North Carolina
Here’s how Hurricane Helene brought “biblical devastation” to western North Carolina in a near “worst-case scenario”
Hurricane Helene has proved to be disastrous for Appalachia, as massive amounts of precipitation from the storm caused rampant flooding that has devastated several towns and killed dozens of people. On Monday, the North Carolina State Climate Office provided a picture of how the “monster storm” was nearly a “worst-case scenario for western North Carolina.”
“Torrential rainfall from the remnants of Hurricane Helene capped off three days of extreme, unrelenting precipitation, which left catastrophic flooding and unimaginable damage in our Mountains and southern Foothills,” a post from the office says. “… the full extent of this event will take years to document – not to mention, to recover from.”
Here’s how the climatologists said it happened.
North Carolina was saturated with rain before Helene hit
As Helene became a Category 1 hurricane in the Gulf of Mexico — more than 500 miles and 30 hours away from where it would eventually make landfall in Florida — western North Carolina was already seeing rain. The climate office says that Helene’s outskirts were feeding tropical moisture to slow-moving storms that had formed along a stalled cold front.
By midnight on Thursday — roughly an hour after Helene’s landfall 10 miles north of Steinhatchee, Florida — Asheville Airport in North Carolina had already seen more than 4 inches of rain. That downpour continued before Helene’s outerbands even moved in. By Thursday night, Yancey County, which sits just south of Erwin, Tennessee, where floodwaters became so bad that people were trapped on the roof of a hospital, had seen more than 9 inches of rain.
Water was already beginning to inundate cities, “all while the heaviest rain from Helene was just beginning to fall,” the climate office said. The more than 300 miles of tropical storm-force winds Helene produced only amplified the situation, pushing more moisture up mountains.
“The storm’s impacts were especially long-lasting because of its massive size. It developed in a high-humidity environment over the warm Gulf of Mexico, which let it grow and strengthen unimpeded,” the office said. “…From the start of the precursor frontal showers on Wednesday evening to the heart of Helene moving through on Friday morning, it was one of the most incredible and impactful weather events our state has ever seen.”
Record rain brings reports of “biblical devastation”
From Wednesday to Friday, the office said that there were more than 8 inches of rain across the western North Carolina mountains, with some areas seeing a foot or more. The highest rainfall total was in Busick, with a three-day total of 31.33 inches — more than 2.5 feet.
At least a dozen weather stations recorded their wettest three-day periods on record, the office said. Asheville Regional Airport lost communications on Friday morning after Helene’s landfall, but had already reported just under 14 inches of rain. That amount, the office said, was “nearly three months’ worth of precipitation … in less than three days.”
All of that rain caused rivers to flood, landslides and mudslides, leading to rescues across several counties.
In Buncombe County, home to Asheville, Emergency Services Assistant Director Ryan Cole told the Citizen-Times that “catastrophic devastation” didn’t accurately describe the impact the deluge had.
“It would go a little bit further and say we have biblical devastation through the county,” Cole said. “We’ve had biblical flooding here and it has been extremely significant.”
The newspaper quoted county manager Avril Pinder as saying, “this is looking to be Buncombe County’s own Hurricane Katrina.”
Rare mountain tornado as Helene’s winds move in
“Helene brought the full suite of hurricane impacts to North Carolina,” the climate office said, “and in full force just hours after its landfall at Category-4 strength.”
The winds from Helene were felt across western North Carolina, with the Charlotte Airport recording the strongest wind gusts it’s seen since a thunderstorm microburst in August 2019. The winds, which surpassed hurricane speeds in some places, contributed to widespread power outages. Millions were left without power across several states because of Helene, and as of Tuesday morning, hundreds of thousands remain without electricity in North Carolina alone.
On Wednesday evening, as the state battled existing storms ahead of Helene, a rare mountain tornado formed in Watauga County, the first it had seen since 1998. The day after Helene made landfall, at least six tornadoes were confirmed, including an EF3 in Rocky Mount that destroyed several buildings.
A historic and deadly storm
CBS News has confirmed that at least 131 people across several states were killed by Helene. Buncombe County alone has reported at least 40 deaths, including a 7-year-old who was swept away by floodwaters with his grandparents.
While hundreds of people were able to be rescued, there have been even more requests for welfare checks. And given the severity of the damage, the climate office said that suggests “the death toll is likely to climb as hard-hit areas are finally accessed in the coming days.”
