News from the South - North Carolina News Feed
What’s next for the I-26 Connector and its controversial overpass? • Asheville Watchdog
After decades of planning and debate, the North Carolina Department of Transportation has said it’s close to starting construction on the long-gestating I-26 Connector project.
But community members, including architects and planners, are still asking the agency to reconsider some of its designs, particularly a controversial and once-secretive overpass above Patton Avenue.
Though they’ve declined to attach a dollar amount to the flyover change specifically, NCDOT officials have noted that the winning design came in $190 million cheaper than any other bid. They’ve said building over Patton saves 15 months of construction time compared to an underpass, largely because it avoids having to relocate utilities in the area. In this time-is-money equation, the agency has said, it can’t afford to go ahead with the project any other way.
But critics argue that there are other ways to save money in the project, and that the NCDOT is only making matters worse by forging ahead with a design that never received sufficient public input. Criticism has come, too, over how changes in the project’s right-of-way will affect surrounding communities. And the flyover has continued to stir questions about the agency’s comportment with federal environmental law.
Top Asheville and Buncombe County officials have joined that chorus: In a letter dated May 22, Mayor Esther Manheimer and county commission chairperson Amanda Edwards asked the agency to consider reverting the flyover design to the underpass it once promised, and to listen to the community’s ideas to improve the look of the Connector and reduce its cost.
Manheimer said in an interview that she’s not asking the NCDOT to hit the brakes over the Patton Avenue issue, as she’s “heard from too many people in the community that want to see the project get done.”
“I think the community has questions, and they need to be satisfied that that really was the only other option,” Manheimer said. “Or if there is a way to return it to an underpass, I’d like to see that. The whole idea with Patton Avenue was to return it to local traffic, and it to be sort of a boulevard. That’s hard to do when it has a giant overpass going over it.”
In an email Monday, NCDOT spokesperson Stephanie Johnson said the agency is “committed to evaluating the alternatives proposed by the City of Asheville and members of the community,” as well as aesthetic improvements to the overpass.
“The feasibility of incorporating these ideas into the project will be assessed based on their impact on the project’s cost and schedule,” Johnson said.
The NCDOT agreed to an underpass design 15 years ago, after a proposal for a flyover was met with a similar outcry. In that case, too, the city and county threw their weight behind the alternative. But two years ago, the agency allowed one bidder on the project, the Archer-Wright Joint Venture, to flip the underpass to an overpass. Archer-Wright won the bid, and the NCDOT didn’t tell the public about the change until an Asheville Watchdog report revealed it in February.
The NCDOT has a timeline: New environmental studies will be done by March, construction will begin in late 2026, and right-of-way acquisition will wrap up in 2027. It’s the closest the project, conceived in 1989, has ever come to fruition — even if the debate over it has never ended.
‘You made a decision without knowing all the impacts’
In the weeks after the flyover became public knowledge, the NCDOT emphasized its position that nothing about the design change undercut its adherence to the National Environmental Protection Act. That law includes requirements that agencies pursuing projects with federal money research and disclose potential environmental impacts.
When the NCDOT released its final environmental impact statement for the I-26 project in 2020, it did so based on the design that the public had seen two years earlier — including an underpass below Patton Avenue. But the change to a flyover was “typical of the Design Build process across the state,” the agency told The Watchdog in an emailed statement in February. “There are no additional impacts due to this change and the project still meets the purpose and need, therefore does not violate the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) guidance.”
Nathan Moneyham, the construction engineer for the NCDOT’s Division 13, which includes Buncombe County, reiterated that stance at a meeting of the French Broad River Metropolitan Planning Organization the same month.
But when the NCDOT released an updated project timeline in April, it included a “NEPA Re-Evaluation” slated for this summer.
In a subsequent interview, Moneyham conceded that the agency needed to take another look at the flyover but said the reevaluation is not a complete redo of the NEPA process.
It’s “to ensure the commitments to the (environmental impact statement) and the impacts are the same,” Moneyham said. He ascribed the need for the reevaluation largely to the fact that the project had gone through a cost-cutting process, called optimization and refinement, last year.
Derrick Weaver, the NCDOT’s deputy director of technical services, said he expects the reevaluation to find impacts similar or less than the original plan. An NCDOT spokesperson said last week that the NEPA reevaluation is on track to be done late this summer, though a separate noise study will take until March.
