western North Carolina is plunging deeper into drought, with the drought in Macon, Cherokee and Clay counties now classified as extreme. The rest of the western region is slightly less dry, but only slightly — it is classified as experiencing severe drought.

Comment

Gardner-Webb University welcomed nearly 160 high school chorus students to campus Oct. 13 as the university’s music department sponsored the 39th GWU Choral Clinic and Concert. The day of instruction and rehearsal culminated in a public concert in Dover Theatre on the GWU campus.

Comment

Two months after a Silver Alert was issued in the disappearance of 81-year-old Sylva resident Eunice Gass, dental records have confirmed the discovery of Gass’ remains in the Cherokee National Forest.

Comment

Swain County residents will be asked whether they support an additional quarter-cent sales tax when they vote during the Nov. 8 general election.

Comment

Two months after issuing a Silver Alert in the disappearance of 80-year-old Sylva resident Eunice Gass, the Jackson County Sheriff’s Department is awaiting test results on remains believed to belong to Gass.

Comment

Fire danger is increasing throughout the forests of Western North Carolina, necessitating caution for any kind of outdoor burning. 

Comment

Drought is continuing and frost has ended the growing season in much of Western North Carolina, so hay could be in short supply over the winter for livestock producers. Hay Alert, a special website set up by the N.C. Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, aims to address that issue.

Comment

Local athletes figured prominently in the top places for the Naturalist Epic 25K/50K race held Oct. 8, a grueling undertaking that routed athletes through downtown Franklin and along the Bartram Trail for a total 7,000 feet of climbing in the 25K race and 10,500 feet of climbing in the 50K race.

Comment

The Smokies came to the Latino communities of Knoxville this month in celebration of National Hispanic Heritage Month, with more than 100 Latino people attending an event at Sugarlands Visitor Center where attendees were offered a chance to learn about the park in Spanish.

Comment

Seasonal images of Western North Carolina’s most exquisite waterfalls adorn a newly published calendar set to raise money for the Blue Ridge Natural Heritage Area Partnership. 

Comment

A new map of Tsali Trails not only creates a better guide to the nationally known trail system on the Swain/Graham county line — it will generate revenue to pay for maintenance of Tsali Recreation Area. Publisher Milestone Press will donate a portion of the proceeds for the purpose.

Comment

More than 100 leaders from across Western North Carolina came together at Western Carolina University this month to talk about how to grow the regional economy without negatively impacting the mountain environment. 

Comment

It was the tale of two halves as the Pisgah Black Bears went toe-to-toe against their Haywood County rivals, the Tuscola Mountaineers.

Comment

The Western Carolina University community will come together under the theme “Purple Reigns” to celebrate Homecoming 2016 with major public events planned from Wednesday, Oct. 26, through Sunday, Oct. 30.

Comment

By Dave Waldroup • Guest Columnist

Legendary former Chicago Bears head football coach Mike Ditka has now joined the chorus of protesters who bash San Franciso 49’ers Quarterback Colin Kaepernick for his peaceful protest against racism in America today. His protest is by kneeling (in prayer) while the national anthem is being performed prior to National Football League games. 

Comment

To the Editor:

The greatest problem facing our country today and in the future is not from abroad but from within. It is the use of hate that is gripping the “far right” and it is growing and spreading among our population.

In the older days, each party built their platform on how to better help the nation and its people. In the early sixties, this “far right” element entered the Republican Party and changed things. They tried attacking their opponents in every way possible and forgot about things to help the people. It became known as “negative politics.” It has worked and has continued over time to grow until now it is no longer “negative politics” but has become “hate politics.” This hate is now being spread by some of its “far right” promoters who even use parts of the scripture to promote it.

Our Constitution forbids the mix of church and state; however, we must also remember that Christ taught only love and forgiveness. While the Bible is used to illustrate the sins of the opponents, is hypocrisy not the greatest sin of all?

