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 The city of Hendersonville began a paid parking program in March that included downtown streets, lots and the new parking deck.

Assistant city manager Brian Pahle told News 13 in June that while the program had been generating good revenue numbers the parking changes were impacting people from a user experience.

He said the city’s goal was to always have parking spaces available but that won’t happen if it’s always free.

But, in an effort to make it easier on drivers, city officials looked into altering some of the program, which brought them to Wednesday’s city council meeting.

Council members discussed parking changes and parking ordinance amendments.

  • Clarify that up to three license plates may be assigned to a city monthly parking permit
  • Clarify that of the three license plates assigned only one vehicle may be parked in the permitted parking facilities
  • Allowing the city manager to invoke the flat rate parking fee for special events, holidays or any other time when needed
  • Changing the increments for billing for paid parking to 15 minutes for on-street paid parking and 30 minutes for surface lots and the parking deck
  • Removing the 30-minute time limit for parking on Main Street
  • Making it a misdemeanor and adopting a $500 penalty for people climbing or sitting on the walls of the parking deck

The majority of parking violations will drop from $50 to $25.

Still, there were some residents at the council meeting who were not happy about the parking situation.

“It’s killing the businesses. The pay-to-park is killing the businesses on Main Street," one local resident said.

Mayor Barbara Volk read a comment submitted by another resident who said they were going to stop going to Hendersonville and go to more visitor-friendly towns.

“It seems that growth and greed combine to destroy the very things that make a city vital and interesting to visitors,” Volk read.

 

STORY & PHOTO COURTESY OF ABC 13 WLOShttps://wlos.com/news/local/its-killing-the-businesses-hendersonville-adjusts-parking-program-amid-public-outcry-city-council-main-street#

 
 
 
 

—The Etowah community in Henderson County continues its fight to save a local landmark, the Etowah Valley Golf and Resort. A Wilmington, NC, developer, Tribute Investment and Development, Inc., has submitted an application to Henderson County for a 242-home subdivision to replace the South Course at Etowah Valley.  Last month the developer withdrew a previous application submitted in May that proposed a 343-site RV park that would replace the South and West Courses of the 27-hole golf resort. The golf resort and many of the surrounding homes were built 56 years ago. Many residents of Etowah say this newly proposed subdivision is no better than an RV park since the plan still includes a sewage treatment plant and adds more than 2000 additional vehicles on our roads per day.  

 

Since news of the impending sale of the golf resort by its current owners to the developer broke in May, a non-profit “Etowah Valley Preservation Society” (EVPS) has sprung into action. Over the past three months, EVPS has been carefully strategizing, planning, and raising its goal of $100,000 to oppose the project. EVPS was well-represented at the Neighborhood Compatibility Meeting held on August 1, in the Thomas Auditorium at Blue Ridge Community College (BRCC). Residents of Etowah asked many basic questions during a Q & A period at that meeting, many of which were left unanswered by the developer’s representative. A recording of the meeting can be found at PreserveEtowahValley.com 

 

EVPS members also plan to show up en masse at the Henderson County Technical Review Committee Meeting on August 15, at 2:00 p.m. at 100 N. King Street. Finally, EVPS plans to fight the project at the upcoming Henderson County Planning Board Meeting on August 24, at 4:00 p.m., in the Thomas Auditorium at Blue Ridge Community College (BRCC). EVPS encourages all residents of Etowah and the surrounding communities to attend these meetings. 

 

Opposition to the proposed 242-home subdivision remains very strong: 

  1. “No RV Park” signs line many Etowah streets and roads and continue to pop up at the corner of frequently travelled roads in Henderson County. The continued use of these signs emphasizes that a subdivision is no better than the RV park. It also indicates that concern and public opposition to the proposed subdivision extends well past the immediate vicinity of the golf course. 
  2. The original petition in opposition to the project now has 2,680 signatures to date. 
  3. The Planning Board meeting location will take place in a larger facility (Thomas Auditorium at BRCC) to accommodate the large number of attendees. 
  4. A weekly newsletter goes out to more than 3000 households in the Etowah community and is posted in a public Facebook group “Preserve Etowah Valley” (which has over 800 members) and on the Nextdoor app. 
  5. EVPS is over 3/4 of the way to reaching its $100,000 fundraising goal. Community-wide fundraisers have included a “take-out” BBQ dinner catered by the Etowah restaurant which would be impacted by the project, “The Salty Landing”, on July 24. Over 550 tickets were sold. Also, a blind auction took place on August 2. Over 100 attendees bid on local art and gift cards made by or donated by local artists and businesses. Future fundraisers are in the planning stages. 
 

