North Carolina
Can lake effect snow happen in North Carolina?
Lake effect snow has been a big talker in recent weeks, as it buried parts of Ohio, Pennsylvania and New York in feet of snow around Thanksgiving.
While this phenomenon is common in that part of the country, I wanted to see if it could happen on a smaller scale in North Carolina.
How does lake effect snow happen?
In order to get lake effect snow, you need a specific temperature differential between the surface and the air roughly 3,000 feet above it.
When arctic air moves over these relatively warmer lakes, lake effect snow gets going.
It is intense at times too, analagous to a summertime thunderstorm. In one town, you can have feet of snow. Miles down the road, you can have virtually nothing.
That’s what happened in Buffalo in late November.
The Buffalo Bills measured more than two feet of snow outside their stadium, while downtown Buffalo didn’t receive any measurable snow.
Just look at these totals from that time frame. They were measuring snow in feet in parts of upstate New York!
So…does it happen in North Carolina?
I found a case study by the North Carolina State Climate Office from January 2014.
In it, they show an example in Rocky Mount and Wilson.
Arctic air was blowing in after a prior snow storm (yeah…when those used to happen, right?!). Meanwhile, Kerr Lake was relatively warm compared to the Arctic air above.
According to the Climate Office, this generated an additional 1 to 2 inches of snow in places like Rocky Mount and Wilson.
The scale of lake effect snow in North Carolina is significantly smaller than that of the Great Lakes.
For example, Lake Erie has a surface area of more than six million acres. On average, it is 62 feet deep and oftentimes closer in proximity to Arctic air masses.
In comparison, Kerr Lake has a surface area of 50,000 acres (.08% the size of Lake Erie) and it has an average depth of 30 feet.
Therefore, the moisture load from Kerr Lake is obviously going to be significantly less than that of Lake Erie.
Any lake effect snow off Kerr Lake would be highly localized and minimal on comparison to the mammoth storms they see up north.
Another round of lake effect snow up north
Beyond our cold front this week, we won’t see lake effect snow.
However, there are several places in Michigan, northeast Ohio, western Pennsylvania and upstate New York that will see a healthy dose of lake effect in the days ahead.
North Carolina
Lowering U.S. and NC Flags to Half-Staff in Honor of North Carolina Rep. Mike Clampitt
Governor Josh Stein today ordered all U.S. and North Carolina flags at state facilities be lowered to half-staff from sunrise to sunset on Saturday, April 4 in honor of North Carolina State House Representative Mike Clampitt, who died on Wednesday, March 18, after a long battle with cancer.
Before his passing, Rep. Clampitt was serving his fourth term and recently won the GOP primary to run for a fifth term in office. A native of Swain County, Rep. Clampitt represented North Carolina’s 119th District including Transylvania, Jackson and Swain Counties. Services for Rep. Clampitt will be held in Cullowhee, North Carolina on April 4.
“Before I was sworn in as Governor, Representative Mike Clampitt was one of the first people I called as we worked to rebuild western NC after Hurricane Helene,” said Governor Josh Stein. “He was a steadfast public servant for his community in WNC, and today I am saddened by the news of his passing. May his memory be a blessing.”
Individuals, businesses, schools, municipalities, counties, and other government subdivisions are also
encouraged to fly flags at half-staff for the time indicated.
North Carolina flag announcements are issued in accordance with regulations outlined in the U.S. Flag Code.
Click for the NC State Government Flag Guide.
Sign up for the North Carolina Flag Alert list.
North Carolina
Abandoned building ordinance proposed to reduce fire and squatter concerns in Asheville
ASHEVILLE, N.C. (WLOS) — Asheville city leaders are set to consider a stricter ordinance aimed at tackling ongoing problems with abandoned buildings, as neighbors continue to report squatters and fires inside vacant properties.
On Tuesday, April 14, the Asheville City Council will vote on a proposal that would give code enforcement staff expanded authority to secure buildings that are structurally sound but still considered unsafe or a public nuisance. Securing would include putting up fencing or boarding up a property to keep squatters out.
Staff says they currently have a running list of about 30 residential and commercial properties they would target if the ordinance is approved.
COMMUNITY RAISES SAFETY CONCERNS OVER ABANDONED HOUSE IN THE RIVER ARTS DISTRICT
City officials shared photos highlighting the issue. One image showed a burned abandoned home on South French Broad Avenue from March 16. Just four days later, another photo showed the same site cleared — an outcome staff says they want to replicate to eliminate fire risks and unauthorized occupancy.
