Cat 4 Hurricane Gabrielle strengthens
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Steering currents could bring Invest 93L close to North Carolina over the weekend. Expected impacts include winds, rain and dangerous surf.
A year after Hurricane Helene hit western North Carolina — dumping as much as 30 inches of rain and felling thousands of trees — countless homes still suffer from leaky roofs, mold and mildew, and rotting floors.
North Carolina has always known hurricanes, but the storms of the last decade are rewriting the state’s history.
Thousands of students across western North Carolina lost their homes a year ago when Helene hit with some of the most vicious floods, landslides and wind ever seen in the mountainous region
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Indigenous groups in Western North Carolina reflect on a year of recovery from Hurricane Helene
I've Had 2 Near-Death Experiences. Here's What I Saw When I Died.
Much of North Carolina’s Outer Banks region is under a tropical storm watch with Hurricane Erin expected to skirt the area Wednesday through Thursday, according to the National Hurricane Center.
From Hurricane Helene debris to dream home: North Carolina builder's remarkable story one year later
One year after Hurricane Helene devastated western North Carolina, resident John Saunby is building a new home using debris from the storm that would have ended up in landfills.
When Hurricane Helene hit western North Carolina in September 2024, catastrophic flooding and landslides impacted residents across the region — including
North Carolina expects coastal flooding from massive waves, tropical-storm-force winds and tidal and storm surges for much of the state shoreline, especially the Outer Banks, as well as life-threatening rip currents for most of the week, Stein said, adding, "No one should be in the ocean."
NORTH CAROLINA (WTVD) -- Hurricane Helene took the lives of more than 101 people in North Carolina. One of those deaths was a firefighter with the Fairview Volunteer Fire Department, Battalion Chief Tony Garrison.