Who Cares?: Locals feel ignored after COVID vaccine adverse events
Volume
28
/ Issue 24
Cover Design Credit:
Scott SouthwickCover Photography Credit:
iStock
Many Western North Carolina residents who have experienced adverse events after receiving COVID-19 vaccines say their concerns have been minimized or ignored by health care providers, driving mistrust about vaccinations and the medical establishment.
arts
Heather Newton revisits the ’70s in new short story collection
The Asheville-based author's latest work explores tense times in Northern Georgia.Q&A with Jazmin Whitmore, owner of plus size consignment shop More to Love
Jazmin Whitmore always enjoyed fashion, yet struggled to afford buying clothes. As a plus-size woman, finding items in her size was also frustrating. It’s a struggle familiar to many women.…Around Town: Local talk focuses on Black Appalachian musical innovators
The Swannanoa Valley Museum & History Center offers a workshop on finding stories in the natural world. Plus, the Western North Carolina Historical Association presents a talk on African American…food
What’s new in food: Dough House Vegan Donuts opens in Black Mountain
The Trashy Vegan owners launch a new doughnut shop in Black Mountain. Plus: Asheville Restaurant Week 2022 arrives; Spicewalla and Poppy's Handcrafted Popcorn collaborate; and plenty more!news
Local resources support WNC’s first-generation college students
In April, Tanya Ledford left a 22-year-long education career teaching history and English at public schools in Henderson and Polk counties. But Ledford’s new job hasn’t taken her far from…Asheville Archives: The Asheville Advertising Club launches, 1922
In pursuit of truthful marketing, the Asheville Advertising Club formed in 1922. The group grabbed many headlines early on, but its contributions failed to draw attention as the years progressesLocal handling of COVID vaccine troubles breeds medical mistrust
Many Western North Carolina residents who spoke with Xpress say they shared their negative responses after COVID-19 vaccination with health providers. But they also say their concerns have been minimized…Green in brief: King’s Bridge offers new public land in Mills River
Hendersonville-based Conserving Carolina transferred the 87-acre property, a former sod farm on the banks of the French Broad River, to the N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission after purchasing it for $440,000…Buncombe continues mask mandate amid record COVID spread
The Buncombe County Board of Commissioners members unanimously voted Jan. 4 to extend the county's indoor mask mandate through Wednesday, Feb. 16. The extended mask requirement does not contain any…opinion
Letter: Asheville’s homelessness predicament
"Signing off on discordant behavior, whether by ignoring it, being apathetic or taking the 'easy' way out and just not dealing with it helps no one."Letter: The city’s crusade against the homeless
"The homeless, their dignity, their civil rights and their belongings are regularly being bulldozed by those with power in Asheville."The future of Coolville
"By the end of the decade, I predict that … Newbies who, in 2022, called out longtime residents as NIMBYs for opposing unbridled development will, by 2029, be NIMBYs themselves."