Gary Blank, a North Carolina State University professor who teaches the NEPA process, worked on environmental impact studies for the NCDOT as a subcontractor for two decades. In an email to The Watchdog earlier this year, he noted that the process doesn’t have to leave the public happy, just informed.
“The agency can propose whatever it wants,” he said. “Even the most dire negative impact will be upheld if an agency follows its established procedure.”
Asked recently about the re-evaluation process, he said there’s precedent for the NCDOT altering a project when considering new information about impacts.
“Revisiting NCDOT projects from new perspectives usually results in positive developments that offer better outcomes,” he said.
Joe Minicozzi, a certified city planner and the principal of the Asheville-based Urban3 planning group, was among those who fought down the flyover design more than a decade ago, and he remains critical of its return; he’s argued that there are better ways to save money on the project. He said the NCDOT’s acknowledgement that the overpass requires a re-evaluation vindicates his criticism of the agency’s opacity.
“We’re supposed to know all of the impacts before the decision is made,” Minicozzi said. “That’s the thing I can’t get my head around — you made a decision without knowing all of the impacts.”
Right-of-way owners in limbo
Not far from Patton Avenue in a West Asheville neighborhood, first-time homeowner Sammi Burke worries about the project on a much more personal scale. Burke, who bought a 100-year-old home a year and a half ago, says the maps she looked at nearly two years ago showed questionable impact on her property, if any.
“At the time, I had no real understanding of what the I-26 project was or any potential impact,” Burke said. “I think it was listed in the listing as ‘unknown impact’ to the property, so I kind of just wrote it off and said, ‘I’ll figure it out when I get there.’”
At the time she bought, maps from 2018 were the NCDOT’s latest, and in the one showing her home on Vandalia Avenue, it looked like the impact on her home would be minimal.
Burke thought a new roundabout would be near her front yard — “not ideal” but livable, she said. But the updated maps show a different route and a driveway connection point “through a significant chunk of my front yard.”
The NCDOT has said the latest plans actually reduce the total number of families and businesses whose property is in the way of the project and will have to relocate, from 85 to 68. But when The Watchdog asked for a list of property owners who had been notified and a full list of properties set to be taken, an official said the list wasn’t finalized — and that the plans were a quarter of the way done.
According to NCDOT spokesperson Stephanie Johnson, some right-of-way acquisition began in 2019, but most of the property acquisition for the main Connector sections through Asheville is expected to begin this fall and be complete by the end of 2027.
Burke said she still feels like she’s in limbo, because it’s difficult to tell exactly where the roundabout will go and what its impact will be.
“My bigger concern, in actuality, is the actual value of my home, because I’m a first-time home buyer and this was a significant investment,” Burke said. “We’re looking at what, six years of construction? Who knows what that’s going to do?”
Burke said she’s enlisted a law firm that specializes in eminent domain cases, “because I don’t know much about all of this, so I’d rather have some expertise behind me to help kind of navigate the whole process.”
At Crown Plaza Resort Asheville, located on the west end of the Capt. Jeff Bowen Bridge, President and CEO Dennis Hulsing has much more certainty about exactly what the NCDOT will take through eminent domain, but it leaves him with no less agitation than Burke has.
“From my standpoint, the disappointing part is if you think about all what they’re taking — they’re taking my clubhouse, all the fitness rooms, the indoor/outdoor pool, the spa, the driving range, all of that, and 20 tennis courts and four indoor tennis courts,” Hulsing said, also noting that the nine-hole golf course will disappear because the NCDOT will take about two and a half holes.
Hulsing said the NCDOT’s initial offer was “less than 25 cents on the dollar” to rebuild what’s being taken elsewhere on his remaining property. The resort comprises 110 acres now, but Hulsing will be left with about 80 acres. The low offer may make it tough to get bank loans, Hulsing said.
As it passes through the resort property, the Connector will be elevated. Hulsing noted that guests leaving the main building will walk out to a parking lot with a view not of downtown and mountains but of a hulking interstate.
That, he says, will have a “negative impact on the remaining land,” and it’s hard to put a price tag on what it may do to business. Hulsing believes the Connector needs to be built, but he’s disappointed in the DOT’s offer, and how the agency flipped the underpass to an overpass.
