I usually have a brief update on Hurricane Helene recovery in western North Carolina at the end of my Monday blog posts. That’s what I had planned to do yesterday, but news from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) on Friday afternoon prompted me to move yesterday’s report to today.
I wish I had some photographs to include in today’s post, but I don’t want to use pictures that are not in the public domain. You can see still photos and videos of the damage left by Helene by doing online searches. Television website such as the one for WLOS in Asheville are good sources, as well as this link to the National Park Service website: https://home.nps.gov/blri/planyourvisit/helene-impacts-and-recovery.htm.
It has now been eight months since Hurricane Helene, and it probably is a distant memory for most Americans. However, as of Friday, 51 roads in North Carolina were still closed due to Hurricane Helene. That count included five US highways, three state highways, and 43 state roads. You may recall that right after the storm, there were more than 1,200 roads closed in the state.
I failed to mention the last several weeks that I-40 near the Tennessee border is still just one lane in each direction with a 35 mile-per-hour speed limit for the foreseeable future.
It is an arduous undertaking to rebuild an interstate highway down in a gorge. It took years to construct the highway through those mountains. Its reconstruction cannot be rushed.
I have driven that section of I-40 a number of times. It is not a leisurely drive as you always see recent rockslides that have been caught behind the miles of steel mesh covering the side of mountains. I always feel a sense of relief when I successfully navigate that winding stretch of highway and can loosen my grip on the steering wheel.
Most of the Blue Ridge Parkway in North Carolina is still closed for the foreseeable future. A total of approximately 95 miles of the parkway are open, but much of that is in one- to four-mile long sections The longest section in NC that is open is a 46-mile section from Balsam Gap to the road’s southern terminus at Soco Gap near Cherokee.
Rail Service
Norfolk Southern freight train service from Tennessee was restored to Asheville on April 25, a full seven months after the hurricane. In addition to rail lines being destroyed, the Newport Bridge over the Pigeon River in Newport, Tennessee had to be replaced. Due to more than 100 washouts due to the hurricane, 13 miles of train track between Newport and Asheville had to be replaced.
On May 21, The (Raleigh) News and Observer reported on the restoration of the rail service as well as the remaining rail service recovery in western North Carolina.
The newspaper reported, “Now the company is focused on 16 miles of tracks east of Asheville, between Black Mountain and Old Fort. That part of the line tops the Eastern Continental Divide with a series of horseshoe turns through rugged terrain and was heavily damaged by landslides and wash outs.
“Not only does the Old Fort line connect to Norfolk Southern’s freight network in central and eastern North Carolina, but the N.C. Department of Transportation is studying that route for possible future passenger trains between Salisbury and Asheville.
“Norfolk Southern says it expects to rebuild the Old Fort section by sometime this winter.”
In addition to Norfolk Southern, CSX and Blue Ridge Southern operate train service in western NC. The Blue Ridge Southern line connects Hendersonville and Waynesville with the Norfolk Southern railyard in Asheville.
The Raleigh newspaper report says, “CSX, whose line through the mountains is a key link between the Southeast and Midwest, is still working to rebuild about 40 miles of tracks along the North Toe and Nolichucky rivers from Spruce Pine northwest into Tennessee. The flooded rivers washed out two bridges and miles of track in the steep, remote valley.”
FEMA
The 2025 Hurricane Season begins in five days, and the word on the streets is that FEMA is not prepared.
It was reported last week by WSOC-TV in Charlotte that FEMA is allowing some people in western NC to purchase the FEMA trailers they are living in at a discount. It made me sad to see a trailer park of FEMA trailers just a few feet apart and to think that those people are faced with a decision now to pay for those “temporary” units and I guess live in them for the rest of their lives. How disheartening that must be!
On Thursday, May 22, FEMA informed NC Governor Josh Stein that it is ending the direct assistance for the US Army Corps of Engineers. Gov. Stein thanked FEMA and the Army Corps of Engineers for all that’s been done to remove debris let by Hurricane Helene in western NC.
The governor said, “I am pleased that they will stay in North Carolina to finish existing missions, and my team looks forward to working closely with them to get those jobs done quickly. Together, we have removed more than 12 million cubic yards of debris from our roads and waterways. Unfortunately, there remains vast amounts of work yet to be done. Our state’s debris removal program is prepared to contract and execute the remaining debris removal and will work diligently and with urgency to complete those jobs as soon as possible.”
Also on May 22, the NC House of Representatives unanimously passed the Disaster Recovery Act of 2025 Part II, which is the fifth round of Helene relief funding. This latest bill provides $464 million for recovery efforts, bringing the NC House’s total allocations to date to a total of $1.8 billion. This bill now goes to the NC State Senate for consideration.
But then the bottom fell out on Friday afternoon. FEMA denied North Carolina’s appeal to extend 100% cost reimbursement for debris removal cost-sharing for the hurricane. It is estimated that it will cost an additional $2 billion to finish cleaning up the debris left by Hurricane Helene. That’s a huge expense for a state like North Carolina to incur with no hopes of being reimbursed by the federal government.
