News

Asheville chalk art dispute sparks First Amendment challenge

Asheville chalk art dispute sparks First Amendment challenge

Some of Virginia Harding's chalk drawings included in a letter to city of Asheville officials. Photo: Contributed/ACLU


ASHEVILLE, N.C. (828newsNOW) — The ACLU of North Carolina is threatening legal action against Asheville, arguing the city’s graffiti ordinance violates First Amendment protections after a resident was warned over chalk drawings on a public street.

According to the ACLU, Asheville resident Virginia Harding began drawing political cartoons in chalk on the street in front of her home in spring 2020. The drawings, which often featured her dog “Auggie” with a thought bubble containing political commentary, continued for nearly five years without incident.

That changed on Feb. 19, 2025, when city workers observed Harding chalking and later that day pressure-washed her drawing from the street. The ACLU said the city continued removing her work daily for nearly a month, during which time other messages, including pro-Trump and critical commentary, appeared alongside her drawings. Public criticism followed after local media coverage of the situation.

The city stopped removing the chalk drawings on March 25, 2025. However, months later, on Oct. 30, Harding received a notice of violation under Asheville’s graffiti ordinance. While the fine was waived, the notice warned she could face penalties or prosecution for future chalking.

Harding has since moved her drawings out of public view, the ACLU said, adding she would have continued sharing them publicly without the threat of enforcement.

In a letter to the city, the ACLU argues the ordinance is unconstitutional because it discriminates based on the content of speech and is too vague, potentially violating due process rights. The organization said all North Carolinians have a right to free expression regardless of the message or medium.

The ACLU has given the city 30 days to respond and said it will pursue legal action if officials do not repeal or revise the ordinance and agree not to enforce it against Harding.

Meanwhile, Asheville City Council member Kim Roney said an update to the city’s graffiti definition is scheduled for consideration at the April 14 council meeting. The proposed change would explicitly allow chalking.

Roney said the recommendation has already cleared the council’s Public Safety Committee and acknowledged concerns about the timeline, adding that addressing the issue is overdue.

Recent Headlines

15 hours ago in Entertainment, Music

Michael Jackson streams skyrocket after ‘Michael’ biopic opening weekend, up 95% in the US

Michael Jackson once sang "Don't Stop 'Til You Get Enough." For fans of the King of Pop's music, it's words to live by: Streams of his catalog jumped 95% in the U.S. over the weekend when compared with the same dates the previous weekend.

21 hours ago in Entertainment

Nedra Talley Ross, the last surviving member of the 1960s bee-hived pop band the Ronettes, dies

Nedra Talley Ross, the last surviving member of the 1960s bee-hived pop band the Ronettes, who sang the enduring hits "Be My Baby," "Baby I Love You" and "Walking in the Rain" alongside her cousins, has died. She was 80.

21 hours ago in Entertainment, Music

Melanie C says she’s bringing joy to the club with ‘Sweat,’ an athletic album from the Spice Girl

Get your heart pumpin'. She'll make you "Sweat." Such is the promise sung by the artist known as Melanie C, or Mel C and Sporty Spice of the game-changing '90s girl group Spice Girls, in the lead single from her ninth album of the same name.

21 hours ago in Entertainment

Summer Movie Preview: Nolan, Spider-Man and ‘Toy Story’ light up the cinemas

The movies always feel bigger in the summer. The budgets. The ambition. The names. The stakes. This summer, Hollywood has many of the regulars on the lineup: "Spider-Man," "Minions," "Star Wars" and "Toy Story." But the most eagerly anticipated is not a superhero, toy, or franchise: It's a 3,000-year-old epic poem.

21 hours ago in Sports, Trending

Marathon milestone shattered: Sabastian Sawe breaks the fabled 2-hour barrier by 30 seconds

A pair of African distance runners took down what was once among the most unthinkable records in sports on Sunday, shattering the long-unapproachable two-hour barrier in the 26.2-mile (42.2-kilometer) marathon.