Annexation debate exposes deep divide over growth in Waynesville
A stretch of land along Ratcliff Cove Road — quiet, rural, long-defined by fields, creek-bottoms and generational ties — became the focal point of a larger question April 14, as Waynesville Town Council took up an annexation request that would determine not just what gets built there, but how the town chooses to grow.
Fight the power: Residents oppose Duke rate hike
The question before the North Carolina Utilities Commission is simple — should residential customers on fixed incomes continue to subsidize commercial and industrial customers, AI data centers owned by globalist juggernauts, environmentally unfriendly generation practices, industrial accidents and the astronomical corporate salaries of millionaires who run a monopoly, or not?
Cooper pitches cost-cutting agenda in Asheville
With grocery bills climbing and health care costs squeezing household budgets, former Gov. Roy Cooper is taking aim at the pocketbook issues he believes will define his U.S. Senate race against Republican Michael Whatley, framing his campaign as a direct response to what he calls an economy tilted against working families.
Man on a mission: In NC-11, former Green Beret confronts GOP incumbent he says fell short
Over the past decade or more, Western North Carolina Republicans have proven that the only candidates that can beat incumbent Republican congressmen are other Republicans. Adam Smith talks like someone who has already settled on that outcome and is now working backward to make it inevitable.
“What conservative voters in the United States want to see is Republicans have the intestinal fortitude to do what they said they were going to do,” Smith said.
Rep. Edwards talks the party line
To the Editor:
Recently three Haywood County citizens long involved in issues of public concern met with Congressman Chuck Edwards at his office in Hendersonville. Issues focused on were SNAP, medical insurance, research cuts and the federal match for Medicaid payments to hospitals and nursing homes.
Guaranteed college scholarship program launches in N.C.: Affordability efforts come at a critical time for higher education
Starting in the fall, North Carolina students whose families make less than $80,000 a year will receive a guaranteed scholarship toward attending any of the state’s public colleges and universities.