Updated
Updated · Fox News · Jun 5
Buncombe County Funds 1st Standalone Emergency Center After Helene Killed 100-Plus
Updated
Updated · Fox News · Jun 5

Buncombe County Funds 1st Standalone Emergency Center After Helene Killed 100-Plus

3 articles · Updated · Fox News · Jun 5

Summary

  • June 2 funding approval lets Buncombe County convert a former Asheville Mall JCPenney into its first standalone emergency operations center ahead of hurricane season.
  • County officials said dedicated space is needed because Helene exposed how quickly a major disaster can overwhelm the mountain region and how critical seamless local, state and federal coordination is.
  • The new center is still a couple of years from opening, but it is planned to house emergency management functions along with public safety communications and 911 operations.
  • Nearly 20 months after Helene, trauma and housing instability persist across western North Carolina: two Fairview sisters who survived on floating debris are still cycling through FEMA housing, campers, sheds and short-term rentals.
  • Helene killed more than 100 people, destroyed thousands of homes and businesses, and forced hundreds of rescues, reshaping preparedness in a region once seen as less vulnerable to hurricane damage.

Insights

After Helene's devastation, is Buncombe County's infrastructure focus overlooking the deep psychological trauma of its survivors?
Is a $5 million command center the best defense, or should funds prioritize moving residents from high-risk flood zones?
As malls decline, could vacant department stores across America become the future of emergency response centers?