featured-image

ASHEVILLE, N.C. (AP) — The weary and worn residents of Julianne Johnson’s neighborhood in Asheville have been getting by without electricity since Hurricane Helene tore through the Southeast last week and upended their lives.

They’ve been cooking on propane stoves and using dry erase boards to keep up with local happenings while wondering when the lights would come back on. Johnson, who has a 5-year-old son and works for a land conservation group, received a text from Duke Energy promising her power would be restored by Friday night. But as of midday, utility poles and wires were still draped at odd angles across the streets, pulled down by mangled trees.



“I have no idea what’s next,” Johnson said. “Just the breadth of this over the whole region, it’s kind of amazing.” She and her neighbors have been taking care of each other since Helene came ashore in Florida on Sept.

26 as a and carved a path of destruction as it moved northward, in six states, including at least 72 in Buncombe County, which includes Asheville. Block captains set out whiteboards with information about who can provide first aid and where to get tools repaired. Nearly 700,000 homes and businesses in the six states — most in the Carolinas and Georgia — were still without power on Friday, according to .

That’s an improvement over the more than 2 million customers were without power five days ago, and Duke Energy, the dominant electricity provider in North Carolina, said it hoped to rest.

Back to Food Page