Crime & Courts

Federal judge orders Asheville to pay 5 white residents in discrimination lawsuit

The Asheville skyline at sunrise over Town Mountain Road Bridge in the fall.
The Asheville skyline at sunrise over Town Mountain Road Bridge in the fall. Visit North Carolina

The city of Asheville must pay five white residents who filed a federal lawsuit claiming they were racially discriminated against when they were rejected from a volunteer board that advises the city on equity, according to a news release from a Western North Carolina group.

WNC Citizens for Equality said the Human Relations Commission of Asheville posted application forms indicating “white persons were automatically excluded from serving unless they could prove a ‘plus factor,’” such as being gay or transgender or living in public housing.

“Non-white applicants did not have to demonstrate any ‘plus’ factors,” the organization wrote in the Wednesday news release.

The five residents filed the lawsuit in September 2023, and the city eliminated “race-based membership preferences” after two years of litigation in August 2025, according to the news release.

One of the denied Buncombe County residents had served as Asheville’s director of risk management for 30 years.

Asheville Mayor Esther Manheimer acknowledged that the city needed to make changes or face litigation, according to WNC Citizens for Equality’s news release.

U.S. Judge Martin Reidinger in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of North Carolina on Tuesday ordered the city pay more than $81,000 total for the plaintiffs’ legal fees.

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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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