News

MNJ Photo/Mariel Williams.  Bill Slagle, executive director of the Mitchell County Economic Development Commission, explains flood devastation in downtown Spruce Pine to North Carolina Secretary of Commerce Lee Lilley, center right.

MNJ Photo/Mariel Williams. Bill Slagle, executive director of the Mitchell County Economic Development Commission, explains flood devastation in downtown Spruce Pine to North Carolina Secretary of Commerce Lee Lilley, center right.

Commerce Secretary talks about recovery

North Carolina Secretary of Commerce Lee Lilley visited Mitchell County last week to discuss flood recovery with local business and government leaders. Lilley visited  a number of locations in the county, including downtown Spruce Pine and Bakersville.
MNJ Photo/Mariel Williams.  The National Park Service is still working to repair numerous landslides on the Blue Ridge Parkway, such as this one near Buck Creek Gap in Yancey County.

MNJ Photo/Mariel Williams. The National Park Service is still working to repair numerous landslides on the Blue Ridge Parkway, such as this one near Buck Creek Gap in Yancey County.

Detour: Map guides Mitchell visitors

The Blue Ridge Parkway Foundation released “Detours of Discovery” recently, a guide for tourists looking for fun ways to get around the blocked portion of the Blue Ridge Parkway while its under reconstruction.
Submitted photo.  Parkway Playhouse hosted the Appalachian Playwriting Festival this past weekend. The above photo shows a performance from last year’s festival.

Submitted photo. Parkway Playhouse hosted the Appalachian Playwriting Festival this past weekend. The above photo shows a performance from last year’s festival.

Staging Appalachia

Two years ago, Parkway Playhouse’s director of marketing, Cheyenne Dancy, pitched the idea of founding a playwriting festival specifically focused on work about Appalachia and written by regional playwrights.
Submitted photo.  In an unprecedented move, a local scholarship committee chose to give out three iterations of the Michael Wilson Scholarship this year.

Submitted photo. In an unprecedented move, a local scholarship committee chose to give out three iterations of the Michael Wilson Scholarship this year.

Mitchell graduates receive Michael Wilson Scholarship

The Michael Wilson Scholarship is a local scholarship that was created by John Wilson and his family in 2018. Each year, a scholarship committee chooses three students to interview before deciding on the winner.
Photo/University of South Carolina.  Charles Bierbauer, who retired to Spruce Pine after decades of experience as a journalist at CNN and an academic at the University of South Carolina, died last week.

Photo/University of South Carolina. Charles Bierbauer, who retired to Spruce Pine after decades of experience as a journalist at CNN and an academic at the University of South Carolina, died last week.

International CNN journalist dies at home in Spruce Pine

Emmy award-winning journalist Charles Bierbauer died at his home in Spruce Pine last week. Bierbauer, who spoke Russian and German, worked as a correspondent in the former Soviet Union and in Washington, D.C., as well as several other assignments. He was 83 years old.
Submitted photo.  Sean Morrison, Carrie James, Joe Seely and AJ Shipman show off the newly-installed BlueNet communications dish on the roof of Blue Ridge Regional Hospital.

Submitted photo. Sean Morrison, Carrie James, Joe Seely and AJ Shipman show off the newly-installed BlueNet communications dish on the roof of Blue Ridge Regional Hospital.

Hospital upgrades its IT system to prevent outages in a disaster

Beginning on Friday, Sept. 27, 2024, while Tropical Storm Helene was pummeling the area, Blue Ridge Regional Hospital lost its communication system both inside and outside of the hospital. But by 8 p.m. on Sunday, the hospital was back online.
MNJ PhotoSteffen Silvis.  Mayland professor Dr. Sherry Sherman and students J.J. Woody (left) and Jason Snyder created an interactive game to draw attention to helping the Southern Appalachian Brook Trout.

MNJ PhotoSteffen Silvis. Mayland professor Dr. Sherry Sherman and students J.J. Woody (left) and Jason Snyder created an interactive game to draw attention to helping the Southern Appalachian Brook Trout.

Inaugural festival celebrates aquatic critters

“We’re running out of everything! Can you bring more supplies?” The young sales assistant at the Tractor Food and Farms booth didn’t sound panicked but rather elated at the fact that by 11:30 a.m.