For more information about the Etowah Valley Preservation Society and its fight against the proposed RV park, please email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.   

 

For the latest information on EVPS, the proposed subdivision, and Henderson County meeting dates, times and locations concerning the development of the Etowah Valley Golf and Resort, visit PreserveEtowahValley.com   

 
 
 
 
 
 

DUNKIN DONUTS officiallly OPENS their SOUTHSIDE STORE in Hendersonville on Spartanburg highway at 6 am on Friday with live broadcasts on WHKP, beginning at 7 am and continuing til 10 am with Tyler Sams 'on location' at the store broadcasting back to Randy Houson on WHKP'S GOOD MORNING HENDERSONVILLE SHOW to WHKP's audience.

To celebrate, the restaurant will award free coffee for a year to the first 50 guests when it opens at 6 am Friday. 

At 8 a.m. the store will hold a ribbon cutting with local dignitaries and community partners. The free coffee winners will get a coupon book for four free medium hot/iced coffees a month for 12 months plus two bonus months — 56 coupons in all.

 Citizen Fuel franchisee Scott Shealy said DUNKIN DONUTS is happy to be so well received by area residents at their 64 East store and looking forward to serving the residents on the south side of the county from the new location on Spartanburg Hiway.

After opening day, the restaurant will be open 4 a.m.-9 p.m. Monday through Friday.  

 

 

Comments

 

The Hendersonville Honeycrisps wrapped up back to back Western Division Championships but lost to Clayton in the ONSL playoffs to end their season.
Our local pro baseball team ended up with a record of 27-13,and they were 22-9 in their division.
7,100 fans came to the Orchard to see then Honeycrisps play..the most ever.
The Honeycrisps players,coaches,and front office thank everyone for their support in 2023,and look forward to an even better 2024.
WHKP fm and am is and will remain the official radio station of our Hendersonville Honeycrisps baseball team next season.

WNC Fall Harvest Days
38TH Annual
Antique Engine and Tractor Show
 
We're inviting All to come Exhibit Agriculture Related Farm Equipment.  Load up the Trailers and come Celebrate Fall.  The Mountains are full of Color.  Apples are being sold by the singles or bushels.  Pumpkins are all a Glow.  We are looking for vendors to come sell agronomic products, quality antiques, parts, tires, mountain crafts, clean out the barn.  Vendor spaces are getting limited.  Outside spaces start at $40 dollars and up.  Inside spaces are 10 x10 start at $50 dollars and up.  Sponsorship Opportunities are available with benefits to help your business.  Set-up begins October 11th at 8am - 5pm.  Limited Camping spaces are available on event show grounds.  Visit our website AppleCountry.org for more information about WNC Fall Harvest Days.  

Featured brand inside the McGough Arena:
International Harvester - Hit n' Miss Engines of all sizes, Tractors, Lawn and Garden Tractors, Implements 
 
All other Brands will be in a separate Exhibit Area:
antique tractors, hit n’ miss engines of all sizes, 
 
Tractor pull, Saturday starting at 10am until all tractors have pulled.  Tractors must be 1964 or older starting at 3,000 lbs to 12,000 lbs.  Hook fees are $10 for one, 3 Hooks for $25.  Rules and parking instructions can be found on our website.
 
Vendor Rules and Event Schedules can be found on our website or facebook page.  