As a nation, where will this hate lead us? If we study history, we learn that the angry man was what eventually led the Nazis and Hitler to power, along with Stalin and the Soviets. What kind of nation will we become and what do we leave for our children if this aforementioned hypocrisy “hate” is not stopped?

According to national polls, it seems that everybody is mad at our country. Although not perfect, it is still the greatest country on earth. They blame Obama for their anger, but truly our economy has come a long way under his guidance considering what he inherited. It would have been done even better had he not had to deal with our other president (John Boehner?). 

ISIS must be happy.

If this sounds like the “negative politics” I’m trying to fight, it is. It is the only thing left to do. Nothing else has worked to stop it. As a farmer would say, “it’s time to grab the bull by the horns,” and as firemen know sometimes you have to fight fire with fire!

This thing on gun control has finally come to the top where it should have been years ago. Just look at the lives that could have been saved.

Tommy Boyd

Haywood County

Comment

To the Editor:

A key skill for magicians is misdirection. Look this way so you won’t see what I’m actually doing. For four years, our legislators in Raleigh have shown that they are exceptionally talented magicians. They have passed legislation that enflames their base, while the real point of the legislation was either against federal law, harmful or ridiculous. 

The magic has been to keep attention on the most inflammatory components of the bills while slipping the really dangerous components through with little scrutiny.

Consider fracking. This bill was a waste of time and your money spent in hearings, arguments and exploring for gas deposits. Because natural gas was abundant and cheap, fracking was not going to happen in North Carolina. Why on earth would a company drill into unproven and, at best, marginal reserves under those conditions?

What this bill was really about was stripping local governments of the ability to manage their own resources. In Western North Carolina we depend on tourism and recreation for significant parts of our economy. We need exceptionally clean water to support that economy. That bill also prevented private landowners from stopping fracking on their own land.

Next came the Voter ID law. Again, the legislature addressed a non-existent problem, but generated a lot of angst. What this bill was really about was preventing a lot of elderly, minority and student voters from voting. As the legislators were told ahead of time, this law was ruled unconstitutional. 

Now we have HB2. The financial damage to the state is in the hundreds of millions. What this bill was really about was preventing Charlotte from experimenting with a higher minimum wage to see whether it would help their economy. The ‘bathroom bill’ also prevented employees from suing for discrimination in state courts, forcing them to take their issues to federal courts that are backlogged because the U.S. Senate will not confirm judicial appointments. There is not much doubt that HB2 will be ruled unconstitutional.

Sen. Jim Davis, R-Franklin, voted for all of these laws that bring ridicule to our state and limit your rights. Magically, he has not yet been held accountable for the damage.

John Gladden

Franklin

Comment

To the Editor:

The future of the American system of representative government is under attack, and who is heeding the call to defend it? 

Are a generation of young Americans ignorant of our democratic traditions and/or disinterested in the survival of our political democracy? Are many Americans more interested in their computer games and TV shows than in voting and participating in our political system? Do many Americans view the presidential election as just another reality TV show? Do they care that special interests are able to spend huge sums of money to buy candidates’ elections to public office who will support their interests and not the needs of the American public?

Why are many American citizens oblivious to the fact that, for the first time in our history as a nation, a foreign power is attempting to influence the outcome of our presidential election? Are American voters aware that overwhelming evidence proves Russia, under the dictatorship or Vladimir Putin, is hacking the emails of the Democratic Party and the its presidential election campaign? Doesn’t anyone wonder why the Russians are not hacking the Republicans and their presidential election committee?

Do voters care that WikiLeaks is relaying illegally obtained information to the American press? Do they understand this is an effort to discredit Hillary Clinton and hope she will lose the presidential election? Why would Putin, and the business oligarchs that support him want Trump to be our next president? What motivates Donald Trump’s refusal to acknowledge the evidence that Russia is behind the hacking of the Democrats?

Could it be that Trump has business interests in Russia and releasing his tax returns would reveal this? Is it because he is a great admirer of Putin and praises his leadership as a dictator? Is Trump using Putin as his role model in his call to jail his opponent Clinton, an event that is unprecedented in our history as a democratic country? 

