RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — North Carolina Gov. Josh Stein urged state lawmakers Monday to allocate hundreds of millions more dollars toward western North Carolina's ongoing recovery from Hurricane Helene instead of waiting on “uncertain federal assistance.”


What You Need To Know

  • Gov. Josh Stein made another request of state lawmakers to commit hundreds of millions more dollars to western North Carolina's recovery from Hurricane Helene last year

  • Stein's proposal announced Monday totals $891 million and would go to critical needs such as revitalizing local economies, repairing town infrastructure and providing housing assistance

  • He emphasized the need for state funds instead of waiting for “uncertain federal assistance"

  • The state Senate has already approved a budget proposal for the next two years and awaits the House plan. Then, lawmakers can decide whether to incorporate some of Stein's requests on Helene aid as the two chambers work out differences

The money requested — $891 million — would go toward critical needs in Helene's aftermath, such as revitalizing local economies, repairing town infrastructure and providing housing assistance, Stein said during a news conference in Union Mills in Rutherford County. He released his Helene proposal as the GOP-led General Assembly prepares to finalize its state budget this summer.

More than 100 people died as Helene tore through western North Carolina in September, destroying homesbusinesses and roadways. The storm's record-breaking devastation totaled $59.6 billion in damage and recovery needs. Recovery has been slow in parts of the region as some hard-hit mountain towns still appear ravaged by the storm nearly eight months later.

Navigating recovery is one of the chief issues Stein has been tasked with handling upon his first few months in office. Some of the first actions his administration took focused on rehabilitating the western part of the state, as well as establishing the Governor’s Recovery Office for Western North Carolina.

“This recovery is going to take a long time,” Stein said Monday. “My administration, though, is in this for the long haul. I know that the legislature is as well.”

In March, state lawmakers passed another Helene relief bill for $524 million — significantly less than the $1.07 billion Stein had requested the month before. That package added to more than $1.1 billion in Helene recovery activities appropriated or made available by the General Assembly the year prior, according to Stein’s office.

Last month, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development approved a $1.4 billion grant that would facilitate western North Carolina's long-term recovery. The Federal Emergency Management Agency — the federal organization responsible for addressing some of the immediate needs in Helene’s aftermath — has also provided more than $700 million to state and local governments, as well as directly to North Carolinians.

Talks over FEMA's effectiveness have ushered western North Carolina's recovery process into the national spotlight as President Donald Trump has suggested the agency's dissolution. As a candidate, Trump continually disparaged the agency's work in the region, which garnered support from those frustrated with a sometimes slow and complicated recovery process.

Just last week, the agency's acting chief David Richardson announced plans to shift disaster recovery responsibilities to states for the coming hurricane season.

Stein has called on the federal government to reform the agency but not to get rid of it, which he reiterated during his budget proposal announcement Monday.

More than a quarter of Stein's proposal would go toward restoring local economies and their tourism industries. Another quarter would fund infrastructure repairs, debris cleanup and resiliency projects to better protect the region from future storms. Other allocations include addressing recovery needs such as housing assistance, fixing waterways and farmlands, and food insecurity.

The state Senate has already approved its budget proposal for the next two years and awaits the House's release of its plan this week. Then, state lawmakers can decide whether to incorporate some of Stein's requests on Helene aid as the two chambers work out differences, with the goal of having a final budget enacted by July 1.

Stein earlier this month visited Marshall in Madison County in his push for more support for small businesses recovering from Helene.