“Sadly, our state’s long-running benchmark for deaths during a tropical event – approximately 80 during the mountain region’s July 1916 flood – could be in jeopardy from this storm that has already broken plenty of other records,” the climate office said, adding that the 1916 event was the area’s flood of record for more than a century — a title that “now belongs to Helene instead.”
Several rivers surpassed their highest-ever crests by several feet, including the Swannanoa River, which saw “the worst flood along the river since North Carolina became a state,” the office said.
As unprecedented as Helene’s impact on the region was, there is a chance it won’t be the last.
“The rapid intensification of Helene over the Gulf, the amount of moisture available in its surrounding environment, and its manifestation as locally heavy – and in some cases, historically unheard of – rainfall amounts are all known side effects of a warmer atmosphere,” the office said.
Last year was already the warmest humans had ever recorded and 2024 has seen countless heat records. The continued use of fossil fuels releases greenhouse gases that are trapping heat within the atmosphere, increasing average temperatures that fuel extreme weather events like Helene.
It’s unclear when an event like Helene would downpour on Appalachia again, but the climate office is near-certain about one thing: “We won’t see another Helene in the Atlantic.”
Officials often retire hurricane names when they are particularly devastating, and while such action has yet to be announced, the climatologists suggest it may only be a matter of time.
North Carolina
Inside North Carolina’s Small Business Centers and their role as ‘economic development engines’
Many businesses begin with an idea followed by a vital question: Is this idea feasible?
In North Carolina, there are 58 Small Business Centers (SBCs) — one at each of the state’s community colleges — dedicated to helping people answer this question.
In 2025, there were 1.1 million small businesses in North Carolina, accounting for 99.6% of businesses across the state. These small businesses employed over 1.8 million people, which makes up 44.2% of the state’s private-sector workforce, and they contributed to the creation of 52,820 jobs in 2024, underscoring the vital role small businesses play in the state’s economy and labor market.
SBCs support these small businesses by providing no-cost counseling, training, and technical assistance to entrepreneurs and small business owners at any phase in the business cycle. One SBC director, responding to an EdNC survey, described the centers as “the first welcoming place where everyday people can explore a business idea without feeling embarrassed, overwhelmed, or dismissed.”
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To document the landscape of SBCs in North Carolina, EdNC conducted an online survey from March 12 to April 2, 2026. In the survey, 30 SBC directors answered questions about opportunities and challenges facing their center. Follow-up interviews were conducted with Anne Shaw, director of the Small Business Center Network, and SBC directors at Southeastern Community College and Surry Community College.
This article explains what Small Business Centers are, describes the role they play in local economies, and highlights challenges directors face that limit their ability to meet demand.
What are Small Business Centers?
Each of North Carolina’s 58 community colleges houses a Small Business Center, forming a statewide network that helps individuals translate their business dreams into reality. Together, these centers make up the Small Business Center Network (SBCN), which is housed within the N.C. Community College System (NCCCS).
SBCs provide counseling, training, and technical assistance to entrepreneurs at every stage of the business cycle, ranging from individuals exploring potential ideas to established businesses looking for growth opportunities.
“When they come to us, they’re bringing their precious dream, and it is a privilege to help them build that out, plan it, nurture it, grow it, and turn that dream into the reality of a business that is … really adding to the richness of a community,” said Shaw.
While SBCs are funded by the NCCCS and housed within individual community colleges, they are not just an on-campus program. Instead, SBCs are community-facing, meaning they are designed to serve the broader public. The services SBCs provide are free and available for anyone in the state of North Carolina, and SBCs primarily serve members of the public who may not have an existing connection to the community college, Shaw said.
Services provided
No matter what kind of idea you’ve got, we can help you get that business off the ground.
— Anne Shaw, SBCN Director
All SBCs offer a core set of services focused on the fundamentals of entrepreneurship, including guidance on how to start a business, manage finances, market products, and navigate taxes and administrative burdens. Demand for different services vary by SBC, and survey respondents identified startup guidance, marketing, financial management, and business development as their most common service areas. The SBCN aggregates training opportunities across all SBCs on its website.
While SBCs provide a wide range of services, Nathan Moore, director of the SBC at Southeastern Community College, said the most impactful work happens beyond workshops and training. Through one-on-one counseling, SBC staff work directly with clients to evaluate ideas, troubleshoot challenges, and guide decisions over time, and Moore views this as one of the most effective services.