Do younger Americans understand the meaning of representative democracy? Do they know that the right to vote is the cornerstone of a free republic?  Will many Americans abandon the right to vote that so many in our history have fought and died to achieve? Will special interests and foreign powers subvert our republic? What will we tell our children and grandchildren?   

Margery Abel 

Franklin

Comment

To the Editor:

Thank you for your honest opinion regarding Trump running for our highest office (www.smokymountainnews.com/opin-ion/item/18589). I respect your bravery to be open about how you feel, and wanted you to know that there are many of us who tried to be fair, give him an opportunity even though he has no political experience, but he has pushed the limits too far for any sensible person to even consider voting for him. 

That is a scary thought when you see hundreds of normally reasonable citizens turning a deaf ear/blind eye to what he is saying and doing. I have never felt so sick about a political personality having the opportunity to be our president. Even though there were many I did not feel would be the right choice, it never scared me like this one does. This time I feel that there is not a good choice, there are issues with both candidates and despite who is the winner, we are going to all be losers.

I appreciate your comments, and thank you.

Nancy Shay

Whittier

Comment

To the Editor:

I have been a political junkie since the Kennedy-Nixon race, but this letter is not about partisan politics, it is about the future of our democracy. This election is far from politics as usual. It is about whether we continue to have the form of government our forefathers created.

There is a candidate running for President of the United States who has attacked, at one time or another, every branch of our government. He has questioned the judicial system by claiming the ancestry of a judge disqualifies him. He has claimed that presidency is part of a global international conspiracy. He is at war with a very Republican Congress because many will not support him. 

In addition, many of the “policies” he proposes are clearly unconstitutional, such as a religious test for immigrants, the use of torture, mass surveillance and limitations on a free press.

 Some may consider all of the above as “politics as usual.” But no candidate since the Civil War has questioned our ability to conduct free and fair elections. And no American presidential candidate has ever threatened to throw his opponent in jail.  

Donald Trump has made it very clear that “the election is rigged against me.” He is not talking just about media bias, he is saying there is grand conspiracy to miscount the votes. Through the use of fear and repetition, millions of his followers are now convinced that their votes will be stolen. There is no telling what he or his followers will do if he is defeated. Many have suggested a “Second Amendment solution.” He seems willing to attack the very fabric of our democracy for his own  personal benefit.

A belief in free and fair elections, and the peaceful and orderly transfer of power, are cornerstones of our democracy. We believe in the will of the majority and the protection of the rights of the minority. Without trust in the electoral process, the system fails. History tells us what usually comes next is some form of dictatorship.

Louis Vitale

Franklin

Comment

To the Editor:

Are you an emotional voter letting the media and others tell you how to vote? Or an intelligent voter capable of looking beyond all the hype from both nominees and others and choosing the one whose common sense proposals make the most  logic to improve the sluggish economy which will motivate the private sector to create jobs for the millions of our fellow Americans desperately  looking  for work to feed their families. 

This is not a sporting contest; it is serious business. Perhaps it takes an outsider who owes no allegiance to either political party or lobbyists except the American people to try to straighten our current mess out. We have  some people working two separate 29-hour jobs because their employers cannot afford to pay the increased insurance costs. 

Last year  the CBO says more jobs failed and went out of business than were created. Are you going to be part of the problem or part of the solution?  Both political parties and most of the media have demonstrated they are interested only in their own interests. Look yourself in the mirror and ask do you really care about our country or just your party and your ego. We need real change not change like happened over the last 7.5 years.

Jack Hogan

Franklin

Comment

To the Editor:

As we face a drought, Rep. Michele Presnell, R-Burnsville, not only vigorously supports fracking (hydraulic fracturing) in North Carolina, she instructs her aides to give callers a speech about the safety and benefits of fracking when they call her office. I called on another matter, and was told about how great fracking would be. Presnell voted yes for SB 786, to fast-track fracking, a bill which also extended big government, pre-empting local ordinances that would let communities make critical decisions about water. 

