News from the South - North Carolina News Feed
Moore County, NC, a month after Chantal damage
When Tropical Depression Chantal struck Moore County in early July, the deluge of rain took out a food bank, a golf course, a cemetery, a shopping center, hiking trails, homes and major roads.
The storm exposed the vulnerability of Moore County’s aging infrastructure in the face of intense weather. Dams built decades ago failed, culverts designed for lighter rainfall were overwhelmed and roads crumbled under floodwaters.
A month later, the county is still recovering. True resilience may require more than just repairs — substantial upgrades may be necessary in many cases. It remains unclear, however, whether the county will receive any disaster assistance from the state.
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The system dumped nearly 10 inches of rain in a matter of hours the night of Jul. 6. It was the worst storm the region has seen since Hurricane Fran in 1996, county officials told Carolina Public Press. Thousands lost power and 13 swift water rescues were conducted on flooded roads.
“Chantal was different: there was so much rain and so much power,” said Emily Yopp, town manager of Carthage, Moore’s county seat.
Thankfully, no fatalities occurred as a result of the storm in Moore County. Even so, the ripple effects have the potential to threaten residents’ livelihoods.
The road leading to the Food Bank of Central & Western North Carolina in Southern Pines sustained serious damage, impacting the organization’s operations for days.
“Hunger is already at a crisis point in Moore County,” Jason Kanawati Stephany, spokesperson for the Food Bank of Central & Western North Carolina, told CPP.
“The recent storm only made challenges worse .… More than 41,000 people in the Sandhills lack the resources to consistently keep food on the table .… Between the loss of food, property, and other costly disruptions, major storms like Chantal push many families over the edge.”
Beyond hunger, the storm has the potential to create a cascade of public-health risks that officials are still monitoring. Matthew Garner, health director for Moore County, said his department is watching for longer-term health impacts from the flooding.
Well contamination, dangerous mold growth in homes and businesses, mosquito-borne diseases: all of these are secondary impacts of flooding that can creep up on people, Garner said. He is also worried about road closures, which can impact residents’ ability to access medical care.
In addition to public health, economic reverberations are still sounding through the area. Moore County’s golf courses — a major economic driver for the region — also took a hit.
A dam failed on Longleaf Golf Course in Southern Pines, flooding and eroding the course and damaging multiple homes downstream. That dam is labeled as high-hazard by the North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality, and has been for years. “High-hazard” refers to the damage that will occur if the dam fails, not to the chances of it failing.
Nearly every dam in the immediate area is also high-hazard. Crystal Lake Dam in Lakeview also failed, causing severe flooding on Camp Easter Road.
“Through the good work of our public utilities department we were able to draw the water in Crystal Lake down quickly enough that we didn’t lose the entire lake,” said Tom Adams, a Moore County commissioner. “Still, there are homes and piers around the lake that are damaged.”
The county commissioners will discuss a resolution asking the General Assembly to ensure the Crystal Lake Dam and Camp Easter Road are restored as quickly as possible, according to county manager Wayne Vest.
A retaining wall also failed on Brucewood Road in Southern Pines, flooding a shopping center. The Kohl’s location in that plaza was evacuated.
These failures reflect a countrywide struggle with aging infrastructure.
“A lot of our infrastructure (in the county) is many, many years old,” Yopp said. “We’re starting to realize that we’re seeing more rain and more storms, and that we need to upgrade these dams, these pipes, these drain systems, these culverts to accommodate all this extra rain.”
The town of Southern Pines is labelling Chantal a “a 500- to 1,000-year flood event, meaning the storm’s severity far exceeded the capacity of most natural and engineered systems to manage stormwater.”
Chantal’s intensity explains why so many systems failed, but as severe flooding events appear to get more common, the status quo may not be good enough.
The county is still working to assess the total dollar amount of damage from Chantal. The preliminary damage assessment has now closed. Moore County Chamber of Commerce CEO Linda Parsons is concerned that the county will not qualify for state assistance, but that remains to be seen.
Meanwhile, residents continue to navigate the storm’s aftermath. For them, the question of how quickly Moore County can upgrade its aging infrastructure is essential to whether they can withstand the next storm.
This article first appeared on Carolina Public Press and is republished here under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
The post Moore County, NC, a month after Chantal damage appeared first on carolinapublicpress.org
Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.
Political Bias Rating: Centrist
The article primarily provides a factual and detailed account of the effects of Tropical Depression Chantal on Moore County’s infrastructure, economy, and public health. It focuses on reporting the storm’s damage, the challenges faced by local officials and residents, and the need for infrastructure upgrades without advancing a clear ideological agenda. The language is neutral and emphasizes local government responses and community impacts, avoiding partisan framing or political commentary. The piece is consistent with balanced, issue-focused journalism rather than promoting a particular political viewpoint.
