Asheville Residents Have Running Water, But Still Can’t Drink It
“turbidity is dropping six to seven tenths of a point per day,”. Asheville’s water outage is the most severe of those that have hit several local governments in western north carolina, but drinking water has been in high demand across. An estimated tens of thousands of people in and around asheville, n. c. , are still without running water, six days after the tropical storm helene. The faucets ran dry in alana. More than half of the customers in asheville and surrounding counties don't have running water due to storm damage and sediment in the reservoir.
Ramo is among tens of thousands of people in and around asheville who still don't have running water. Two weeks after the remnants of hurricane helene hit asheville, the city is still struggling to restore clean drinking water for 417,000 people. The north fork reservoir, the. Nearly a month after the remnants of hurricane helene ravaged western north carolina, running water has now been restored to most of the region around asheville — but you can’t drink it. Asheville's water distribution system is recovering from tropical storm helene, which damaged the north fork reservoir and some neighborhoods. The city is treating the. An estimated tens of thousands of people in and around asheville, n. c. , are still without running water, six days after the tropical storm helene. The faucets ran dry in alana.