SBCs are often misunderstood as “just a training program,” he said, when in reality, they support businesses from conception to fruition.
Funding sources

SBCs are primarily funded by the General Assembly through the N.C. Community College System. At minimum, the base allocation for each SBC supports salary and benefits for one full-time Small Business Center director and $9,000 for instructional costs.
In addition to this base allocation, SBCs can receive additional performance-based funding, which is determined via six metrics.
These measures include the number of businesses started, number of jobs created, number of jobs retained, number of counseling clients, number of counseling hours, and the number of small businesses in the service area. This funding model ensures baseline access to funding across all SBCs while simultaneously rewarding centers for generating positive economic outcomes and providing more funding for centers in geographic areas that serve more small businesses.
In 2024-25, total state funding for SBCs was roughly $10 million.
Some SBCs supplement state funding with local college funding, grants, or donations; however, these secondary sources often make up a small portion of funding, with most SBCs relying primarily on state allocations.
Of the 30 SBC directors EdNC surveyed, 17 SBCs said they receive funding beyond the state allocation, and most of those respondents said additional funding made up less than 10% of total funding. Therefore, most centers rely heavily on state funding, which determines their capacity and the scope of services they are able to provide.
Staffing structure
Most SBCs operate with limited staff, often employing just one full-time director. The base funding provided by the state ensures salary and benefits for a full-time director.
However, Shaw’s vision of an ideal SBC staffing model would include a full-time director, a program assistant, and access to business counselors who are either part-time or contracted.
“It just seems like there’s never enough capacity to meet the needs of all the business owners that are calling in and emailing and dropping in, stopping by to get the help that we provide,” said Shaw.
Of the 30 SBC directors EdNC surveyed, 18 SBCs reported having only one full-time equivalent employee, with an average of 1.33 staff per center. Many directors expressed challenges with current staffing capacity, as they are often required to take on multiple roles to balance counseling, programming, outreach, and administrative responsibilities.
Common misconceptions
One of the most common misconceptions is that Small Business Centers are the same as the Small Business Administration (SBA), at least in terms of services offered; however, they are distinct.
The SBA is a federal agency that offers “counseling, capital, and contracting expertise” to small businesses. They are the only national agency with a specific focus on small businesses, and unlike SBCs, they have the capacity to offer funding for small business owners.
Of the 30 SBC directors EdNC surveyed, one-third said that entrepreneurs seeking their services commonly expected them to offer financial support, such as grants or loans, which SBCs do not provide. Instead, SBCs can help clients access capital by connecting them to financial institutions or individuals who can help and by providing one-on-one guidance and counseling.
Across interviews and survey responses, several other misconceptions about SBCs were identified. SBC directors shared that people often believe that SBCs are only for startups, are only available to community college students, and only offer training programs.
Directors described these misconceptions as understating the scope of their work. In reality, they said SBCs are community-based support systems working to provide ongoing, individualized guidance to entrepreneurs and small business owners. Survey respondents described SBCs as “boots on the ground,” “acting as a high-stakes consulting firm for the underserved,” and “the collective brainpower of the entire state” within their communities.
“Small Business Centers are economic development engines, not just class providers,” said Moore. “We measure success by how many businesses survive, grow, and create jobs.”
The impact of Small Business Centers
The impact of SBCs is traditionally measured via the number of businesses started and the number of jobs created or retained. Directors expressed that much of their work takes place well before those outcomes as they are involved in facilitating conversations, initiating referrals, and cautioning risky decisions throughout the entire business development process.
For Moore, fulfilling these duties involves supporting both economic and community development. On any given day, Moore said he may meet with county leaders about planning and zoning, counsel a business owner looking to expand without taking on additional debt, or connect a prospective entrepreneur with local partners.
“Economic development starts with something as simple as a trusted conversation right here at the community college,” he said.
Fostering community connections
SBCs often bridge relationships between entrepreneurs and organizations that support business growth. Shaw said that centers work with chambers of commerce, banks, accountants, the North Carolina Department of Revenue, the Secretary of State’s office, the federal Small Business Administration, the federal Small Business and Technology Development Center, and other state and local partners. The goal, according to Shaw, is not to duplicate services, but to help entrepreneurs access the right resources at the right time.