Fracking isn’t safe. Operations in other states have contaminated groundwater, according to findings from Duke University, and have also caused adverse health impacts. Water is vital to our national security and to our lives. Rep. Presnell is ready to jeopardize our water through fracking, actively opening the way for out of state companies to drill for export. Like Sen. Jim Davis, R-Franklin, she pushed legislation without adequate time for study, and without requiring companies to disclose chemicals used in fracking operations — putting fire department and first responder volunteers at risk. The industry’s own estimates show that fracking would create only about 400 jobs in North Carolina.

Rep. Presnell’s irresponsible choices regarding fracking put drinking water at risk. She is up for election this fall, and it’s time to ask her to step down at the voting booth.

Autumn Woodward

Canton

Comment

As Jonathan Creek Road meanders south from Interstate 40 some 17 miles hence, it forms a “T” with Soco Road.  

There, at that busy three-way intersection linking Maggie Valley and Waynesville with the outside world, sat Doug Smith. 

Comment

Around noon today, a telephone call was made to local law enforcement. The caller made threatening comments about Canton Middle School.

Comment

New U.S. Topo maps are out, and the quadrangles covering the Great Smoky Mountains National Park now display trails, campgrounds, visitor centers, boundaries and other visitor information for the first time. 

Comment

A statewide challenge to knock out 100 miles of hiking, walking, running, paddling, skating, horseback riding or rolling a wheelchair in North Carolina aims to get people enjoying N.C. natural beauty and improving their health. 

Comment

A $3,500 grant from the Haywood County Tourism Development Authority will help enrich the elk viewing experience in the Cataloochee area of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park.

Comment

Western Carolina University was among the 18 public colleges and universities recently honored by the state for leadership in reducing their energy consumption.

Comment

It has been over 10 years since the Haywood County Arts Council brought the Atlanta Ballet to Haywood County to showcase classical dance, but this tradition will soon be renewed. The council is creating an annual dance artist residency to serve as a new platform for professional classical and contemporary dance.

Comment

Brett Riggs, Sequoyah Distinguished Professor of Cherokee Studies at Western Carolina University, has received the 2016 Cherokee National Worcester Award for his efforts to preserve Cherokee culture.

Comment

To the Editor:

From my mailbox recently I pulled a large political mailer from State Sen. Jim Davis, R-Franklin, attacking Jane Hipps and touting his NRA credentials, and I thought to myself, “what is this guy talking about and who, exactly, does he work for?”

First, no one elected to the North Carolina General Assembly has power to affect the 2nd Amendment. That’s federal. Second, the 50th Senate District represents seven counties in North Carolina that are generally poor, in need of help with schools, keeping water clean and creating jobs. If Jim Davis thinks the NRA, a powerful corporate entity, will help our small little corner of the state with education, clean water and jobs, then great. But that’s not going to happen. 

Jim Davis is the dishonest politician here. He’s opened the door to fracking in our state, imposed new taxes on things people need (including ammo), and has positioned himself as the lapdog of corporate special interest. He doesn’t know, nor does he care about, the families of Western North Carolina. And he is either confused about who he works for, or worse, knows exactly who he works for and isn’t saying.

Dan Headrick

Waynesville

Comment

To the Editor:

With the advent of the election season, my mailbox and my sensitivities are being assailed by political pronouncements and advertisements infinitum. If I don’t want to see and hear them on the television, I can just cut it off or at least curtail my viewing. Unfortunately, I also get multiple flyers in my mailbox touting the virtues of certain candidates and listing the negative aspects (usually spurious) of their opponents. Thus it is with the flyers that I receive on a regular basis from the North Carolina Republican Party espousing the virtues of Sen. Jim Davis, R-Franklin, and denigrating both Jane Hipps and Hillary Clinton.

