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HKYNC News & Views April 12, 2026 – Executive Summary (On the way)
References for this article - The References are listed in the article itself
Hickory Hound News & Views Archive
References
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📤This Week:
The Monday Mashup: A Message from the Heart of the Foothills of Western North Carolina to the Coastal Elite - This post by James Thomas Shell explores the economic "post-impact" of the North Carolina Foothills. It critiques coastal neglect while highlighting the region’s resilience. Shell discusses job losses from offshoring, environmental crises like the Catawba River's pollution, and local efforts to reinvent the community through technology, training, and sustainability.
(Tuesday) - Hickory 201: Note 6 - The Resource Anchor (Securing the Community Metabolism) - If the Labor Hub (Note 4) is the engine and the Housing Anchor (Note 3) is the battery, Note 6 addresses the fuel and the cooling. You cannot build a "Backbone" of fiber and high-precision tooling if the underlying metabolism is failing.
(Thursday) - Economic Stories of Relevance 4/9/2026 - This report highlights a "Liquidity Lock" where energy inflation and tax bottlenecks squeeze household cash. Locally, tech-driven housing poaching near Trivium spikes rents, while Allegacy expands. Despite industrial wins like the US Forged Rings plant, state-level budget gridlock stalls infrastructure permits, signaling a divergence between high-tech growth and ground-level stagnation.
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📤Next Week:
The Monday Mashup - All of these stories will be relevant to today. Some will be retro stories and others will be mashups of retro stories brought forward to today’s realities.
(Tuesday) - Hickory 201: Note 7 - The Institutional Audit - How do we rewire the Public Square?
(Thursday) - Economic Stories of Relevance - We continue with the reboot of one of the Hound's old legacy series. Back by popular demand. I run the script for the analysis at the beginning of each week.
🧠Opening Reflection:
For those of us rooted in the Foothills Corridor, geography is more than just lines on a map; it is a shared inheritance of grit and quiet struggle. When I speak of the Corridor, I’m not just talking about the urban hubs of Hickory, Lenoir, or Morganton. I am talking about the entire working backbone of Western North Carolina—stretching from the poultry barns of Wilkes to the textile remnants in Gastonia, and through every small town like Claremont, Maiden, and Valdese that sits in the shadow of the Blue Ridge.
This region was settled by people who didn't want the isolation of the high peaks or the sprawl of the coast. They wanted a middle ground where they could build. And for generations, they did. They turned this Corridor into an industrial powerhouse that fueled the nation. But today, that "middle ground" is being hollowed out. What we are seeing in April 2026 is the final expiration of the "Hickory Discount"—that unspoken agreement where a modest wage was balanced by a low cost of living.
The reality is that the Corridor is being treated as a resource to be mined rather than a community to be maintained. We are trapped in a "Bifurcated Economy." On one side, we see a polished "Mirage" of innovation districts and tourism branding. On the other, we have the "Structural Realism" of the people who actually keep this place running—the builders, the fixers, and the grandmothers—who are now facing a "Phantom Tax Hike" through skyrocketing housing costs and utility fees.
The "Friction" we feel every day—the automated customer service that replaces human connection, the rising costs that eat our margins, the sense that our civic leadership is looking past us—is not a mistake. It is the result of a system that has forgotten the "working backbone" by design.
This week, we look at how that friction is manifesting in our daily lives. We aren't just here to complain about the price of eggs or the state of the roads. We are here to document the "Shrinking Center" and to give a voice to the people who stay, who mow their own grass, and who refuse to be edited out of the region’s future. If you feel like the world is getting more expensive and less human, you aren't imagining it. You're just living in the Corridor, and it’s time we started talking about what that actually means in 2026.
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⭐ Feature Story ⭐
The Friction in the Machine:
An Honest Look at the 2026 Foothills Corridor
By the second quarter of 2026, the folks living in the North Carolina Foothills Corridor are caught in a difficult place. There is a deep tension between the stories the big institutions are telling and the anxiety families feel every time they check their bank accounts. You can see this clearly if you look at the difference between the "Mirage" and "Structural Realism." The marketing brochures and the city planning power point presentations show you a vision of high-tech growth and record-breaking investment. That’s the Mirage. But the structural reality—the way the world actually works—is a system designed to extract money and energy right out of your home. We call this the "Phantom Tax Hike." It’s a way to move the cost of business onto your shoulders without ever putting it to a vote. They use regulations and market shifts to transfer wealth from the people who do the work to the multinational corporations that run the show.