At Surry Community College, the SBC recently relocated from campus to a coworking space in downtown Mount Airy called InterWorks. This move has made the SBC more visible to the public, said Lesa Hensley, director of the Surry Community College SBC.
Prior to relocation, Hensley said, the center was located in a classroom building on campus, where it saw less walk-in activity. Since moving downtown, she said more people have dropped in and more community members have become aware that the center’s services are available to anyone.
“This is my home base, but I’m still out and about in the community. It’s just brought awareness to the Small Business Center,” she said of the relocation. “I’ve been doing it, and it’s been around for a long, long time, and there’s people (who say) ‘I had no idea that you offered these free classes and counseling.’”
Survey responses emphasized that where SBCs are located, how visible they are, and how connected they are to local partners can shape awareness of and demand for services among entrepreneurs.
Serving rural communities
Several directors emphasized how essential SBCs are to rural communities, in particular, as these areas often have fewer places for entrepreneurs to turn to for no-cost business support.
In Columbus County, Moore said, small business support comes in many forms due to the diversity of income and needs. Small businesses “may be a family farm … it might be a tradesperson hiring their first employee, or some big main street storefront,” each of which require tailored approaches. Collectively, these small businesses sustain the local tax base and better their communities.
Additionally, Moore said the community college is often the most trusted institution in rural communities, positioning the SBCs in a space where individuals may already turn to seek support.
“That’s why the work of the SBC matters so much in rural North Carolina,” Moore said. “When you think about the 58 community colleges, all the SBCs are helping families create stability, because every job matters in … our community.”
This theme was also present in survey responses. One SBC director wrote: “Because rural small businesses can’t afford $250/hour private consultants, SBC directors often have to act as CFO, Marketing Director, and Operations Manager all at once.”
Hurricane Helene response
SBCs also provide support in times of crisis, such as following an economic or natural disaster. As covered in EdNC’s playbook on Hurricane Helene recovery, SBCs played a pivotal role in supporting western North Carolina businesses after the storm, providing disaster counseling and aiding business owners in navigating recovery challenges.
This support included guidance on insurance claims, loss assessments, rebuilding financial records, marketing, and applications for grants and recovery loans to replace inventory and restore damaged property. Some SBCs also helped businesses secure temporary working-spaces in cases where their physical locations had been destroyed.
Examples of recovery initiatives led by SBCs include:
These responses highlight the flexible support SBCs can provide in times of need and their economic impact on local communities.
Impact and outcomes
To track the impact of SBCs, every training, counseling interaction, and client note is recorded in the SBCN’s client management system, allowing the network to report how state investments are being used.
In fiscal year 2024-25, SBCs impact across the state included:
- 7,339 jobs created or retained
- 902 business startups
- 16,132 counseling hours provided to 6,683 total clients
- 4,345 training events with 44,043 total attendees
According to an SBCN 2024-25 economic impact analysis shared with EdNC, the network reported an estimated $440.5 million in total economic impact, with each state dollar invested in SBCs generating roughly $44 in statewide economic activity.
While these numbers help quantify the network’s impact, some directors said they do not entirely capture the scope of SBC work. For example, Moore expressed that current reporting often misses how centers support workforce pathways, student entrepreneurship, trades-to-ownership pipelines, and local collaboration with chambers and economic developers.
“We’re a huge, strong engine of local prosperity that connects to every other area,” Moore said.
You can read success stories about the impact SBCs have on businesses in this awards announcement.
Stories from Small Business Centers
Challenges facing Small Business Centers
Even as SBCs work to serve their communities, challenges remain. In survey responses and interviews, directors expressed challenges related to funding and staffing, access to capital for small businesses, and awareness and demand, all of which impact how much support centers are able to provide.
Funding and staffing
In EdNC’s survey, 17 of 30 SBC directors identified funding as one of their center’s biggest challenges, with directors saying that funding constraints hinder their ability to hire staff, contract with field experts, attend professional development, market services, and respond promptly to all client needs.
Shaw said the SBCN is grateful for the state’s current investment, as their impact and success would not be possible without this support; however, she said that additional funding would help centers better meet existing demand.
“Do we need more money? We absolutely do need more money, and that’s mainly because we have people standing in line to get our service,” Shaw said. “It’s difficult to meet all the need that’s out there.”