These flyers are reminiscent of the ones that were sent out when Davis first ran for the North Carolina Senate, only at that time they were mailed by Real Jobs North Carolina. The money for these mailings came from Art Pope of the Pope Foundation and Glen Raven Mills. You might note that Art Pope pumped millions of dollars into the North Carolina elections that year to get both Davis and Pat McCrory, as well as others elected. Mr. Pope was well rewarded by being named the Director of the State Budget by Gov. McCrory.  

You might also wish to note that Glen Raven Mills was the last holdout to unionization in the textile industry in North Carolina. When the workers finally formed a union, the company promptly shut their manufacturing doors in the state and moved the operation to China. I do believe they maintain corporate headquarters in North Carolina in order to benefit from the favorable corporate tax laws that are supported by Gov. McCrory, Davis, and the Republican-controlled legislature.

Several weeks ago I wrote a letter to the North Carolina Republican Party (1506 Hillsborough Street, Raleigh, N.C., 27605) requesting that I be removed from their mailing list. I explained that my wife is a registered Democrat, and that I, though registered as non-affiliated, would vote for Davis under no circumstances. I believe that my exact wording was that I wouldn’t vote for Mr. Davis if they paid me, which they apparently were attempting to do considering all of the flyers and the cost of the postage of the same that was wasted by sending this material to our household.  

In fact, I believe I described Mr. Davis in terms that cannot be printed in your paper. The mailings continue to arrive. Does the North Carolina Republican Party not read it’s mail, or is it too ignorant to understand the meaning of the word no? It may very well be the latter considering the Republican Party doubling down on House Bill 2 rather than listening to the people and the businesses in the North Carolina.

I am now beginning to receive flyers for the reelection of Sen. Richard Burr sent by One Nation (P.O. Box 34424, Washington, D.C. 20043), whoever that is. At least his flyers, so far, have not gone negative, but I don’t need these either.

Luther Jones

Sylva

Comment

To the Editor:

Your income went down, but your N.C. income tax went up. Is this possible? You bet. If you do your own taxes, read the What’s New section at the beginning of the instructions and you will find out why. Ever since Sen. Jim Davis, R-Franklin, and the Republican majority passed HB-998 in July of 2013, your tax benefits (that still exist in most other states) have been disappearing.

Do you work hard for each dollar you earn? No longer can you claim a tax credit for earned income.

Are you retired? Gone is the $2,000 or $4,000 (married) deduction from your taxable income. Nor is there any longer a deduction for being blind or over 65.

Do you have to put your children in daycare so that you can work a job to make ends meet? That credit has also vanished.

Are you hoping that your children can afford a college education? It just got harder with the elimination of the College Savings Program deduction by the N.C. legislature. And the list goes on.

Sure, Davis likes to tout the increased standard deduction, but when you figure in the vanished personal exemptions and missing credits, you don’t come out a winner.

And the flat rate tax ushered in by HB 998? Those of us with $30,000 of taxable income went from a 6 percent rate to a 5.75 percent rate, a $75 benefit. However, those with $200,000 of taxable income saw their rate drop from 7.75 percent to 5.75 percent, putting $4,000 right into their wallets.

And the sales tax additions are too numerous to mention in a single letter, but it is obvious to all of us that they hit the lower income group the hardest, that group carrying the wealthy on their backs. 

Sen. Davis’ negative tax changes are bad enough, but the spin that appears in our mailboxes is even worse.

Jane Hipps, through her long career in public service, has shown that she cares, and will work for, our quality of life. We will all be better off when she goes to Raleigh as Sen. Hipps.

Doug Woodward

Franklin

Comment

To the Editor:

Have you ever seen the light in a student’s eyes when they learn a new  concept? I have and its magic! 

I have taught science in the past. However, I don’t think it matters. If you get an experienced science teacher to assist, they will know how to teach the laboratory and more importantly they will know the curriculum for that grade. 

My own experience was with Mark Ethridge teaching fifth-grade science at Central Elementary School. Mr. Ethridge was knowledgeable, knew the curriculum and had a great flair for presenting science concepts with samples.

