Government Accountability Project of Asheville

GAP Report for 5/4/26

URGENT

  • 0 Items

PROBLEMATIC

  • Buncombe County is advancing budget, land use, and investment decisions without any anti-displacement analysis (new)
  • Appeal deadline for property tax reappraisals is too early (resolved)

QUESTIONABLE

  • The 50 Coxe Avenue affordable housing development should do more to prevent displacement (resolved)

POSITIVE

  • 0 Items

Summary of the Report

Buncombe County continues to make major policy, budget, and land-use decisions that shape who can afford to live here without any consistent effort to analyze or mitigate displacement. This week’s agenda is no exception. From the FY2027 budget to new public financing strategies and farmland preservation policies, the County is acting in ways that will influence housing stability across the community, yet has still not adopted an anti-displacement lens or framework.

This report highlights three key agenda items that illustrate the pattern: decisions affecting immediate funding priorities, future investment strategies, and long-term land use are all moving forward without any assessment of who may be pushed out as a result. Despite repeated requests, the County has yet to commit to even a basic displacement impact analysis—leaving critical decisions disconnected from their real-world consequences.

This omission is not an outlier, but the norm. In the past 5 months, we’ve lifted up 22 distinct policy decisions that the County was making without any assessment of who might be displaced as a result.

You can see a complete list of these missed opportunities here.

This GAP report also provides updates on two other issues:

  • The 50 Coxe Avenue affordable housing development passed (which is good), but without some of the anti-displacement safeguards we recommended (which is unfortunate)
  • The County ignored requests from multiple community groups, as well as many GAP supporters, to extend their deadline for property tax reappraisals.

Templates and Links to More Information

Take action with us:
Here are all active email templates:

Resources:

Click here to read our full proposed anti-displacement policy proposal.

Active Issue Reports

No Results Found

The page you requested could not be found. Try refining your search, or use the navigation above to locate the post.

PREVIOUS REPORTS

GAP Report for 7/7/25

0 items Asheville City Council is considering a two-year dissolution of community-led Boards and Commissions (new) Buncombe County needs to track demographic information as it navigates the recovery process (on hold) Buncombe County to offer more rental assistance to...

GAP Report for 6/30/25

0 items Western North Carolina needs more state-funded Helene aid (updated) Buncombe County needs to track demographic information as it navigates the recovery process updated) Buncombe County to offer more rental assistance to Asheville residents (updated) Asheville...

GAP Report for 6/23/25

0 items Western North Carolina needs more state-funded Helene aid (new action) The Housing Authority of the City of Asheville should attempt to address the needs of both PEAK Academy and PODS (report back) Buncombe County needs to track demographic information as it...

GAP Report for 6/16/25

0 items Western North Carolina needs more state-funded Helene aid The Housing Authority of the City of Asheville should attempt to address the needs of both PEAK Academy and PODS (new) Buncombe County needs to track demographic information as it navigates the recovery...

GAP Report for 6/9/25

0 items Western North Carolina needs more state-funded Helene aid Asheville Policy, Finance and Infrastructure Committee needs to hear from community on policy decisions (new) Buncombe County to offer more rental assistance to Asheville residents Asheville Budget...

SIGN UP FOR UPDATES

Search All Reports

Meetings this Week

  • Week of 7/13/26

    The Buncombe County Commission meets this Tuesday, July 14, 2026 at 5 pm for a special meeting to consider how to amend the Fiscal Year 2027 Budget in light of recently passed state laws. The meeting will take place at 200 College Street in downtown Asheville in the Commission Chambers on the Third Floor. You can attend the meetings in person or watch them online via Buncombe County's Facebook page. The full agenda for the meeting can be found here.

    The Asheville City Council meets this Wednesday, July 15, 2026, for a special meeting to consider tax rate adjustments. You can attend the meeting in person on the 2nd Floor of City Hall, 70 Court Plaza in downtown Asheville. Alternatively, you can access the meeting online (live or recorded) at this link. No agenda for the meeting has been published.