Two full days
Hit n' Miss Engines, Tractors, Vendors, Exhibitors, Tools, Crafts, Antiques and Collectibles

October 13 and 14, 2023
 
Entry Details: 8 AM to 5 PM rain or shine
 
WNC Agriculture Center Fairgrounds - Airport - Exit #40 off I-26
Between Asheville and Hendersonville, North Carolina
 

Admission: $8/day 
Children under 12 free with paid adult
Admission to all exhibitors of Farm Equipment limit to 2 people per exhibit, 3 or more $8 Adult Admission
Entrance use Gate #1 1301 Fanning Bridge Rd, Fletcher, NC 28732

Tractor Pulls - Farm Tractors 1964 & earlier on Saturday @ 10:00 am

Kids Activity Corner:  Corn Pit, Corn Cob Toss, Crafts

NC Ag Center or ACAETA is NOT Responsible for Theft or Accidents
>> No Alcoholic Beverages. No Weapon, all motorized vehicle operators must have a state driver's license.
 
Place of Event:
Western North Carolina Agriculture Center
1301 Fanning Bridge Road
Fletcher, NC 28732
 

Presented by: Apple Country Engine and Tractor Association
 

Website: AppleCountry.org
 
Phone:  828-435-0413

The City of Hendersonville has announced a series of community connection workshops being held in August. The workshops are co-sponsored by local organizations and aim to foster community connections and understanding between all community members. Please find topics and meeting details below. 

 

August Community Connection Workshops 

 

Tuesday, August 22, 2023 | 5:30pm - 7:30pm 
Hendersonville City Hall, Second Floor Meeting Room 
160 6th Avenue E. Hendersonville, NC 28792 

Co-Sponsored with El Centro of Henderson County and True Ridge 

 

Marginalization And Membership -- The Perspective of Non-dominant Immigrant Communities in Hendersonville: This participant-directed workshop surveys the opportunities that non-dominant immigrant communities have in order to become ‘‘full members’’ of the Hendersonville Community, and the social psychological factors associated with claiming civil, social, and political autonomy. We will explore how people deal with change, manage unfamiliar environments, and cope with changes to their self-evaluation and identities in their new home. We will also examine the challenges that culturally diverse environments have on people’s values, the retention of their culture, and the way they see themselves.  

 

 

Wednesday, August 23, 2023 | 6:00pm - 8:00pm 
The Whitmire Activity Center 
310 Lily Pond Dr, Hendersonville, NC 28739 

Co-Sponsored with Hendersonville Pride and PFLAG 

 

Proud To Be -- Identity and Autonomy in Our Community: This interactive workshop will help participants explore and understand how identity (specific to the LGBTQIA+ Community) is formed and influenced by experiences within the Hendersonville Community. This workshop will also examine viewpoints that underscore how the Hendersonville Community appreciates and connects with the LGBTQIA+ Community. 

 

 

Thursday, August 24, 2023 | 6:00pm - 8:00pm 
Union Grove Missionary Baptist Church 
901 Robinson Terrace Hendersonville, NC 28792 

Co-Sponsored by The Henderson County NAACP 

 

Welcome to West End: This highly interactive workshop will explore issues of gentrification, land ownership and community connection to land through a series of realistic scenarios. Participants will experience various physical situations meant to elicit conversation, reflection and critical discourse around the future of affordable housing, community legacy and city planning within Hendersonville. 

 

 

Hendersonville Community Connection Workshops are based upon the conviction that the perspectives, lived experiences and expectations of all community members are fundamentally essential to transformational and sustainable positive change. The scope and direction of the workshops is focused specifically on fostering community connections and facilitated by Ahkirah Legal and Diversity Consultants.  

For more information, visit www.hvlnc.gov.  

Henderson County Foster Parent Association teams up with Bold Rock for fundraiser
by Kari BarrowsSat, August 5th 2023, 5:31 PM EDT

Aug. 5, 2023 - The Henderson County Foster Parent Association teamed up with the Bold Rock Mills River Cidery on Saturday for a motorcycle poker run. The money raised from Saturday's event will help cover school related costs throughout the 2023-2024 school year for foster children in DSS custody. (Photo credit: WLOS Staff)

It traveled through Fletcher, Hendersonville, Chimney Rock, Lake Lure, Tryon and then back through Hendersonville.

The money raised from Saturday's event will help cover school related costs throughout the 2023-2024 school year for foster children in DSS custody.