Funding limitations are closely related to staffing constraints, as it requires money to hire employees, and state funding only covers a single, full-time director. In EdNC’s survey, 14 directors identified staffing as one of their biggest challenges, and 18 centers reported only having one full-time equivalent employee. Shaw’s ideal staffing model, as aforementioned, would include a full-time director, a program assistant, and access to a part-time or contracted business counselor.
One survey respondent described themselves as “one person with an entire center to run,” as they are responsible for clients, partnerships, programming, and other duties, making it difficult to build capacity.
This sentiment was echoed by Moore, who said additional administrative support would allow him to spend more time on the ground with businesses and community partners. Without that support, directors must balance direct client engagement with follow-up work, outreach, and administrative responsibilities.
Access to capital for small businesses
In EdNC’s survey, 29 of 30 SBC directors identified access to capital as an emerging need for small business owners.
SBCs do not provide direct funding for small businesses; instead, they help entrepreneurs understand their financing options, prepare for loan applications, and connect with lenders and partners.
This can create a mismatch between business readiness and available capital, specifically in rural communities. One survey respondent describes the impact of limited access to capital, saying, “a Tier 1 county means local entrepreneurs often lack the personal collateral or high credit scores required by traditional banks. This creates a ‘bottleneck’ where the SBC can provide the knowledge, but the local financial ecosystem lacks the liquidity to move those businesses from the planning phase to launch.”
Moore and other survey respondents echoed this concern. Many clients approach SBCs looking for grants. However, Moore said, “there isn’t some secret bucket of money” dedicated to for-profit companies. To address this gap, directors help clients think carefully about available financing options and their associated risks.
Awareness and demand
In EdNC’s survey, 20 of 30 SBC directors identified awareness of services as one of their center’s biggest challenges.
Lack of awareness can limit who receives support, especially when community members believe SBCs are only for students, only support startups, or only provide workshops. For example, several directors said that they often have to explain to community members that the SBC’s services are free to any member of the public and that services are available to both established and startup businesses.
At the same time, some directors also reported increasing demand for their SBC’s services. At Surry Community College’s SBC, Hensley said the relocation off campus has increased demand and awareness. Hensley also highlighted professional development programs for SBC directors as important opportunities to increase awareness and impact.
Hensley was recently certified to teach a “Pitch It” program, and she now leads an eight-week class for 16 entrepreneurs that guides participants through marketing, business plans, financials, break-even points, and market research. She said that certifications and training, like “Pitch It,” allow directors to bring higher-quality services back to their communities, attracting more clients. However, training and conferences come with a cost, which can create barriers for some SBCs.
Other barriers
Directors also highlighted other challenges such as physical space limitations, administrative burdens, technological advancement, and finding collaborative partners and field experts. While not as common as the aforementioned barriers, these challenges can impact the daily function of centers, as they can reduce responsiveness, limit counseling capacity, make outreach more difficult, and constrain opportunities for specialized support.
Looking ahead
North Carolina’s Small Business Centers play a critical role in helping entrepreneurs start and sustain businesses, navigate challenges, and connect with resources, supporting individuals and the communities they serve.
Across EdNC’s survey and interviews, directors expressed that they need more funding, more staff, broader awareness, and stronger access to capital for small business owners to better meet the needs of local business owners. These needs are particularly vital in rural communities where the local SBC may be one of the few places aspiring and established entrepreneurs can turn for no-cost guidance.
“In a rural county like Columbus, this impact is deeply personal, because one successful business can support an entire family and sometimes multiple generations,” said Moore.
For Shaw, the growing demand facing SBCs highlights both a success and a challenge.
“When you’re good at what you do, you get more to do,” she said. “But at some point, you’ve got to have some help to keep delivering on those promises.”
North Carolina
USC’s College World Series hopes shattered in heartbreaking loss to North Carolina
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. — Two outs away, and then the ultimate pain.
USC baseball’s 25-year College World Series drought continued Sunday with an agonizing 4-3 loss to No. 5-seed North Carolina in Game 3 of the Chapel Hill Super Regional after the Tar Heels scored two runs in the bottom of the ninth inning.
USC (48-18) nearly forced extra innings when Owen Hull hit a 2-0 pitch into the left-field corner in foul territory, but the ball fell between three Trojans. Hull then lined the next pitch into the gap in left-center field for a walk-off double to send the Tar Heels to Omaha in a heartbreaking, season-ending loss for USC.
