At our Policy on Tap on Oct. 27, 2025, three local leaders shared what’s next for small business support, local contracting and long-term resilience. We were pleased to have James Shelton and Marcus Kirkman from the City of Asheville and Christine Laucher of Mountain BizWorks on hand to share resources and updates important to the business community.
Read below for our recap or click to view the presentation slides.
James Shelton, Community Development Division Manager for the City of Asheville gave an overview of recovery funding. Asheville has received $225 million in federal Community Development Block Grant-Disaster Recovery (CDBG-DR) funds – one of the fastest post-disaster allocations in the nation. CDBG-DR programs include $31M for housing, $125M for infrastructure and $2M for public services.
$52 million has been allocated to economic revitalization programs including $30 million for revitalization of flooded commercial districts (site development, facility improvements, flood-proofing and arts and cultural support) and $5 million for workforce development (skilled labor and specialized training benefiting recovery and rebuilding efforts).
$17 million will directly support small businesses through grants and technical assistance focused on keeping doors open, retaining jobs and re-establishing operations. The Asheville Chamber partnered with the City and Go Local Asheville to gather input from business stakeholders to inform the small business support in alignment with our Advocacy Agenda.
The City will partner with nonprofit and institutional subrecipients that specialize in small business support. A Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) opened at the end of October with program rollout expected spring 2026.
In order to qualify, businesses must:
Shelton encouraged businesses to prepare now:
“These funds are about stabilization and continuity,” Shelton emphasized. “Small businesses are the foundational pillar of Asheville’s economy.”
Learn more: AshevilleRecovers.org
Marcus Kirkman, Business Inclusion Manager for the City of Asheville, brought the conversation from funding to opportunity, specifically how local, minority-owned and women-owned businesses can tap into the city’s contracting pipeline.
Following the storm, Asheville prioritized hiring local small and MWBE firms for debris removal. One small landscaping business grew its equipment fleet and hired multiple crews through recovery contracts. “That’s what this is all about,” Kirkman said. “Local businesses creating local jobs.”
Kirkman outlined several steps to get started:
He also manages an email listserv of 300+ businesses, sharing bid notices and networking opportunities several times a week. “Community is the operative word in Community Economic Development,” Kirkman reminded attendees. “When we engage meaningfully, we all create change.”
Register as a vendor: ashevillenc.gov/purchasing
Christine Laucher, Partnership Manager at Mountain BizWorks, highlighted the organization’s rapid and ongoing response to Helene’s economic impact.
Just ten days after the storm, Mountain BizWorks launched the WNC Strong Helene Business Recovery Fund, which has since deployed $47 million in 800 loans. Thanks to recent state action, the fund now offers:
Beyond capital, Mountain BizWorks is helping businesses “Recover Forward” with:
“Our goal isn’t just to help businesses recover,” Laucher said. “It’s to help them re-emerge stronger, more resilient, and ready for what’s next.”
Explore resources: MountainBizWorks.org or WNCStrongTogether.org