“I hate that the final plan they selected went through me, and I hate worse I’m having to fight with them for what I think is right,” Hulsing said. “But if you take me and take that out of the picture, yes, it’s something that definitely needed to be done to correct the bottleneck.”
‘Yeah, we can do something’
The city and county’s insistence that the NCDOT hear out other ideas echoes the work of local designers and planners critical of the overpass. They’ve been developing alternative proposals since the flyover change was uncovered by The Watchdog. Many of their ideas emerged last month, during a weekend-long charrette — a high-intensity design brainstorm, in essence.
Minicozzi described the crowd as ranging from 20-somethings with virtual-reality headsets to contributors to the original underpass plan, who were already elder statespeople of the local design community when it seemed to win the day a decade and a half ago.
“People are really trying,” he said. “They really look for ways to try to make things better. Coming in with an attitude of ‘Yeah, we can do something’ — that spirit is back.”
Sonia Marcus, a West Asheville resident and member of the anti-flyover I-26 Citizens’ Coalition, described several core ideas during Tuesday’s City Council meeting. One includes a slight shift to the placement of the highway that local designers believe would allow it to avoid some of the utilities that the NCDOT has flagged as a costly disruption necessitating the overpass. Another would have the highway bypass Haywood Road altogether, a change Marcus argued would improve pedestrian safety in the heart of West Asheville while saving money; in its place, a frontage road within the highway’s footprint could connect Haywood to Patton Avenue.
And reducing the width of I-240, which is planned at 10 lanes in some places, to six lanes citywide could also save on construction and eminent domain costs, Marcus said.
“We also avoid turning 240 into any larger a monstrosity in our city than it already is,” she added.
The NCDOT may be poised to at least hear some of these ideas: Architect Rachel Murdaugh, a co-founder of the Citizens’ Coalition, said during Tuesday’s meeting that the group was in talks with the agency about meeting to go over the proposals.
And the NCDOT spokesperson’s statement Monday signaled a shift for the agency, which in recent months had signaled its reluctance to make any changes to the project — particularly reverting the overpass back to an underpass.
“Honestly, at this point, I don’t think there’s anything that’s going to make us change our mind, except delay the project,” Weaver said at the April 24 meeting.
Switching back to the underpass plan would add to the project’s cost, an idea the NCDOT’s top leadership is unlikely to accept.
“Our executive leadership is going to say, ‘We’re not comfortable funding that right now, so we’re going to delay the project,’” Weaver said. “And they’ll push this money out to other projects and speed them up.”
Moneyham was equally blunt.
“There’s not any wiggle room,” he said at the same meeting. “This is the plan.”
Asheville Watchdog welcomes thoughtful reader comments about 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. John Boyle has been covering Asheville and surrounding communities since the 20th century. You can reach him at (828) 337-0941, or via email at jboyle@avlwatchdog.org. Jack Evans is an investigative reporter who previously worked at the Tampa Bay Times. You can reach him via email at jevans@avlwatchdog.org. 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 What’s next for the I-26 Connector and its controversial overpass? • 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: Center-Left
This article largely adheres to factual reporting on the I-26 Connector project, focusing on community concerns, government planning decisions, and environmental regulations. However, the tone and framing show a subtle emphasis on the voices of local critics, planners, and residents who challenge the state agency’s decisions, which aligns with a progressive viewpoint advocating for community input, environmental caution, and transparency. The critical stance toward government opacity and eminent domain impacts, along with highlighting public opposition and alternative proposals, suggest a slight center-left leaning without overt ideological advocacy.
News from the South - North Carolina News Feed
Flooded homes, cars frustrate people living in Wilson neighborhood: ‘I’m so tired’
SUMMARY: Residents in a Wilson, North Carolina neighborhood are expressing frustration after yet another round of flooding damaged homes and vehicles following heavy overnight rains. Water rose to knee level on Starship Lane, flooding driveways, cars, and apartments. One resident reported losing music equipment, furniture, and clothes for the third time due to recurring floods. The rising water even brought worms and snakes from a nearby pond into homes. Debris and trash were scattered as floodwaters receded, leaving many questioning why no long-term solution has been implemented. Residents are exhausted, facing repeated loss and cleanup efforts after each heavy rainfall.
“We have to throw everything out. This is my third time doing this.”