The event brought the community together in a big way.

"It all came about because the Toy Run Association does a wonderful job doing the Christmas toys, and we wanted to do something this summer for the kids," said Hope Kim, president of the Henderson County Foster Parent Association. "And we have school coming up, and so the proceeds today will benefit school related activities throughout the year."

"I'm a motorcycle rider myself, have been since I was about 10 years old, and I used to be a former foster parent and now I give back by helping the foster parents now," said Crystal Quinn with the Toy Run Association.

Right now, the Henderson County Foster Parent Association has 127 kids in foster care, so the need is great.


For those unable to foster, there are still several ways to help out the organization. CLICK HERE to learn how.

STORY AND PICTURE COURTESY OF WLOS-TV 13

Henderson County Public Schools start their school year in just over one week.

The district will be starting classes, Aug. 14, two weeks before state law allows. It is one of at least 16 districts defying state law that says schools must start Aug. 28.

As volunteers prepared for the start of the school year during United Way of Henderson County's Day of Action on Friday, Aug. 4, News 13 asked Mark Garrett, superintendent of Henderson County schools, about the early start date.

“One of the things that we try to do here is look at student need over adult convenience,” Garrett said. “When we looked at what a 14th start does, it aligns with our community college calendar, it lets us finish the semester for our high school kids before Christmas and that holiday break. It just really makes a lot of sense at the student level and at the classroom level, and that’s where we want to put our priority."

The school calendar law was passed in 2004 after a group called Save Our Summers pressured lawmakers to set the statewide date.

Henderson, Polk and Rutherford County public schools have all approved start dates for Aug. 14.

 

STORY COURTESY OF ABC 13 WLOShttps://wlos.com/news/local/superintendent-henderson-county-public-schools-mark-garrett-voices-support-for-early-start-date-school-year#

 

The City of Hendersonville was awarded $250,000 through the Flood Mitigation Program. Congratulations to Hendersonville’s Stormwater Division on securing this funding.

Today, the Golden LEAF Board of Directors awarded $1,158,333 to support five projects through the Open Grants Program, $3,150,518 in funding for 10 projects through the Flood Mitigation Program, and $2,778,721 in funding for 24 projects through the Food Distribution Assistance Program.

A resolution was read in honor of Jerome Vick’s service on the Golden LEAF Board of Directors. Access the resolution here.

“Today, the Golden LEAF Board honored the memory of Jerome Vick,” said Golden LEAF Board Chair Don Flow. “Jerome served on the Board for 10 years. He was a tremendous ally of agriculture and leader, and a fierce advocate for North Carolina’s economy. We recognize and honor his dedication to our state and to the mission of Golden LEAF.”

The Golden LEAF Foundation Board of Directors awarded $1.2 million in funding for five projects through the Open Grants Program. These projects will support job creation and economic investment, workforce preparedness, and agriculture in Catawba, Durham, Jackson, MaconNash, and Swain counties.

  • $58,333 to Farmer Foodshare in Durham to purchase and modify a van for cold storage to expand food hub distribution and launch a community-supported agriculture program. The van is needed to pick up produce from small farms distant from Durham and for local delivery, which is expected to result in increased revenue for local farmers and new markets.
  • $500,000 to Southwestern Community College for dental equipment and supplies to support establishment of a new dental assistant program. The one-year program leading to certification as a dental assistant is expected to begin in the fall of 2023. After two years, the college will add a dental hygiene associate degree program.
  • $200,000 to the Town of Spring Hope to construct an eight inch water line along US64A to extend water just beyond the Bass Farm Sausage facility. This water line extension will support expansion at the meat packing facility, resulting in 40 new full-time jobs over two years with an annual wage of $38,400. The water line extension would also be available for new industrial development in the area.
  • $200,000 to Western Carolina University to purchase nursing curriculum subscriptions, onboarding fees, and equipment to implement a new simulated learning environment using virtual and augmented reality technologies, for Western Carolina University’s Master’s Entry Prelicensure Nursing program. 
  • $200,000 to the City of Hickory for construction of an access road and related costs in the Fairgrove Business Park that will serve 107 industrial acres, including a tract owned by the city, and support an estimated 200 new jobs at an annual wage of $55,000 and $33.6 million private investment.

