ASHEVILLE, N.C. (WLOS) — As drinkable water returns to Asheville, some are still concerned about the possibility of lead.
Residents of North Carolina’s most populous mountain city are no longer under a boil water notice, Asheville officials announced on Monday. Extensive rain and flooding from Hurricane Helene on ...
A boil-water notice — put in place because of lingering sediment from the destructive September storm — was lifted Monday. In related news, the Biden administration has asked Congress for $100B in ...
Clay Chandler, a spokesman for the city of Asheville's Water Resources Department, said at a briefing Monday that water tests ...
Clay Chandler here, filling in for Diane. Bjarke’s firm, Bjarke Ingels Group (aka “BIG”), has also been a key player in the ...
according to Water Resources Department spokesperson Clay Chandler — and then an additional two weeks to flush the system. Chandler told the Citizen Times Nov. 1 that "mid-December is certainly ...
Asheville, North Carolina, residents now have safe drinking water after a boil notice was lifted Monday, more than seven ...
More than 100,000 residents in western North Carolina were allowed to drink and bathe using water from their home faucets on Monday, nearly two months after Hurricane Helene destroyed much of the ...
ASHEVILLE, N.C. — During a community briefing Sunday, Asheville Water Resources Department spokesperson Clay Chandler ...
Water Resources Department spokesman Clay Chandler delivered the good news on Monday, Nov. 18: the City of Asheville's water ...
Asheville lifted its boil water notice this morning, city spokesperson Clay Chandler shared this morning at a press briefing.
The water in Asheville is officially safe again. Buncombe County Government officials confirmed the boil water advisory in Asheville has been lifted 53 days after Hurricane Helene. Clay Chandler, ...