More: https://abc11.com/post/overnight-storms-central-north-carolina-cause-flooding-wilson/16764793/
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News from the South - North Carolina News Feed
McDowell DSS shakeup after child abuse not reported to NC DHHS
More than three months after McDowell County placed its Department of Social Services director on leave, officials have kept quiet about upheaval inside the office responsible for child welfare and a range of other public services. A letter obtained by Carolina Public Press revealed that McDowell DSS failed to alert law enforcement to evidence of child abuse — and violated other state policies, too.
County commissioners placed former McDowell DSS director Bobbie Sigmon and child protective services program manager Lakeisha Feaster on paid administrative leave during a special session meeting on Feb. 3. Another child protective services supervisor resigned the following week.
[Subscribe for FREE to Carolina Public Press’ alerts and weekend roundup newsletters]
County Commissioner Tony Brown told local news media at the time that the county initiated an investigation into its DSS office and the state was involved, but did not provide any details about the cause for the investigation. County commissioners haven’t spoken publicly about the matter since.
That Feb. 21 letter, sent by the N.C. Department of Health and Human Services to Brown and county manager Ashley Wooten, offered previously undisclosed details about issues at the DSS office.
State letter details DSS missteps
According to the letter, McDowell County reached out to the state with concerns that its DSS office hadn’t been notifying law enforcement when evidence of abuse and neglect was discovered in child welfare cases.
The letter didn’t say how or when the county first became aware of the problem, but District Attorney Ted Bell told CPP that he had “raised issues” with the county about DSS prior to Sigmon and Feaster being put on leave. Bell’s office was not involved with the investigation into McDowell DSS.
The state sent members of its Child Welfare Regional Specialists Team to look into the claim. Their findings confirmed that McDowell DSS had failed in multiple instances to alert law enforcement to cases of abuse.
Additionally, the state identified several recent child welfare cases in which social workers failed to consistently meet face to face with children or adequately provide safety and risk assessments in accordance with state policy.
“Next steps will include determining how to work with (McDowell DSS) to remediate the service gaps identified in the case reviews,” the letter concluded.
However, that nearly four-month-old correspondence is the state’s “most recent engagement” with McDowell DSS, a spokesperson for the Department of Health and Human Services told CPP last week.
Sometimes the state will initiate a “corrective action plan” when it finds a county DSS office in violation of state policy. If a county fails to follow through on its corrective action plan, the state may strip the DSS director of authority and assume control of the office.
Just last month, the state took over Vance County DSS when it failed to show improvement after starting a corrective action plan.
The state hasn’t taken similar measures in McDowell.
McDowell considers DSS overhaul
Wooten has served as the interim DSS director in Sigmon’s absence. He told CPP that Sigmon and Feaster resigned “to seek employment elsewhere” on May 31, after nearly four months of paid leave.
That Sigmon and Feaster resigned, rather than being fired, leaves open the possibility that they may continue to work in DSS agencies elsewhere in North Carolina. CPP reported in 2022 on counties’ struggles to hire and retain qualified social workers and social services administrators.
Wooten would oversee the hiring of a new DSS director if the commissioners choose to replace Sigmon, but the county is considering an overhaul to its social services structure that may eliminate the director position entirely.
The restructure would consolidate social services and other related departments into one human services agency, Wooten said. The county may not hire a new DSS director in that case, but instead seek someone to lead an umbrella agency that would absorb the duties of a traditional social services department.
A 2012 state law changed statute to allow smaller counties to form consolidated human services agencies, which are typically a combination of public health and social services departments.
County DSS directors across the state opposed such a change to state statute at the time, but county managers and commissioners mostly supported it, according to a report commissioned by the General Assembly.
At least 25 counties moved to a consolidated human services model in the decade since the law was passed.
McDowell shares a regional public health department with Rutherford County, so it’s unclear what a consolidated human services agency there might look like. Statute does not define “human services” so it’s up to the county what to include in a consolidated agency.
Wooten told CPP that no decisions about such a transition have been made.
This article first appeared on Carolina Public Press and is republished here under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
The post McDowell DSS shakeup after child abuse not reported to NC DHHS 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
This article from Carolina Public Press focuses on administrative failures within McDowell County’s Department of Social Services, relying on official documents, quotes from public officials, and a chronological recounting of events. It avoids emotionally charged language and refrains from assigning blame beyond documented actions or policies. The piece does not advocate for a specific political solution or frame the story through an ideological lens, instead presenting the issue as a matter of public accountability and governance. Its tone is investigative and factual, reflecting a commitment to journalistic neutrality and transparency without promoting a partisan viewpoint.