The State of North Carolina appropriated the Golden LEAF Foundation $25 million for a Flood Mitigation Program. The Flood Mitigation Program awards funding up to $250,000 per project. Funds may only be awarded to units of local government.

The Golden LEAF Board awarded $1,368,100 in funding to support 10 projects through the Flood Mitigation Program in Brunswick, Cumberland, Gaston, Graham, Henderson, Jones, Robeson, Sampson, Transylvania, and Wake counties.

  • $250,000 to the City of Brevard in Transylvania County for installation of new stormwater infrastructure to mitigate flooding that occurs in Brevard’s downtown business district at the Times Arcade Alley.
  • $200,000 to the City of Fayetteville in Cumberland County to address stream erosion and flooding of roadways through data gathering, field inspection and surveying, model updates, and conceptual design, to support floodplain management and stream enhancement at Blounts Creek. 
  • $250,000 to the City of Gastonia in Gaston County for design and engineering to restore and improve Duharts Creek, whose flooding causes overtopping of roads and yards and severe erosion that has exposed wastewater pipes and threatens to expose nearby power lines to flood waters.
  • $250,000 to the City of Hendersonville in Henderson County to complete design, engineering, and permitting to route water through a 25-acre site that will serve as an area for floodwater storage that will mitigate flooding that occurs on bridge decks, railroad tracks, and two highways, and threatens businesses along the Lower Mud Creek Watershed.
  • $72,697 to the Town of Lake Santeetlah in Graham County to pave and deepen the ditches directing stormwater downhill and away from roads to culverts installed to discharge the stormwater into the lake, mitigating roadside erosion and flooding in the community that occurs during periods of heavy rain.
  • $250,000 to the City of Lumberton in Robeson County to upsize an existing culvert and realign piping to mitigate frequent flooding that occurs along First Street. 
  • $250,000 to the Town of Pollocksville in Jones County to install new infrastructure that would relieve road overtopping and prevent flooding in yards along Fourth Street.
  • $250,000 to the City of Raleigh in Wake County to complement the city’s initial assessment of flooding issues in the Kingsborough Estates area by funding activities to identify alternative solutions and design and engineer the selected solutions, complete an in-depth study of the upstream watershed, and further evaluate identified solutions.
  • $169,488 to the Town of Roseboro in Sampson County to complete preliminary design of an alleyway and both sides of West Roseboro Street that would resolve flooding of the alleyway, sidewalks, and businesses.
  • $250,000 to the City of Southport in Brunswick County to perform a city-wide asset inventory and assessment of the condition of the stormwater system, mapping of the system, and modeling to support development of a capital improvement plan to reduce flooding throughout the town.

The N.C. General Assembly appropriated $10 million to Golden LEAF for the Food Distribution Assistance Program. This program is funded by federal State Fiscal Recovery Funds through the North Carolina Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services. Funds may be used for grants to nonprofit organizations to assist organizations in becoming eligible to be partner agencies of a North Carolina food bank or enhancing or expanding the capacity of current partner agencies of North Carolina food banks. Funds may also be used for grants to nonprofit organizations to assist organizations in establishing a school-based weekend food assistance program or enhancing or expanding the capacity of current school-based weekend food assistance programs. 

“The Golden LEAF Board awarded its first round of Food Distribution Assistance Program funding to support 24 projects across the state,” said Golden LEAF President, Chief Executive Officer Scott T. Hamilton. “This funding will be used to address gaps in existing food assistance networks. We are proud that the State of North Carolina entrusted us to assist in this important work.”

The Golden LEAF Board awarded $2,778,721 to support 24 awards in the first round of Food Distribution Assistance Program funding. Golden LEAF anticipates awarding the remaining available funding at the December 2023 Golden LEAF Board meeting. Click here to view a spreadsheet of awards to organizations in Anson, Brunswick, Buncombe, Davidson, Durham, Edgecombe, Forsyth, Graham, Haywood, Henderson, Macon, McDowell, Mecklenburg, New Hanover, Onslow, Pender, Perquimans, Scotland, and Wake counties.