Another property on Booker Street in South Asheville, photographed in 2023, also shows signs of fire damage. Staff says they have continued monitoring that location, but are limited in what they can do under current rules.
APRIL 1, 2026 – An abandoned home in Asheville, North Carolina. (Photo: WLOS Staff)
Neighbors living near these properties say the conditions are concerning. Steve Ehly, who lives across from one abandoned home in West Asheville, supports giving compliance staff more authority to act.
“It’s run down. I don’t know that anyone’s been staying there,” Ehly said. “I’d like to see some improvement. The tax assessments and such just went up. There’s groundhogs living under there, and they’ve come over — I’ve had to set traps.”
PROPOSED ASHEVILLE ORDINANCE AIMS TO TRANSFORM ABANDONED STRUCTURES AMID SAFETY CONCERNS
Vacant buildings along Tunnel Road, including commercial buildings and vacant retail space at Innsbruck Mall, are also on the city’s radar.
Compliance coordinator Chris O’Brien said there’s a gap in the city’s current enforcement tools. As it stands, the city cannot issue violations for abandoned buildings if they are still structurally sound, even if they pose safety concerns.
APRIL 1, 2026 – An abandoned business in Asheville, North Carolina. (Photo: WLOS Staff)
“Our hope is we can create a safe site for the public, whether that means the buildings are boarded up or fully fenced,” O’Brien said.
At the former Mountaineer Inn on Tunnel Road, city crews have completed some exterior cleanup per a judge’s order allowing it. However, city staff says they lack the authority to take further action.
CITY BEGINS CLEANUP OF DEFUNCT MOUNTAINEER INN
News 13 has learned the city has now issued a “Notice of Violation” to the property owners, Radify Asheville LLC, for having an unsafe structure. The owners have 90 days to address the issue. If they fail to comply, the city could step in and board up the property.
Some residents say stronger measures are overdue. In the Montford neighborhood, homeowner James Liner said he supports a tougher ordinance.
“We’re seeing more and more homeless people coming here, and some of them have been in some of these houses,” Liner said. “They need to be either boarded up or fenced around.”
City council members are expected to vote on the proposed ordinance on April 14. Staff says they believe it will pass, noting the council is aware of the safety risks tied to these properties.
North Carolina
North Carolina’s electoral future may hinge on rural Black voters who feel ignored by Democrats
NASHVILLE, N.C. (AP) — Ricky Brinkley has lived in rural North Carolina nearly all of his 65 years, and he likes it “out in the county,” past the street lights and bustle of the small towns that carpet the landscape.
But the former truck driver can feel left out when elections roll around in this battleground state.
“People don’t come out like they should and ask you how you feel about things,” Brinkley said while he manned the counter at his daughter’s beauty supply store down the street from the Nashville courthouse. “You want somebody to vote, but you don’t want to do nothing to get the vote. No, it don’t work that way.”
Brinkley is among the rural Black residents who Democrats have often failed to mobilize as they try to dent Republican advantages here. It’s an urgent demographic puzzle for the party, which is normally strong with Black voters but tends to fall short in rural areas.
Success could help former Gov. Roy Cooper win a hotly contested U.S. Senate race this year and tilt the balance of power in Washington. It could also reshape presidential elections, providing Democrats with a wider path to the White House.
“People want to look at the word ‘rural’ in North Carolina and equate it to the word ‘white,’” said state party chair Anderson Clayton, a 28-year-old who won her job three years ago promising to expand the party beyond cities. “In my vision of a Democratic Party, when you talk about reaching out to rural voters, you are talking about rural Black voters.”
The Rev. James Gailliard, a former state lawmaker who leads a large Black congregation in Rocky Mount, put it even more bluntly.
“You don’t win this state in Durham,” Gailliard said. “You win it in the east.”
It’s about more than Cooper’s Senate bid
North Carolina is known for the university-heavy Research Triangle that includes Durham, Raleigh and Chapel Hill, along with Charlotte’s banking hub. But it also includes large swaths of small towns and rural areas where Democrats have lost ground in recent decades.
That’s not just because of white voters realigning with Republicans. It’s also because Black voters who lean Democratic don’t vote as often as their urban counterparts. Those rural Black voters are concentrated east of the triangle, extending along winding state highways through small towns, flatlands and farmland toward the Atlantic coastline.
