Archived (30103)
Children categories
Dove hired back as Haywood's health and human services director
Joel Mashburn, Interim County Manager, announced today the appointment of Mr. Ira Dove as the Director of the Haywood County…
Read More
A beer by any other name: Brewery’s naming choices cause protest in Cherokee
Over the past decade or so, the craft beer explosion has ricocheted throughout Western North Carolina, bouncing through the valleys…
Read More
Alcohol referendum scheduled
A referendum vote asking enrolled members to approve a tribally owned package store and ABC store selling beer, wine and…
Read More
Budget gap $3 million for Haywood County
Although it’s still early in the budget process, Interim Haywood County Manager Joel Mashburn told commissioners that requests for the…
Read More
Haywood County revises public records policy
A flurry of contentious public records requests by a longtime local government watchdog has prompted Haywood County officials to revise…
Read More
Major development looking toward Maggie Valley
A major hotel could be coming to Maggie Valley sooner rather than later after the town recently passed a pair…
Read More
Request to increase future Sylva apartment complex’s size approved
Two years after Sylva leaders first cheered a proposal for a workforce housing complex across the road from Harris Regional…
Read More
Students talk safety: Jackson’s high school students share insights
Hours after students in schools across the nation walked out of their classrooms to protest gun violence in American schools,…
Read More
WNC students speak out on school safety
Last week, students across the country walked out of classrooms to acknowledge the 17 people shot to death at Marjorie…
Read More
Religious community opposes Jackson Brunch Bill
If the two Jackson County commissioners considering a “yes” vote on Sunday morning alcohol sales were looking to the community…
Read More
Former educator now leading Bryson City
After a 30-year career in public education, Regina Mathis is trying her hand in public administration as the new Bryson…
Read More
MLK’s ‘Poor People’s Campaign’ revived in North Carolina
Two weeks ago marked the 53rd anniversary of a watershed moment in the civil rights movement — the Selma to…
Read More
Franklin trying out new traffic pattern
The town of Franklin will begin a 90-day trial of a new one block long parking plan for Main Street…
Read More
Macon sheriff now able to seize digital forfeitures
Drug dealers are constantly finding new ways to protect their assets and the Macon County Sheriff’s office is trying to…
Read More
Regional commission completes broadband study
With the results of a regional broadband survey now available, leaders have expansive data on the underserved areas in their…
Read More
Hard times, come again no more: An evening with Scott Ainslie
Literally and figuratively, the idea of “listening” is somewhat of a lost art in our digital world. When a voice…
Read More
This must be the place: There’s a reason you should care, seriously
Sitting in a chair on a front lawn late Sunday afternoon, the sun had already disappeared behind the mountains, a…
Read More
The Swag changes hands
David and Annie Colquitt of Knoxville, Tennessee, are purchasing The Swag, a popular mountain retreat near Waynesville.