So, if you are possibly interested in volunteering to help with science lab in the public schools, I invite you to call me (828.246.0657) for help in getting started. The schools badly need volunteers and you’ll get a kick out of helping.

Hugh J. Burford 

Waynesville

Comment

To the Editor

I was astonished by your recent article about the HSUS bringing dogs from Korea to Western North Carolina. I have been involved in area shelters, rescue and transport since I moved here in 2000. I have never, in any place that I have ever lived, seen so many stray and unwanted dogs, not to mention the dogs that are tied out to barrels or live their lives in a pen day in and day out. I do not believe we need to import dogs to our local counties.

Does the Humane Society of the U.S. really need to go half way around the world to extricate 500 dogs? What was the cost to transport, shelter and medicate these dogs? Not to mention the time factor and man power used for flying that many dogs to our country that euthanizes 5 million or more every year!  What that money could have done on a more local level …. I’m sure that the recently flooded areas in West Virginia and Texas could benefit from some of that.

The article states that the effort was brought about in part to bring the public’s awareness to the dog meat trade. As a dog lover and a vegetarian, I find the thought of eating a dog repulsive. But I find equally detestable the plight of chickens, cows and pigs in the factory farms in this country. Chickens live out their life in a cage the size of a shoe box and pigs are in crates that they cannot even turn around in and forced to stand on their tiny legs supporting a very unnatural over-fattened body to bring cheap eggs and  bacon to grocery stores. I think the Koreans could call us on that!

I’m sure the people involved feel good about the dogs they “rescued,” but I venture to guess that there are 500 dogs in the U.S. that will not find homes because of it (some of them right here at home).

Jane Finneran

Cullowhee

Comment

Women climbing the corporate ladder or owning their own business is nothing new, and in fact North Carolina is among the nation’s leaders in this area. Still, those we interviewed for our annual series on women in business illustrate their inspiring success stories and the unique challenges they face as they move toward an era where the playing field is more level than ever before. 

Comment

It’s a constant flow.

“All day people are coming in and out of the gallery, to wander the shop or simply to say hello,” said Elisa Holder. “It’s exciting to see what each day will bring, because each day is different — it’s never boring.”

Local runners came out high in the rankings with completion of the Cherokee Harvest Half Marathon last weekend. 

Comment

A federal judge has ordered the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to halt its plan to transfer the reintroduced population of endangered red wolves from the wild into captivity.

Comment

A 956-acre prescribed burn is being proposed for the Nantahala National Forest in southeastern Jackson County, aiming to reduce wildfire risk, improve habitat for grazing and browsing wildlife, mimic the mosaic habitat pattern produced by naturally set fires and bolster regeneration of desirable species. 

Comment

To the Editor:

I attended the debate on Sept. 29 at Southwestern Community College between the four candidates running for the District 3 and 4 seats on the Jackson County Commission.

The questions were chosen and asked by students from the school’s “Social Problems” course .The two incumbents, Mark Jones and Vicki Greene, have held the seats for the last 10 and four years, respectively. One would expect them to know all the projects, planning and accomplishments of the commission and they did. The two challengers, Mickey Luker and Ron Mau, were introduced and all four looked to be professional, dedicated and honest. 

During the debate, it became apparent that Luker and Mau were both very energetic and knowledgeable. They attend the commission meetings and were up to date on the planning and projects before the board. I feel both are ready to step in and have a positive impact on the board and the County.

Unlike the incumbents, they had new ideas and innovative solutions to get the county back to a balanced budget. During the debate, they were both focused on ways to save tax money and keep funding for necessary projects. 

All four candidates stated they were “for” fiscal responsibility, but Jones and Greene both have a record that shows a tax and spend history. In this case it’s spend and tax, as the money was spent first and when the deficit kept growing, they did what Democrats always do ... raise taxes. 

The innovative solution would have been to start reducing spending five years ago to match the anticipated revenues. but raising taxes is quick and easy. They knew there would be a re-evaluation on property assessments years ago but did nothing to prepare.