Since 1999, Golden LEAF has funded 2,151 projects totaling $1.2 billion supporting the mission of advancing economic opportunity in North Carolina’s rural, tobacco-dependent, and economically distressed communities.

About Golden LEAF
The Golden LEAF Foundation is a nonprofit organization established in 1999 to receive a portion of North Carolina’s funding from the 1998 Master Settlement Agreement with cigarette manufacturers. For more than 20 years, Golden LEAF has worked to increase economic opportunity in North Carolina’s rural and tobacco-dependent communities through leadership in grantmaking, collaboration, innovation, and stewardship as an independent and perpetual foundation.

The Foundation has provided lasting impact to tobacco-dependent, economically distressed, and rural areas of the state by helping create 67,000 jobs, more than $720 million in new payrolls, and more than 95,000 workers trained or retrained for higher wages.

For more information about Golden LEAF and our programs, please visit our website at www.goldenleaf.org.

ANNOUNCING

Fall Classes and Auditions for our World Premiere Musical!
Flat Rock, NC (August 2, 2023)
Playhouse Jr. Fall 2023 Classes are on sale now! Our after school classes for K-12
students help prepare the next generation of artists for success on and off the stage.

This fall, for the first time ever, each enrollee will receive a free ticket to Flat Rock
Playhouse's all-new family musical SLOWPOKE! The True Story Of A Tortoise & Hare!
premiering this November!

ALSO, back by popular demand, this semester we will be offering an adult scene study
course!

See more details and a full list of available courses at:
https://www.flatrockplayhouse.org/classes-camps

The number of course slots is more limited than usual this year, so be sure to check out
your options and reserve your slots ASAP!

Questions? Please email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Want to register over the phone? No problem! You can call our Education Director,
Lauren Hopkins at (828)693-0403 ext. 246

Upcoming Audition Workshop & Auditions

Playhouse Jr. is excited to announce auditions for our WORLD PREMIERE musical,
SLOWPOKE! The True Story Of A Tortoise & Hare!
An audition workshop for this all new musical will take place on Saturday August 19
from 9am-12pm. This one time only class session teaches the ins-and-outs of the
audition process to musical theatre hopefuls, and is a vital resource for understanding
what to expect from a professional theatre audition. Meet the writer, director,
choreographer, and more!
For more information about the audition workshop and auditions visit:
https://www.flatrockplayhouse.org/playhousejr-auditions

A little history about Flat Rock Playhouse
In 1937, a group of struggling performers, led by Robroy Farquhar, organized
themselves as the Vagabond Players. The Vagabonds worked in a variety of places
over the course of three years, and in 1940 found themselves in the Blue Ridge region
of Western North Carolina. The local and tourist community welcomed them with open
arms when they presented their first summer season of plays in a 150-year-old grist mill
they converted into The Old Mill Playhouse at Highland Lake. So successful that
summer, they returned in 1941. After WWII, the Vagabond Players reorganized, came
back to the region and opened a playhouse in nearby Lake Summit. The Lake Summit
Playhouse thrived during the post-war years and soon the Vagabond Players were
looking for a larger and permanent home. In 1952, the troupe of performers, and a
newly formed board of directors made an offer to buy an 8-acre lot in the Village of Flat
Rock. This new home made the Vagabonds “locals” and a rented big top gave birth to
Flat Rock Playhouse. As the beautiful Western Carolina region continued to grow, so
did the Playhouse and in 1961, by Act of the North Carolina General Assembly, Flat
Rock Playhouse was officially designated The State Theatre of North Carolina. What
began as a few weeks of summer performances in 1940 is now a nine-month season of
plays including Broadway musicals, comedy, drama, and theatre for young audiences.
The Playhouse’s dual mission of producing the performing arts and providing education
in the performing arts includes a professional series; a summer and fall college

apprentice and intern program; and Playhouse, Jr., year-round classes and workshops
in theatre and film for students from kindergarten through adults. Flat Rock Playhouse
now hosts over 98,000 patrons annually and is a significant contributor to the local
economy and the Arts in North Carolina.