Read More
Brunch Bill hearing planned for Jackson
A public hearing at 5:30 p.m. Monday, March 19, will give Jackson County residents a chance to weigh in on…
Read More
Too often, we ignore the calls for help
Doing nothing to enhance school safety is not an option. Thoughtful gun control measures would be helpful and are one…
Read More
Maintaining a nostalgia for unique main streets
Recently, I spent time in the tri-cities of Rutherford County, N.C. Spindale, Forest City and Rutherfordton make up this trifecta…
Read More
The U.S. has become an oligarchy
By Martin Dyckman • Guest Columnist Do politicians read their mail? It depends. A recent New Yorker article on Christopher…
Read More
Books that help bridge the political divide
Time for spring-cleaning. The basement apartment in which I live could use a deep cleaning: dusting, washing, vacuuming. It’s tidy…
Read More
Scholarships available for outdoor camp
More than $25,000 in scholarships is available for kids interested in attending Youth for Christ Outdoor Mission Camp in Maggie…
Read More
Solar project finished in the Smokies
Completion of a solar energy project in the Cades Cove area of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park will result…
Read More
Trail town chow down: Franklin A.T. season launches with hiker meal
When Sharon Van Horn organized the first-ever Thru-Hiker Chow Down in Franklin, she and her husband Bill were pretty fresh…
Read More
Work crews return to Elkmont
Rehabilitation work in the Elkmont area of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park has started up again, with work crews…
Read More
Fingers still crossed
Status of the Lake Junaluska eagles remains a mystery, but I still have my fingers crossed for a successful nesting…
Read More
New pictorial book on Cherokee released
Images of America: Cherokee, Anna Fariello’s new pictorial history book, will be presented during a special event at 6:30 p.m.…
Read More
‘Let the freaks take back the night…’
The further you meander down the road of life, the more you come to realize just how haphazardly bumpy and…
Read More
Passion, politics intertwine for Haywood tax collector candidates
Outside the Haywood County Justice Center in downtown Waynesville, Haywood County Tax Collector Mike Matthews stands with a slim manila…
Read More
Relocation project leaves contractors unpaid
Months after work wrapped up to relocate Caney Fork General Store in Jackson County, multiple subcontractors who worked on the…
Read More
Officials considering armed volunteers for schools
Columbine, Sandy Hook, Stoneman Douglas — those names ring out like the bullets that once flew through their hallways, stark…
Read More
High school students in Haywood will walk out Wednesday
Right about the time this newspaper hits the stands on Wednesday, March 14, students at Haywood County’s two public high…
Read More
Beloved Man leaves behind lasting legacy
Jeremiah “Jerry” Wolfe, Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians’ Beloved Man, passed away Monday at the age of 93.
Read More
Drug crisis unit vote delayed in Cherokee
Plans to build a crisis stabilization unit in Cherokee for people battling addictions stalled this month when Tribal Council, for…
Read More
State, local boards of elections still in limbo
Gov. Roy Cooper’s legal battle challenging the Session Law 2017-6 — passed by a Republican-majority legislature — is having local ramifications…
Read More
No decision on Duke Energy rate hike for WNC
The North Carolina Public Utilities Commission has not yet ruled on a rate increase request for Duke Energy customers in…
Read More
Small increase in Haywood schools budget
Haywood County’s high-performing public schools will see a small budget increase for the FY 2018-19 school year, but at the…
Read More
Despite threats to funding, ARC soldiers on
The $100,000 grant to Haywood Community College from the Appalachian Regional Commission wasn’t the first made by the ARC in…
Read More
Maker space movement comes to Haywood
The type of traditional manufacturing that put many small towns on the map and provided a decent living to generations…
Read More
TWSA struggles with open meetings laws
When the Tuckaseigee Water and Sewer Authority held its annual meeting Tuesday, March 6, no members of the media were…
Read More
Sylva’s Creekside Oyster House to expand
Sylva’s Creekside Oyster House and Grill will soon upgrade to a new building following the Tuckseigee Water and Sewer Authority’s…
Read More
Unaffiliated candidate mounts congressional bid
The five men — three Democrats, a Republican and a Libertarian — hoping to unseat Asheville Republican Congressman Mark Meadows…
Read More
Parking decks planned for Western Carolina
Parking decks could come to Western Carolina University sooner rather than later following the Board of Trustees’ unanimous vote to…
Read More
‘Your everlasting summer. You can see it fading fast’
Half the battle is just getting out of the house and on the road. Whenever we travel, we all understand…
Read More
Psychologists, counselors and nurses will make schools safer
By Virginia Jicha • Guest Columnist I was in the process of writing about the need for school nurses when the…
Read More
Time to take back the NRA
To the Editor: I would like to add some additional comments to Martin Dyckman’s guest column in the Feb. 21…
Read More
Our senators are bought and paid for
To the Editor: Our state’s senators, Richard Burr and Thom Tillis, have consistently opposed event he most modest form of…
Read More
Liberals have lost touch with reality
To the Editor: In reference to a recent article I read in The Smoky Mountain News, maybe if you took…
Read More