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Democratic state legislators to hold Asheville town hall on federal funding cuts

Asheville, North Caroilna, USA downtown skyline at dawn.
Asheville City Government
/
Asheville City Government
The skyline of downtown Asheville at dawn.

Democratic state legislators will hold a town hall in Asheville this week to discuss the impact of federal funding cuts on Buncombe County, including the region鈥檚 ongoing recovery from Hurricane Helene.

N.C. Sen. Julie Mayfield and Reps. Lindsey Prather, Brian Turner and Eric Ager will host the event from 6-7:30 p.m. Thursday at Asheville Buncombe Technical Community College鈥檚 Ferguson Auditorium.

The event comes one week after U.S. Rep. Chuck Edwards鈥 at the same venue, where thousands of local residents turned out to voice opposition to many of the actions being taken by the Trump administration.

鈥淲estern North Carolina is already facing serious recovery challenges after Helene, and these federal cuts only add more uncertainty for our communities,鈥 Prather said in a statement. 鈥淭his town hall is about listening to those impacted and working together on solutions to fill the gaps.鈥

State and local officials have warned in recent weeks that funding freezes and cuts enacted by the Trump administration could have a devastating impact on Western North Carolina鈥檚 recovery.

In their release announcing Thursday鈥檚 event, the Democratic state legislators pointed to the potential loss of several types of federal funds, including more than $1 billion in U.S. Department Housing and Urban Development funding; nearly $1 billion in funding for low-income schools and special education programs; and up to $27 billion in Medicaid funding for North Carolina.

鈥淭hese federal cuts don鈥檛 just disappear 鈥 they create holes that communities like ours are left to fill,鈥 Mayfield said in a statement. 鈥淲e need to have honest conversations about what鈥檚 at stake and what we can do to protect our region.鈥

Those interested in attending can sign up online .

Felicia Sonmez is a reporter covering growth and development for Blue Ridge Public Radio.
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