News from the South - North Carolina News Feed
Enjoying the I-26 widening project? Great, because it won’t be over until July 2027 — if it stays on schedule • Asheville Watchdog
Among the many topics that draw continued interest — and ire — from you good readers, the I-26 widening project has to be right at the top of the list.
No, not the I-26 Connector project, which we will get to complain about for roughly the next decade. I’m talking about the widening of I-26 through Buncombe and Henderson counties, the $534 million project that started in October 2019.
Initially, it was to be completed in 2024, but that date got pushed back to this year. Then next year.
And now?
“Our revised contract completion date for I-26 widening in Buncombe — which includes Exit 35 — is July 1, 2027,” David Uchiyama, spokesperson for the North Carolina Department of Transportation in western North Carolina, said via email.
You read that right — two more years of harrowing passes through Jersey barriers, slamming on the brakes because the pickup in front of you didn’t notice the line of cars in front of him coming to a standstill, and serious concrete envy when you drive I-26 in Henderson County, which is a glorious four lanes on each side in places.
Most times I go to Asheville, I take I-26. It’s gotten so I give myself about 40 minutes for what once was a 20-minute trip, mainly because I just don’t know what I’m going to get.
Best-case scenario is a sluggish slog through the Long Shoals area and up the mountain to the Blue Ridge Parkway, as the tractor-trailers refuse to move over and they slow everything down. Worst-case scenario is a wreck, for which I can plan on settling in for a good 50 minutes or so.
Clearly, this road project makes me a little grumpy, but I can assure you I’m not the only one. I routinely hear from readers who might even outdo me on the grump-ometer. Most recently, an octogenarian wrote to express his displeasure:
“If the pace of building the Connector takes as long as building out I-26 at the Outlet Mall to below the airport and beyond toward Hendersonville, it almost certainly will not be completed in our lifetimes, and I’m 82 years old. Could you please determine why this project is still not complete? It seems like an interminable length of time exacerbated by the many days one passes through the area and sees lots of machinery not in use nor any work going on at all. It seems to me that magnificent roads in Western Europe get done a lot faster, and certainly in China where significant projects get done three times faster than here with work ongoing 24 hours a day. You want to get things done, then China’s approach may be worth our consideration. Or, are we too soft?”
I chuckled. To be fair, China is a communist country that builds apartment buildings and roads that folks don’t even use, and if you’re a worker there, they might suggest your life could be a lot shorter if you don’t put in all that overtime.
To be fair to the NCDOT and its contractor, the new exit for the Pratt & Whitney plant got added in well after the I-26 widening had begun.
“The addition of Exit 35 — an economic development project in addition to a project that will relieve congestion and increase safety — created (the) completion dates,” Uchiyama said.
Back in March, when another reader had asked about delays, Luke Middleton, resident engineer with the NCDOT’s Asheville office, said, “The addition of a new interchange, Exit 35, after the project was more than halfway completed extended the timeframe needed to complete the north section.
“The south end of the project did not have these obstacles,” Middleton said then. The new exit was announced in early 2022.
Middleton noted that Exit 35 will include an additional bridge and multiple retaining walls, “which increased the overall project timeline by almost two years.”
This month, I asked if the contractor was facing any penalties because of the extended time frame.
“Damages will not be charged unless the contractor is unable to complete the work by the newly established contract date,” Uchiyama said. “If work goes past that date a multitude of items will be considered before damages are charged.”
Those damages could be $5,000 a day.
While it may appear work is not going on yet with the interchange, that’s a misperception, Uchiyama said.
“The contractor started working on the westbound on and off ramps in March of 2024,” Uchiyama said. “I-26 traffic has been on the other side of the interstate island, which obstructs the view of drivers in the area.”
Over the past month, “earthwork operations have started on the offramp on the eastbound side of I-26, just south of the French Broad River,” Uchiyama added. He also noted that the interchange bridge will be a little less than one mile south of the French Broad River bridge and about halfway between the French Broad River and the Blue Ridge Parkway.
