Elections

Western NC voters cast ballots in donation center after Helene tossed Ashe County

Tim Hamm had a lot to think about when Big Horse Creek flooded.

How many more branches need to be sawed off before the roads are cleared? Is this boulder big enough to fill the hole in the bridge?

How are people going to vote?

Remnants of Hurricane Helene doused North Carolina’s rural Ashe County in rain, mud and debris on Sept. 27. It pulled the foundation out from under a century-old voting site — the site for the county’s Hurricane Precinct. The little building had no heater, Hamm said, only a wood-burning fireplace that needed constant tending.

Ashe County’s Hurricane Precinct typically hosted voters in a creekside building that is still filled with sludge and sand from Tropical Storm Helene.
Ashe County’s Hurricane Precinct typically hosted voters in a creekside building that is still filled with sludge and sand from Tropical Storm Helene. Julia Coin

A month after the storm, sand still covered the uncannily-named precinct’s floorboards, and nearby residents still spent their days digging sludge out of their rooms and restaurants.

A little over a month after the storm, it was Election Day.

Some in western North Carolina were voting in tents. Others were voting in a new place for the first time in their lives.

Two voters bubble their ballots next to diapers, cleaners and canned food inside Ashe County’s makeshift polling location for its Hurricane Precinct.
Two voters bubble their ballots next to diapers, cleaners and canned food inside Ashe County’s makeshift polling location for its Hurricane Precinct. Julia Coin

“You find us OK?” Hamm, the chief judge for the Hurricane Precinct, asked as Debbie Miller walked into the relocated site Tuesday. The new location had been combined with another precinct and a donation center.

“Well,” Miller said as she weaved through tables of clothes and cleaners, “eventually.”

The 66-year-old first went to the old schoolhouse where she’d voted every other election.

It was destroyed.

A building near Ashe County’s normal polling site for its Hurricane Precinct sits mangled and filled with sand after Tropical Storm Helene.
A building near Ashe County’s normal polling site for its Hurricane Precinct sits mangled and filled with sand after Tropical Storm Helene. Julia Coin

So she called the courthouse, and they told her where to go, she said. Six miles away, on the other side of a one-way, cliff-side dirt road, she’d be able to vote at White Oak Community Center, known locally as the Old White Oak School, a clerk told her.

Ashe County’s Hurricane Precinct was relocated from its century-old location to another community center on the other side of a one-way, dirt road.
Ashe County’s Hurricane Precinct was relocated from its century-old location to another community center on the other side of a one-way, dirt road. Julia Coin

Linda Inch’s great-grandson made sure she made it to her voting location, too.

“You going to work, grandma?” 3-year-old Levi asked as Inch packed her bag Tuesday morning.

“Yes,” she replied.

“You going to vote?” he followed up.

“Can you believe he said that?” Inch said to Hamm and two other poll workers sitting inside a makeshift voting site. They all knew each other. “He’s not even four years old yet.”

The White Oak Community Center, known locally as the Old White Oak School, hosted a storm-relief donation center as well as Ashe County’s Hurricane Precinct and Horse Creek Precinct on Election Day.
The White Oak Community Center, known locally as the Old White Oak School, hosted a storm-relief donation center as well as Ashe County’s Hurricane Precinct and Horse Creek Precinct on Election Day. Julia Coin

Ashe County, which hugs Virginia’s border, has a population of about 20,000. Lansing, the closest town to the Hurricane Precinct, has about 128 people.

In purple, swing-state North Carolina, both Ashe County and Lansing are solidly Republican. Through orange and yellow leaves — and brown and gray grass — bits of red, white and blue poked through. “Trump, Take America Back” signs and flags dotted the soggy ground after storm winds had blown campers, refrigerators and sheets into trees in September. One voter wore a Trump hat, shirt and pants as he dropped his ballot into the box.

Inch remembered when young Levi saw former President Donald Trump on TV months ago — before Helene ripped strips of tin off her roof. He looked up, listened and, in the voice of a toddler, said: “I like that man.”