News from the South - North Carolina News Feed
Why can’t we just sterilize bears? Or relocate them? What happened to the City of Asheville water report? • Asheville Watchdog
Today’s round of questions, my smart-aleck replies and the real answers:
Question: Regarding the bear situation, my concern is that nothing kills these bears. Did you ever see a roadkill bear, like a deer, raccoon, possum or squirrel? So, every year these mamas are producing one or two more cubs, so every year the population is increasing exponentially, as more reach the age to reproduce. What is the answer? Trap and export them? Feed them birth control pills maybe? How about capturing males and castrating them? Something’s got to be done soon as it continues to become a problem. I’m sure you will have a witty answer, John.
My answer: Generally speaking, when you toss the word “castration” at a male of any species, wit evaporates instantaneously. Such was the case here. I have also bought a stainless steel codpiece.
Real answer: My recent column about whether we’re heading toward bearmageddon spawned this query. As I noted, we have 8,000 to 9,000 black bears in western North Carolina, and Buncombe County typically accounts for about one-third of the state’s human-bear interaction reports annually.
Our bear population is growing in part because bears have so much access to human-related food, whether that’s garbage, bird feeders or people intentionally feeding bears, all of which cause problems.
Before we get to bear birth control, let’s clear up a misconception the reader has that bears do not get hit by vehicles. I’ve seen dead bears on the roadside at least three times, and it’s unfortunately not that uncommon.
“As stated before, collisions with vehicles are the number one cause of mortality of bears living in and around Asheville, followed by legal hunter harvest,” Colleen Olfenbuttel, a North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission wildlife biologist, said via email. “In fact, Buncombe County continues to be the hotspot for human-bear vehicle collisions in the state.”
For 2023, the most recent year available, Buncombe County recorded 18 to 23 fatal vehicle-bear collisions. Haywood and McDowell were close behind, recording 10 to 17 mortalities, according to WRC data.
“NCDOT, as well as our agency, does a good job of responding to bears hit by cars and removing them, which may be why the commenter never has seen a dead bear,” Olfenbuttel said. “However, the level of mortality caused by drivers is not sufficient to cause the bear population in the Asheville area to decline or stabilize.”
Regarding reproductive control by castration or birth control, “neither are feasible or effective,” Olfenbuttel said.
Let’s start with trying to castrate or sterilize male bears.
“Because one male can inseminate many females and because males tend to disperse widely, castration or sterilization of male bears would not be an effective strategy,” Olfenbuttel said. “One would have to sterilize almost every male bear in the county. That means trapping hundreds of male bears, which is simply not possible, as about half of bears are trap-shy, meaning they won’t go in the trap, no matter what bait you use to try to entice them.”
Also, any such effort would have to be annual, “since male bears would disperse into Buncombe County from surrounding counties to displace the sterilized male bears.”
“Another barrier is where you could trap, as there are areas with bears that you can’t place traps, partly due to lack of landowner permission or areas that have high human use,” Olfenbuttel said. “To trap as many male bears as possible, you would need to trap as many places as possible, which is not possible.”
And castration would be effective for captive animals only in controlled settings, she added.
Regarding fertility control for female bears, Olfenbuttel said the “short answer is there are no chemical fertility controls with FDA approval for female bears. Simply put, none are available for application to female black bears.”
Olfenbuttel added these points that also make fertility control difficult:
- Fertility control requires treating a large proportion of reproductive females in the population, which is extremely difficult in open populations where movement/dispersal rates are high.
- Impacts of fertility control on the health, behavior, and population ecology of treated animals are still largely unknown.
- There are no long-lasting contraceptive agents that have been developed that avoid the repeated capture of wild animals and avoid the very high cost of re-treatment.
- terilization and fertility control would cost millions of dollars annually.
Over the years I’ve had multiple readers ask about relocating bears, and this is not practical, either. The WRC has a good explainer page on its website about this. The commission notes that its employees will not trap and relocate nuisance bears for these reasons:
- This would simply move the problem, rather than solve it. The solution is to modify your habits and prevent bears from being attracted to your home and neighborhood.
- Most conflicts do not warrant trapping. For example, a bear simply being in a neighborhood is not necessarily threatening or cause for trapping.
- In most cases, people are the cause of the problem and the best long-term solution involves removal of attractants (bird feeders, unsecured garbage) rather than destruction of the bear.
- Simply catching every bear that someone sees is not an option; we have no remote places left to relocate bears where they will not come into contact with humans.
- Relocated bears often return to the place they were originally captured.
- Catching bears is difficult, and can be dangerous for the bear, the public, and those involved in the capture. It is best to let a bear take its natural course out of the neighborhood or city.
The commission really cannot overstate how important it is to secure potential food sources for bears. These sources are called “anthropogenic foods” because they are related to us humans.