New Blue Ridge Parkway bridge building has been slow
Another factor in the widening slowness is the construction of a new Blue Ridge Parkway bridge, which Middleton acknowledged in March “has taken longer than anticipated, which has resulted in a delay to remove the existing structure. Removal of the existing structure is key to getting traffic in its final pattern.”
Uchiyama said the removal of the old bridge is coming up this summer.
“We anticipate switching traffic from the old bridge to the new bridge and new alignment on the Blue Ridge Parkway late this summer,” Uchiyama said. “Once traffic has been moved to the new alignment, the contractor will begin taking down the existing bridge.”
I wrote about the parkway bridge last August, noting that it was supposed to be finished between Halloween and Thanksgiving. The $14.5 million bridge is 605 feet long, 36 feet wide and will provide two lanes of travel over I-26.
It’s also right in the area where I-26 traffic gets bottlenecked pretty much every day, especially traveling west (which is really more northward through this area, but let’s not split hairs). Coming from Airport Road, you’re driving on three lanes of concrete, which narrow down to two at Long Shoals.
Add in a fairly steep hill leading up to the Parkway bridge, and it’s a guaranteed bottleneck. I asked Uchiyama what causes this.
“Congestion issues existed for years prior to construction,” he said. “The opening of new lanes, wider shoulders and faster speeds approaching this area, and the opening of lanes in the opposite direction exacerbate the perception of current congestion.”
Allow me a moment to note that this is not a “perception of current congestion.” It’s congested through here every day, just about any time of day, and it’s particularly horrid during rush hours. If I’m heading to Asheville during rush hours, or coming home, I opt for another route.
As far as the bottleneck, Uchiyama said the NCDOT had to narrow four lanes down to two.
“Functionally, NCDOT chose a traffic pattern that trims four lanes down to two while providing drivers with ample time for merging to the appropriate lanes, including the Long Shoals Road offramp,” Uchiyama said.
Part of the problem is this is an area where you get people not paying attention and then slamming on the brakes, or folks hauling arse into the construction zone instead of slowing down, resulting in someone slamming on the brakes, or a rear end collision. It’s unpleasant to say the least, dicey and dangerous to say the most.
Regarding trucks not moving over, don’t look for that to change.
Right now there’s just nowhere to pull over as you head up the mountain, so pulling over trucks is not practical.
“The truck restriction enacted prior to construction has been suspended to increase safety for construction workers, those who would enforce any truck restriction, and those responding to any crashes or breakdowns,” Uchiyama said. “NCDOT and other agencies — including law enforcement — will revisit the necessity of a truck restriction upon completion of the project.”
Some relief in sight
Once you crest the hill and pass under the Parkway bridges, the construction zone is curvy and lined with concrete barriers. You better be on your toes through here, in both directions.
Some relief is coming, though.
“The current configuration is temporary — less than a month remaining,” Uchiyama said. “The contractor anticipates moving traffic to the new westbound alignment from Long Shoals (Exit 37) to Brevard Road (Exit 33) before the July 4th holiday,” Uchiyama said. “This will provide for more shoulder area.”
So that covers the widening project.
But if you really think about all this, the fun is just starting.
By that, I mean we can now anticipate the $1.1 billion I-26 Connector project kicking off and creating traffic issues for, oh, I don’t know, the next 25 years.
I asked Uchiyama if we can expect these projects — the ongoing widening and the Connector — to overlap.
“On the calendar? Yes. On the ground? No,” Uchiyama said. “Construction has started on the south section of the Connector. The north section is slated to start in the second half of 2026.”
I’m going to classify that as overlapping, at least in my world.
The NCDOT’s official page on the Connector project lists the completion date as October 2031. I’m going to add five years, just to be on the safe side.
Asheville Watchdog welcomes thoughtful reader comments about 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. John Boyle has been covering Asheville and surrounding communities since the 20th century. You can reach him at (828) 337-0941, or via email at jboyle@avlwatchdog.org. To show your support for this vital public service go to avlwatchdog.org/support-our-publication/.
Related
The post Enjoying the I-26 widening project? Great, because it won’t be over until July 2027 — if it stays on schedule • 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
This content provides a detailed and pragmatic overview of a local infrastructure project without showing clear ideological bias. It critiques government project delays and inefficiencies, compares practices internationally, and addresses practical concerns of local residents. The tone is concerned but balanced, focusing on accountability and transparency rather than promoting a specific political agenda or leaning left or right.
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