During his campaign last October 21, Donald Trump visited western North Carolina for some a photo ops and told the people that he would respond to their needs. He went over the top (as only he can do) with lies about how the Biden Administration had let them down. He told them that Biden was going to steal their land. He told them that Biden had directed the storm to hit western North Carolina!
He accused FEMA of only giving hurricane victims a total of $750. Of course, the $750 people who have lost their homes in a natural disaster is what FEMA gives them to meet their immediate needs until long-term assistance can be determined. Whether Trump spoke out of ignorance or intentionally lied is up for debate.
In October 2024, Trump accused the Biden administration of diverting FEMA assistance from North Carolina to house illegal immigrants. He said, “$1 billion of FEMA spending was ‘stolen’ for migrants.” None of that was true.
Out of desperation, some of the people believed him and then voted for him just two weeks later. Some of them now see this as a case of “bait and switch.”
NC Governor Josh Stein responded to Friday’s decision from FEMA with his usual grace, class, and facts: “The first step to help western North Carolina recover is to clean up all the debris. So far, we have removed more than 12 million cubic yards of debris from roads and waterways, but given the immense scale of the wreckage, we have only scratched the surface. FEMA’s denial of our appeal will cost North Carolina taxpayers potentially hundreds of millions of dollars to clean up out west. The money we have to pay toward debris removal means less money toward supporting our small businesses, rebuilding downtown infrastructure, repairing our water and sewer systems, and other critical needs.
“Despite this news, we are going to stay the course. We will keep pushing the federal and state governments to do right by western North Carolina. We will keep working with urgency, focus, and transparency to get any appropriated money on the ground as quickly as we can to speed the recovery. We will not forget the people of western North Carolina.”
I’m embarrassed to say it, but North Carolina voted for Trump last November. Perhaps the rest of the states need to take note: This is how Trump rewards his supporters.
If you live in a “a blue state” (or “a red state”) you’d better hope you don’t have a natural disaster in the next three and a half years. Just ask the people in Missouri and Kentucky who feel abandoned by FEMA since the deadly tornadoes experienced there this month.
I hope NC’s two Republican US Senators take note. I hope our Republican US Representatives take note. Y’all have backed Trump on every turn. Did you expect help for your state in return?
We have a crisis of government spending in this country. It must be addressed; however, suddenly pulling the rug out from under citizens is not the American way.
How FEMA operates needs to be assessed but making rash decisions about how its programs are implemented in places hundreds of miles from an ocean that have been devastated by a hurricane while denying that the climate is changing might not be the best time to pull on that rug.
No one living hundreds of miles inland can prepare for 30 inches of rain accompanied by tropical storm force winds. It’s one thing to build a house where the ocean waves lap at the foundation. It’s another thing altogether when the home several hundred miles inland where multiple generations of your family have lived gets washed away.
Until my next blog post
I hope you are reading a book that has you so captivated you will stay up all night tonight to finish it.
Remember the people of Ukraine and western North Carolina.
Janet

Well, progress is slow but happening, just like in our Valencian community with the recovery from the flooding… if it weren’t for governments things would get done…
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Thank you for the NC update, Janet. Is it safe to assume that the state is going to have to raise taxes and/or cut services to make up the hurricane recovery money FEMA has taken away? I’ve read, too, that FEMA is not ready for hurricane season. Based on the severity and frequency of storms resulting from climate change, FEMA’s budget should have been increased, not decreased! (I’ve been thinking this for the past couple of years.)
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Well, to be fair, he needs to find $1Bn to revamp his big, beautiful plane, so no wonder there’s nothing left over for FEMA…
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Thank you for reading my post, Liz. I’m sure people are getting weary of my weekly updates about the hurricane, but I feel like I need to remind people that the suffering continues. The news media report on a hurricane for a week or two and then they move on to another story. The Governor hasn’t addressed how the state will come up with that kind of money. He has his work cut out for him with our Republican-dominated General Assembly. There is a built-in conflict between the coastal plain and “the western part of state” that dates back to colonial times when the coastal plain was settled first and got used to holding the power. I learned when I was in graduate school in Raleigh that everything west of Raleigh is considered “the western part of the state.” And here I thought I had lived all my life in the Piedmont. The General Assembly sees everything west of Raleigh as a wilderness undeserving of highways or anything else. But I digress! This afternoon the US Department of Transportation announced new funds for transportation recovery due to Hurricane Helene in NC, SC, TN, FL, and GA. Don’t know how much NC will get out of the $683 million. I haven’t even seen estimates of what the final cost of rebuilding Interstate 40 will be or how long it will remain just one lane in both directions. I don’t know what the answer is, especially when climate change is included in the equation. It seems like natural disasters alone could bankrupt our country. For years I’ve thought it was foolhardy and a waste of government funds for people to be allowed to rebuild on the coast. I mean, when the waves are lapping at the supports holding your vacation home up out of the water, it seems to me the writing is on the wall. It’s hard for me to have sympathy for people who lose a vacation home that was built right on the beach. The people in western NC had no reason to think they or their property was in danger, although over the last couple of decades too many Floridians have purchased land on the tops of mountains and way up on the sides of mountains and built summer homes there. My sister and I have always thought they were foolhardy and, well, stupid. After all, that is not where the indigenous people built their houses (the Cherokee lived in houses, not tepees), and that’s not where the early white settlers built their houses either. It is not the natives who have done that. But in Helene, no one in the mountains was safe from 30 inches of rain in three days. I just hope the people who get helped are the natives whose houses were in what would have been considered safe locations — where their families have lived for generations –who have received and will receive some financial assistance. So… between FEMA abandonment and the NC General Assembly prejudice against the Piedmont and the mountains, I don’t know how Gov. Stein is going to find billions of dollars. He seems to be a good guy. He was our state Attorney General prior to running for Governor last year. He’s relatively young and energetic, which is going to be in his favor to do whatever it takes to get the mountains recovered to the new normal. Now, we just hope no part of the state gets hit by a hurricane this year!