Cooper, 68, won two terms as governor and four terms as state attorney general. However, Republicans control the state courts and the legislature, and they’ve redrawn the congressional map to expand their advantage in the U.S. House. Donald Trump carried the state for Republicans all three times he ran for the White House.
A native of rural Nash County, Cooper already in recent months held roundtable sessions with Black farmers, business owners and civic leaders in eastern North Carolina, along with students from North Carolina A&T University, a historically Black school that draws students from across the state. His campaign promises a statewide organizing effort before November.
Gailliard wants a more intentional effort
But Gailliard wants more.
The founding pastor at Word Tabernacle Church, Gailliard was among the Black state lawmakers who lost seats after Republican-led redistricting. He said regaining ground will require neighborhood-level organizing and investment from national Democrats, something he struggled to get from Kamala Harris’ 2024 presidential campaign.
“I couldn’t get any traction,” Gailliard recalled. “I begged them to bring her to Rocky Mount. I said, ‘Listen, Rocky Mount is the gateway to the East. If we crack Rocky Mount, we’ve cracked the East.’ Could not convince them to come. Two weeks later, guess who’s in Rocky Mount? Donald Trump.”
The Harris campaign sent former President Bill Clinton to the area instead.
Gailliard said Cooper needs people like him to get elected.
“Roy is a great friend, and I’m gonna run my butt off to help him in every way, but I’m not banking on his coattails,” Gailliard said. “I’m going to do the opposite. I’m going to grow coattails for him.”
The state party tries to fill gaps
Clayton, the state party chair, said the national party and its donors haven’t prioritized North Carolina early enough in recent cycles.
She said she’s relied mostly on local money to finance 25 full-time staffers, more than three times what the state party had heading into the 2022 midterms.
Bertie County Democratic chairwoman Camille Taylor, whose hometown of Powellsville has fewer than 200 residents, said she’s felt the shift.
She speaks regularly with a field organizer in nearby Greenville, the city closest to the northeastern counties with large proportions of Black residents. But she said it’s especially difficult to persuade rural voters to care about voting beyond the presidency, even though she tells them “these are the races and the people that you’re going to interact with more.”
Democrats have recruited candidates in all 170 legislative districts — two are Democratic-aligned independents — and every U.S. House district. State Supreme Court Justice Anita Earls, a noted civil rights attorney and Black woman, is running statewide for reelection.
Gailliard said he’s identified a few hundred nonprofits, neighborhood associations and other groups that can do issue-orientated work in his district as the election approaches. He wants to match each of them to specific precincts, routing money for them to reach voters and persuade them to vote.
He wants volunteers to get training from Democratic and left-leaning organizations rather than have the outsiders themselves knocking on rural Black voters’ doors.
“We can’t have 21-year-old recent college graduates from Utah knocking doors at $22 an hour in the hood,” Gailliard said. “That just does not work. They’re not a trusted messenger.”
Marginal voting changes add up
About 2 in 10 North Carolina voters in the 2024 and 2020 presidential elections were Black, according to AP VoteCast, as well as in the 2022 Senate election.
Roughly 4 in 10 Black voters in North Carolina’s last presidential election said they live in small towns or rural communities, similar to the share who said they live in the suburbs. Only about one-quarter reported living in urban areas.
Small shifts in persuasion matter, particularly when races are close. In 2008, Barack Obama became the last Democratic presidential candidate to win North Carolina, by a margin of just 14,000 votes out of 4.3 million votes cast.
Voter turnout between the 2020 and 2024 elections declined more in North Carolina counties that have larger Black populations.
Counties where Black voters make up about 30% to 40% of the electorate saw the biggest drop, with turnout falling by more than 3 percentage points. Counties with smaller Black populations saw more modest declines of about 1 percentage point. Overall, turnout remains higher in counties with fewer Black voters.
An old Cooper schoolmate just wants to be asked
Gailliard said Democrats cannot underestimate how much it means for someone to simply get asked for their vote.
“Black and rural voters are not transactional,” he said. “They are relational.”
Back in Nashville at the beauty supply store, Brinkley agreed.
“You get to be a big wheel, and you can forget where you came from,” Brinkley said. “I ain’t gonna say Roy forgot. He’s a hometown guy, so to speak, but I don’t expect to see him out here walking.”
Brinkley made it clear that if he votes, it would be for Cooper and other Democrats — but only if he votes.
“I could. I could. I may vote,” he said. “There’s just so much going on.”
___ Sweedler reported from Washington. Associated Press journalist Linley Sanders in Washington contributed to this report.
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