“Well good,” Inch replied, “because grandma’s going to vote for that man.”

Inch said she felt most comfortable voting for Trump, who she described as “an honest man who does what he says.”

Linda Inch, 66, voted at a makeshift polling location in Ashe County. Her normal voting location in the county’s Hurricane Precinct was washed out by a flooded Big Horse Creek when Hurricane Helene fell over Appalachia.
Linda Inch, 66, voted at a makeshift polling location in Ashe County. Her normal voting location in the county’s Hurricane Precinct was washed out by a flooded Big Horse Creek when Hurricane Helene fell over Appalachia. Julia Coin

As Inch drove away in her blue Volkswagen Beetle, Hamm handed the precinct’s first curbside ballot to 72-year-old Randy Gurlacz.

The Miami-born man moved to Ashe County 20 years ago. His wife was scared of the hurricanes, he said.

“Now, here we are,” he said. “We’re in the Hurricane Precinct, you know?”

Gurlacz, who lost his left leg years ago while building bridges, cast his ballot from the passenger seat as his nephew, Tony Jaramillo, 27, and family friend, Shane Blevins, 28, bubbled in their ballots inside.

Randy Gurlacz, 72, voted curbside outside White Oak Community Center, known locally as the Old White Oak School. He lost his leg in a bridge building accident years ago, he said.
Randy Gurlacz, 72, voted curbside outside White Oak Community Center, known locally as the Old White Oak School. He lost his leg in a bridge building accident years ago, he said. Julia Coin

Jaramillo said he knew to go to the new location after checking the Board of Elections website. Other residents knew because of the beloved local radio station — their equivalent of a local TV station — 580 WKSK The Farm. Some knew simply by word of mouth.

“You just kinda hope it gets out there,” said Lansing Mayor Mack Powers, 73, of the changed polling sites.

By Tuesday afternoon, it seemed like it had.

Joyce Clark, 79, left, has lived in Ashe County for 62 years. She and her daughter, Sue Davis, 60, right, knew their voting location had changed because of the local radio station.
Joyce Clark, 79, left, has lived in Ashe County for 62 years. She and her daughter, Sue Davis, 60, right, knew their voting location had changed because of the local radio station.

“We have a whole lot going on,” he said, “and despite the importance of the election, getting the mud out of your house, having somewhere to sleep and food to eat are at least equally important.”

Hamm said the day had gone as expected, and they had a good turnout on top of the roughly 60% of voters who cast their ballots early.

“Everything was the same,” he said, “except this time I didn’t have to build a fire.”

A decorated Christmas tree sits among storm-relief donations inside Old White Oak School, which hosted voters from two precincts on Election Day.
A decorated Christmas tree sits among storm-relief donations inside Old White Oak School, which hosted voters from two precincts on Election Day. Julia Coin
Read Next

In other areas of Western NC

More people voted in Buncombe County on Election Day this year than did in 2020, the county government reported in an update at 4 p.m. Tuesday.

“We’re thrilled to see so many voters turning out today,” Buncombe County Elections Director Corinne Duncan said in a statement. “Our community has been through so much in recent weeks, but we are resilient and committed to the elections process, and there has been much to celebrate already today.”

About three hours before polls closed, students at Appalachian State University in Boone were waiting in a four-hour line to vote, journalist Lee Tauss posted on social network X.

Buncombe County had to replace or transfer 17 of its 80 voting sites because of Helene.

This story was originally published November 5, 2024 at 9:59 PM with the headline "Western NC voters cast ballots in donation center after Helene tossed Ashe County."

Julia Coin
The Charlotte Observer
Julia Coin covers courts, legal issues, police and public safety around Charlotte and is part of the Pulitzer-finalist team that covered Tropical Storm Helene in North Carolina. As the Observer’s breaking news reporter, she unveiled how fentanyl infiltrated local schools. Michigan-born and Florida-raised, she studied journalism at the University of Florida, where she covered statewide legislation, sexual assault on campus and Hurricane Ian in her hometown of Sanibel Island. Support my work with a digital subscription
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