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That’s true, but it shouldn’t be a problem with him and his buddies in Congress. They can always just cut national park budgets and employees, literally cut down the national forests and sell the timber, slash the budget for the National Weather Service, cut money for museums and libraries, cut off money for food for poor children, or cut money for cancer research. His oligarchs don’t need any of that stuff anyway. Who needs a warning that a hurricane is forming and it looks like it’s heading for [fill in the blank.] Who needs a forest? Who needs air traffic controllers? Trumpers see all government expenditures except the military as waste.
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Recovery is always slow. The “red tape” is an assistance killer. I’m sorry to hear that the part(s) of Valencia damaged by the horrific flood are still trying to get back on their feet.
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I agree with you about the government paying people to rebuild after their oceanfront vacation house is wiped out by a hurricane. You build your house on a barrier island and wonder why it goes kerplunk into the ocean when hurricane season hits. I hope your governor is able to figure out a solution for disaster relief for the sake of the people in your state. Other governors are going to be facing similar situations as climate change worsens.
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Lies, damned lies, statistics and a whole new category–Trumpety Lies. How much more do people have to experience before they begin to believe this man only has his own interests at heart-not theirs. It you claim that your conservative values are the reason you are in trouble with the law, then you have a friend in court, especially if you are a large donor. The fact that you actually broke the law, unless that is a conservative value, has everything to do with your conviction. The last three days have given us a daily lesson in this new fact of life. The first one, is a former sheriff less than an hour from here who had numerous people testify against him-but according to the sheriff, it was his conservative values that got him falsely arrested.
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Thank you, Liz. Yes, they are. More and stronger hurricanes and tornadoes. Bigger floods.
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Yes! My entire blog post on Friday will be about Trump pardons. It got longer and longer as I drafted it this afternoon. Doggone him if he pardons the six men who conspired to kidnap Gov. Whitmer! And there is no one to stop him. He can literally pardon anyone he wants except someone who has been impeached. He is so far out-of-control on this and everything else! Now we know what happens when we put a businessman in the White House. The political scientist in me saw the horror coming, but it is even worse than I anticipated. Back to pardons… Every time I checked the news this afternoon, someone else had been pardoned! He’ll have other things on his mind tomorrow, though, after that court ruling that just came down telling him to stop the tariffs! And don’t you just love the new TACO thing? Trump Always Chickens Out! LOL!
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Here the physical damage has been repaired but the victims have still not been helped…
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I do love TACO and just found out this morning that it came from the Financial Times. Pardoning the kidnappers should be a line not crossed which probably means he will. No low is too low for TACO Pollo.
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You’re welcome, Janet.
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Yes, but there have already been so many lines crossed…. The bar is low.
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That’s a long time for them to be left homeless or living in dire conditions.
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Thanks for the update, Janet!
Jim Gilmer
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When the government is corrupt people matter very little, unfortunately… These people have been left, mostly, on their own.
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You’re welcome, Jim.
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I heard just a minute or two on the radio this afternoon that the people in Valencia were protesting today about the government’s lack of response after the flooding. It’s sad when people who are already beaten down have no choice but to march in the streets. I hope they will get some results ASAP!
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Yes, yesterday there were huge demonstrations in front of the presidential residence and palace of the Generalitat to try to shame the president and demand his resignation. But of course, like most politicians, he has no shame…
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What a pity! Sounds like he’s just like Trump. Listens to no one.
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It seems that many presidents throughout the world have gotten the same virus…
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Yes, it does seem to be contagious. Trump caught it from Putin and Kim Jong Un.
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Two very virulent sources…
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Indeed! His idols. He wants his birthday parade on June 14 to be like their military parades. He’s wanted such a parade since his first term.
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Incredible!
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