“Our urban bear study showed that due to the amount of anthropogenic foods in Asheville, Asheville residents are growing more bears — larger litter sizes, younger age of first reproduction,” Olfenbuttel said. “If anthropogenic foods were secured in Asheville and surrounding areas — i.e., remove bird feeders when bears are active, use a bear-resistant trash can, use bear-resistant trash can straps such as Trash Lock, put garbage in a secure place until morning of trash pick-up, don’t purposely feed bears — this would reduce anthropogenic foods, thus impacting reproduction and human-bear interactions.”
Reducing human-related foods would make bears act more like wild animals, which means they would be more wary of humans, Olfenbuttel said. It’s always worth mentioning the state’s “BearWise” program, which offers good rules for coexisting with bears:
- Never feed or approach bears.
- Remove bird feeders when bears are active.
- Never leave pet food outdoors.
- Clean and store grills.
- Alert neighbors to bear activity.
Question: I called the Asheville Water Resources department in February and inquired about the Asheville water quality report. I was told it would be released to the public in April. I recently called to find out if the post-Helene results were available. The supervisor would only refer me to the pre-Helene 2024 results. When I pressed further, I was given the runaround. I know that pre-Helene annual results were always included in early spring with the water bill. Not so post-Helene. What is the water department hiding? And why, for the health of its customers, aren’t the recent detailed water testing results being released to the public?
My answer: Throughout the report, they apparently substituted the letter ‘d’ for the ‘b’ in “turbidity.” Unfortunate, that.
Real answer: This was a bit of a misunderstanding.
Water Resources spokesperson Clay Chandler said he listened to the call my reader put into the city.
“The customer service rep got confused when the caller asked for the ‘2025’ Water Quality Report,” Chandler said via email. “The 2025 Water Quality Report won’t be issued until spring 2026. The 2024 report, which includes post-Helene results, was posted to the website in April.”
You can find it here.
Now, if you’re looking for a paper copy, you won’t find one.
“One thing that is different this year is that we didn’t print copies of the report, as a cost-savings measure,” Chandler said, noting that customers were told it is available on the website. “Our regulators at the North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality allow us to either mail paper copies of the report or post it on the website. To save approximately $20,000, we didn’t produce paper copies this year.”
Asheville Watchdog welcomes thoughtful reader comments on this story, which has been republished on our Facebook page. Please submit your comments there.
Asheville Watchdog is a nonprofit news team producing stories that matter to Asheville and Buncombe County. Got a question? Send it to John Boyle at jboyle@avlwatchdog.org or 828-337-0941. His Answer Man columns appear each Tuesday and Friday. The Watchdog’s reporting is made possible by donations from the community. To show your support for this vital public service go to avlwatchdog.org/support-our-publication/.
Related
The post Why can’t we just sterilize bears? Or relocate them? What happened to the City of Asheville water report? • Asheville Watchdog appeared first on avlwatchdog.org
Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.
Political Bias Rating: Centrist
The content focuses on local environmental and community issues—specifically bear population management and public water quality reporting—with factual explanations and expert input. It avoids partisan language or promoting ideological positions, instead emphasizing practical challenges and solutions supported by data and authorities. The tone is informational and balanced, reflecting a neutral stance without discernible leanings toward left or right political perspectives.
News from the South - North Carolina News Feed
Drivers experience is ‘worsening’ at NC DMV, state auditor’s report says
SUMMARY: The North Carolina DMV faces worsening driver experiences, with average wait times around 75 minutes and over 13% of visits exceeding 150 minutes. Many customers avoid busy locations due to long lines. State auditor Dave Bulock recommends making the DMV autonomous, improving staffing by converting temporary roles to permanent, raising salaries, enhancing IT, and creating a public dashboard for wait times and satisfaction. He also suggests separating the DMV from the Department of Transportation for better efficiency. DMV Commissioner Paul Tyne emphasizes focusing on customer service improvements. Recently, lawmakers approved funding to hire more DMV workers to help ease delays.
Atop the list of issues is the average wait time North Carolinians are spending at the agency.
https://abc11.com/post/nc-dmv-wait-times-experience-worsening-customers-according-state-auditor-dave-boliek/17430115/
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News from the South - North Carolina News Feed
Back to school shopping tips to save some money
SUMMARY: Back-to-school shopping can be budget-friendly with the right approach. Expert Trae Bodge suggests parents first take inventory of existing supplies and clothes to reuse and involve kids in choosing what they need. Sales are active at retailers like Target, Walmart, and Amazon, with special deals such as Instacart’s Deal Week (August 11–17), offering free lunch essentials daily and 20% off at stores like Staples. Shopping secondhand at places like Goodwill can also stretch budgets, especially when teens understand spending limits. Giving kids gift cards encourages smart spending and independence during back-to-school shopping.
Getting students ready for the new school year can start making a big dent in bank accounts.
More: abc11.com
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