Community for Hurricane Helene Survivors

Asheville Can is a community for Western North Carolina's unstoppable and resilient Hurricane Helene survivors. By locals for locals, we advocate, destroy roadblocks and provide tangible steps to get your needs met -- and pursue the life you want and deserve.

Asheville Can...

person holding white and black tiger printed textile

Help Ourselves

Some days can feel impossible, but at Asheville Can you'll always have neighbors to give you a boost, connect you with resources, and share ideas and advice.

People say you can't beat the system. Of course you can!

We have all the hacks to cut through red tape, know and defend your rights, and access the support and services you're entitled to with ease.

Sure, the game is rigged. But we've got the cheat codes.

a porch with two chairs and a table on it

Enjoy Life, Not Just Endure It

Everyone deserves:

  • food, water and the basic necessities to survive

  • health and wellness

  • safety, freedom and transportation

  • access to benefits entitled to under law without obstacles, unfair denials and nefarious red tape

  • unconditional acceptance free of discrimination

  • enough income (doing what you love, not what you do just to live) to sleep easy at night

  • and a comfortable, harassment-free, livable and affordable home to do so.

Eviction Letter

Fight for People Before Profits and Politics

Hurricane Helene amplified ongoing crises in housing, income and discrimination. The very agencies that should be our lifeline often are adversaries, not advocates.

There are landlords profiting off of people's pain. There are public servants who stopped serving the public.

Politics are just a distraction. It's not us against us. We all want the same thing: to live a life we would want our kids to replicate. We're in this fight with you.

"Well-aimed slingshots can topple giants."

(Maggie Kuhn)

Be Part of the Launch

This Helene survivor community is by Western North Carolina locals and for locals (no organizations or corporations or government agencies, although we plan a directory to find and review those). We want your input to figure out the biggest challenges locals are dealing with right now, what is falling through the cracks, and what we should prioritize. Every question is optional, and all answers will be kept confidential. We just don't want to assume what is needed most, we want to listen first.