NC Agricultural Leaders Call For Additional Relief Funding and Investments

Source: NC Newsline

Hurricane Helene’s destruction in western North Carolina will have a lasting impact on communities and industries that call the mountainous region home. 

For farmers, the hurricane caused insurmountable damage to land and crops. In Henderson County alone, early estimates have predicted a total loss of up to $50 million for the county’s 450 farms.

“It’s not just the crop loss. It’s the land,” Karen Blaedow, Henderson County’s horticultural agent, told WUNC. “Repairing the land is going to be the most costly part of the recovery.”

According to NC Newsline, North Carolina leaders have stated that acres of crops were swept down flooded rivers, topsoil has been washed away, and equipment and infrastructure are severely damaged.

“We’ve got a real mess on our hands in North Carolina agriculture,” Steve Troxler, Commissioner of Agriculture, told House lawmakers. “But we can fix it.

WUNC reports that federal relief programs such as the Tree Assistance Program or the Emergency Conservation Program, are available to help farmers remove debris, rebuild land, and replant crops.

From the state level, Governor Roy Cooper has proposed funding $422 million for agricultural relief and assistance with farmer recovery.

Despite calls from western North Carolina elected officials, advocates, and residents for further relief funding, Republican lawmakers are focusing on passing a bill that would strip powers away from the governor, attorney general, and other offices that Democrats won during the 2024 election. 

“This bill really didn’t provide immediate and direct funding to western North Carolina,” Gov. Cooper told WCNC before vetoing the bill. “It simply moved some money around, saying that they were going to appropriate it later, that leaves small businesses hanging that are really in need of direct grants. It leaves local governments hanging and to bill this as a disaster recovery legislation, it’s really a disaster in and of itself because it’s just a massive power grab.”

Share:

More Posts

Otro año pasa con la demanda Leandro sobre el financiamiento escolar estancada

La Corte Suprema de Carolina del Norte continúa sin emitir un fallo en la histórica demandaLeandro sobre el financiamiento de las escuelas públicas, dejando el caso en el limbo más de 660 días después de que se escucharan los alegatos orales. La demora es inusual y se produce pese a que el tribunal ya publicó sus decisiones finales del año sin incluir este caso clave, que podría definir el futuro de la educación pública en el estado.

Trump vuelve a vender cheques de $2,000 sin plan, sin aval legal y sin garantías

Donald Trump ha retomado la promesa de enviar cheques de reembolso de hasta $2,000 a los estadounidenses en 2026, asegurando que los fondos provendrían de los ingresos generados por los aranceles. Sin embargo, la propuesta carece de un plan concreto y enfrenta importantes obstáculos legales y políticos que ponen en duda su viabilidad.

My ACA premium is increasing 240%

My husband and I are small business owners, so we rely on the Affordable Care Act for health care coverage. We currently pay $400 per month for medical and dental care. But, because of Republicans’ refusal to fix the crisis they’ve created, our monthly medical health premium is expected to cost us 240% more in 2026. And my daughter, a Medicaid recipient, could lose coverage altogether.

Autoridades federales comparten datos de viajeros con ICE, incluso en vuelos nacionales

La Administración de Seguridad en el Transporte (Transportation Security Administration, TSA) está proporcionando a las autoridades migratorias de Estados Unidos listas con los nombres de personas que se espera viajen a través de aeropuertos del país, como parte del programa de deportaciones de la administración del presidente Donald Trump, según informó The New York Times.