
Articles
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1 month ago |
foxnews.com | Chelsea Torres |Bowen Kedrowicz
HURRICANE HELENE NC RECOVERY This week, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers reached a milestone in western North Carolina, removing 5 million cubic yards of debris. Hurricane Helene devastated towns across the south in September, causing record rainfall and triggering historic flooding. Seven months later, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) is still on the ground leading the clean-up effort in western North Carolina – one of those towns being Lake Lure.
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2 months ago |
foxnews.com | Chelsea Torres |Bowen Kedrowicz
Hurricane Helene recovery in North Carolina Seven months later, a small mountain town in North Carolina is still rebuilding what Helene destroyed. The town of Chimney Rock is still inaccessible to visitors. The vacation town of Chimney Rock, North Carolina, is unrecognizable after Hurricane Helene left a line of destruction across the southeast back in September, according to the town's mayor, Peter O'Leary. "It destroyed the village," O'Leary said.
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2 months ago |
es-us.noticias.yahoo.com | Chelsea Torres |Bowen Kedrowicz
Chelsea Torres, Bowen Kedrowicz29 de abril de 2025, 3:32 a.m.·2 min de lecturaLa ciudad de vacaciones de Chimney Rock, Carolina del Carolina, está irreconocible después de que el huracán Helene dejara una línea de destrucción por todo el sureste en septiembre, según el alcalde de la ciudad, Peter O'Leary. "Destruyó el pueblo", dijo O'Leary. "Se llevó la antigua Chimney Rock".
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2 months ago |
yahoo.com | Chelsea Torres |Bowen Kedrowicz
The vacation town of Chimney Rock, North Carolina, is unrecognizable after Hurricane Helene left a line of destruction across the southeast back in September, according to the town's mayor, Peter O'Leary. "It destroyed the village," O'Leary said. "It took away the old Chimney Rock."Thousands of visitors visit the mountain town on a typical summer day, but damage left behind by Helene blocked Chimney Rock off to everyone except residents.
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2 months ago |
foxbusiness.com | Sarah Alegre |Bowen Kedrowicz
close video Gulf Coast shrimpers say tariffs are a lifeline for their industry Shrimpers along the Gulf Coast are calling for stronger federal protections, saying unfair foreign trade practices and international investment are devastating their industry. Shrimpers along the Gulf Coast say they need more help from the federal government with cheap shrimp imports from countries like Ecuador, India, Indonesia, and Vietnam driving down local demand.
Journalists covering the same region

Eva Tesfaye
Coastal Reporter at WWNO-FM (New Orleans, LA)
Eva Tesfaye primarily covers news in the Greater New Orleans area, including Metairie and Baton Rouge, Louisiana, United States.
Amanda Valdin
News Producer at WDSU-TV (New Orleans, LA)
Amanda Valdin primarily covers news in New Orleans, Louisiana, United States and surrounding areas.

Don Ames
Afternoon News Anchor at WWL-AM/FM (New Orleans, LA)
Don Ames primarily covers news in New Orleans, Louisiana, United States and surrounding areas.

Jeff Hamburger
Executive Producer at WGNO-TV (New Orleans, LA)
Jeff Hamburger primarily covers news in New Orleans, Louisiana, United States and surrounding areas.
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