 I’m one of the many part-time residents that pay their “fair share” of property and sales tax. We shop and buy local, use local contractors and labor and support county charities. But we cannot vote. We ask for the hard-working, law-abiding, taxpaying residents to help elect Luker and Mau. Their signs say “Change is Coming.” I just hope it's not too late.

Robert Fromhartz

Whittier 

Editor’s note: Counties in North Carolina are required by state statute to have a balanced budget, and Jackson is no exception.

Comment

To the Editor:

The rivers are low, and so are the springs. As we face a drought, Sen. Jim Davis, R-Franklin, not only actively supports fracking (hydraulic fracturing) in the state, he co-sponsored SB 786 to fast-track fracking. This bill also extended big government, pre-empting local ordinances that would let communities make critical decisions about water. 

Fracking is not safe. Operations in other states have contaminated groundwater, according to findings from Duke University, and have also caused adverse health impacts. Water is vital to our national security, and to our lives. 

Jim Davis is ready to jeopardize water with fracking in our mountains and elsewhere in the state, actively opening the way for out-of-state companies to drill for export. He pushed legislation without adequate time for study, and without requiring companies to disclose chemicals used in fracking operations — putting fire department and first responder volunteers at risk. The industry’s own estimates show that fracking would create only about 400 jobs in North Carolina.

Jane Hipps is an excellent candidate who is running against Davis in District 50. Jane will work to protect our water, and opposes fracking. In the 2014 hearing on fracking before the Mining and Energy Commission (MEC), 80 people spoke eloquently with concerns about fracking. The MEC received 220,000 written comments, the majority ardently opposing fracking in N.C. Instead of listening to the people, the legislature and governor have continued to actively promote fracking. Please let Mr. Davis know that water is too important to be casually ignored.

Autumn Woodward

Canton

Comment

A conference at Western Carolina University on Friday, Oct. 7, will focus on the intersection of the environment and the economy in Western North Carolina.

Comment

Bryson City was one of 10 downtown communities to receive funding from the Appalachian Regional Commission (ARC) to offer free Wi-Fi access in their downtown areas.

Comment

Western North Carolina played a big role in this year’s International Bluegrass Music Association awards held last weekend in Raleigh. Waynesville songwriter Milan Miller was nominated for “Songwriter of the Year,” Haywood’s County’s own Balsam Range was nominated for several awards, Jackson County’s Mountain Faith was named “Emerging Artist of the Year” and Smoky Mountain News A&E Editor Garret K. Woodward was nominated for “Media Person of the Year.” Dave Brainard photo

SEE ALSO:
• Mountain Faith wins big in Raleigh
• Balsam Range presses on

• Waynesville songwriter nominated by IBMAs
• This must be the place: SMN at IBMA

 

 

 

 

 

  

Comment

The federal government waited until the 11th hour to issue a response to Swain County’s North Shore Road lawsuit — and the response was not surprising. 

Comment

Although Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump have overshadowed nearly every other political campaign in the country, that doesn’t mean that those other campaigns aren’t important.

Comment

The Jackson County Arts Council in Sylva announces a new exhibit entitled "Fear No Art" by Isabella Jacovino, an artist and author of many dark-epic fantasy novels.

Comment

Smokey Mountain News Logo
SUPPORT THE SMOKY MOUNTAIN NEWS AND
INDEPENDENT, AWARD-WINNING JOURNALISM
Go to top
Payment Information

/

At our inception 20 years ago, we chose to be different. Unlike other news organizations, we made the decision to provide in-depth, regional reporting free to anyone who wanted access to it. We don’t plan to change that model. Support from our readers will help us maintain and strengthen the editorial independence that is crucial to our mission to help make Western North Carolina a better place to call home. If you are able, please support The Smoky Mountain News.

The Smoky Mountain News is a wholly private corporation. Reader contributions support the journalistic mission of SMN to remain independent. Your support of SMN does not constitute a charitable donation. If you have a question about contributing to SMN, please contact us.