The Trojans took a 3-2 lead to the bottom of the ninth and even got the first out. USC reliever Adam Troy then walked North Carolina third baseman Cooper Nicholson before falling behind 3-0 to nine-hole hitter Carter French, leading USC coach Andy Stankiewicz to make a pitching change mid at-bat.
He went to Chase Herrell, and French lined a 3-2 single through the right side. Jake Schaffner tied the score on a sacrifice fly.
USC coach Andy Stankiewicz talks to his players after their season-ending loss to North Carolina.
(Laura Wolff / For The Times)
USC failed to capitalize on a heroic start from pitcher Andrew Johnson, who gave up seven hits and two earned runs while striking out four and walking two over 7⅔ innings.
Kevin Takeuchi and Andrew Lamb hit solo home runs for the Trojans in the fourth and fifth innings, but the Trojans squandered scoring opportunities with runners in scoring position in the seventh and ninth innings.
North Carolina
NC Lottery Powerball, Pick 3 Day results for June 6, 2026
The NC Lottery offers several draw games for those aiming to win big.
Here’s a look at Saturday, June 6, 2026 results for each game:
Winning Powerball numbers from June 6 drawing
16-32-55-59-64, Powerball: 03, Power Play: 3
Check Powerball payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Pick 3 numbers from June 6 drawing
Day: 4-7-2, Fireball: 4
Evening: 6-1-1, Fireball: 3
Check Pick 3 payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Pick 4 numbers from June 6 drawing
Day: 8-1-5-5, Fireball: 8
Evening: 9-2-3-1, Fireball: 0
Check Pick 4 payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Cash 5 numbers from June 6 drawing
03-07-12-22-29
Check Cash 5 payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Double Play numbers from June 6 drawing
03-11-14-20-30
Winning Millionaire for Life numbers from June 6 drawing
03-13-18-35-48, Bonus: 04
Check Millionaire for Life payouts and previous drawings here.
Feeling lucky? Explore the latest lottery news & results
Are you a winner? Here’s how to claim your lottery prize
All North Carolina Lottery retailers will redeem prizes up to $599.
For prizes over $599, winners can submit winning tickets through the mail or in person at North Carolina Lottery Offices. By mail, send a prize claim form, your signed lottery ticket, copies of a government-issued photo ID and social security card to: North Carolina Education Lottery, P.O. Box 41606, Raleigh, NC 27629. Prize claims less than $600 do not require copies of photo ID or a social security card.
To submit in person, sign the back of your ticket, fill out a prize claim form and deliver the form, along with your signed lottery ticket and government-issued photo ID and social security card to any of these locations:
- Asheville Regional Office & Claim Center: 16-G Regent Park Blvd., Asheville, NC 28806, 877-625-6886 press #1. Hours: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. This office can cash prizes up to $99,999.
- Greensboro Regional Office & Claim Center: 20A Oak Branch Drive, Greensboro, NC 27407, 877-625-6886 press #2. Hours: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. This office can cash prizes up to $99,999.
- Charlotte Regional Office & Claim Center: 5029-A West W. T. Harris Blvd., Charlotte, NC 28269-1861, 877-625-6886 press #3. Hours: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. This office can cash prizes up to $99,999.
- NC Lottery Headquarters: Raleigh Claim Center & Regional Office, 2728 Capital Blvd., Suite 144, Raleigh, NC 27604, 877-625-6886 press #4. Hours: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. This office can cash prizes of any amount.
- Greenville Regional Office & Claim Center: 2790 Dickinson Avenue, Suite A, Greenville, NC 27834, 877-625-6886 press #5. Hours: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. This office can cash prizes up to $99,999.
- Wilmington Regional Office & Claim Center: 123 North Cardinal Drive Extension, Suite 140, Wilmington, NC 28405, 877-625-6886 press #6. Hours: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. This office can cash prizes up to $99,999.
Check previous winning numbers and payouts at https://nclottery.com/.
When are the North Carolina Lottery drawings held?
- Powerball: 10:59 p.m. Monday, Wednesday, and Saturday.
- Mega Millions: 11 p.m. Tuesday and Friday.
- Lucky for Life: 10:38 p.m. daily.
- Pick 3, 4: 3:00 p.m. and 11:22 p.m. daily.
- Cash 5: 11:22 p.m. daily.
- Millionaire for Life: 11:15 p.m. daily.
This results page was generated automatically using information from TinBu and a template written and reviewed by a Carolina Connect editor. You can send feedback using this form.
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