The Shiny Brochure vs. The Bank Statement
In the spring of 2026, the Foothills Corridor—stretching from Gastonia through Shelby to Marion, Morganton, Lenoir, North Wilkesboro, Statesville, and Hickory—is living two different lives. The Mirage is the version you see at the ribbon-cutting ceremonies. It is the "North Carolina success story" where they brag about billion-dollar data centers and new manufacturing plants. But the Structural Realism of the region is not found in a press release. You find it in your mailbox, your bank statement, and the time you spend on hold with an automated phone tree.
The Phantom Tax Hike is the main tool used to make this reality. It is not like a property tax that a town board votes on or a bond you see on a ballot. This is a systemic extraction that is hidden behind words like "infrastructure improvement" or "market adjustments." The machine treats your household budget like a mine for corporate expansion. They take the costs of global technical shifts and spread them across every person who pays a utility bill, while the big players keep the record profits for themselves.
The Power Play and the People in the Middle
The clearest example of this Phantom Tax Hike is the aggressive way Duke Energy Carolinas and Duke Energy Progress are coming after more money. There is a public hearing at the Burke County Courthouse on April 28, 2026, that is going to be the center of this fight. This is where the "Shrinking Center"—the middle-income families in places like Newton and Shelby—has to stand up to a utility proposal that threatens their financial survival. These families have done everything right, but they are watching their margins disappear because of a plan they did not ask for.
The Hard Math of the Rate Hikes
If you want to understand the scale of what is happening, you have to look at the numbers. Duke Energy Carolinas has formally asked for a 15.8% rate increase. Over on the other side, Duke Energy Progress is looking for an 18.5% hike. These requests are not just one-time events; they are part of a climb that has been going on for years. Since 2020, electric bills in North Carolina have already gone up by about 22%. These 2026 filings are a move to make that higher cost of living permanent for every working person in the region. It is a deliberate shift in the budgeting of how you live.
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For a resident in a 1950s ranch in Conover or a small business owner in Lincolnton, these increases are not "spreadsheet entries" but direct hits to their ability to sustain a household. By 2029, a residential customer consuming 1,000 kWh per month will be paying approximately $190, compared to $140 in 2023—a 35% increase in six years that far outpaces local wage growth.4
The Regulatory Mechanics of Extraction
The rate hikes are facilitated by the North Carolina Utilities Commission (NCUC) through various dockets, most notably E-7 Sub 1329 and E-2 Sub 1380.1 Under the current regulatory system, utilities are permitted to recover infrastructure costs from customers after making "front-end" investments.1 This system, combined with "Performance-Based Regulation," allows for the recovery of capital projects regardless of whether they ultimately reduce costs for the consumer.1
Beyond the base rate, customers are subjected to a series of "riders" that further obscure the true cost of service. These include:
Fuel Cost Riders: Direct pass-throughs of fluctuating natural gas and coal prices, tying local bills to global energy market volatility.1
REPS Riders: Costs associated with Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency Portfolio Standards.5
CPRE Cost Recovery: Riders for the Competitive Procurement of Renewable Energy.5
DSM/EE Riders: Charges for Demand-Side Management and Energy Efficiency programs.5
This layered billing structure creates a "Friction Economy" where the average ratepayer cannot easily discern the primary drivers of their rising costs, leading to a sense of "unexplained and skyrocketing increases" in electricity bills.1
The AI Nexus: Subsidizing the Global Tech Shift
A critical element of the Phantom Tax Hike is the identification of where the demand necessitating these "infrastructure improvements" originates. While utility representatives cite "growth" and "resilience," data from the Duke Energy 2025 Integrated Resource Plan (IRP) reveals a different driver: the massive energy requirements of AI data centers and advanced manufacturing.1
The Data Center Pipeline
Duke Energy reports a staggering 6 gigawatts (GW) of data center demand currently in its development pipeline for the Carolinas—an amount of power capable of serving 3 million to 6 million homes.2 While data centers historically represented less than 1% of peak demand, they are projected to account for 10% of total electricity sales by 2030.12
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The Radical Shift in the State’s Energy Landscape
You can see the scale of the change by looking at the history of how much power we use. For the last 20 years, the demand for energy grew by about 7%. But starting now, the people running the system expect that demand to jump as high as 60% over the next 15 years. This massive shift is happening because of projects like the one Amazon is building in Richmond County. They're putting in a $10 billion campus dedicated to cloud computing and artificial intelligence, and that kind of technology requires a staggering amount of electricity to keep the servers running.
Who Really Pays for Corporate Growth?
The real issue here is how we pay for the infrastructure required to support these massive tech campuses. When a huge company moves into the area, they usually pay for the direct connection costs to their own buildings. However, the broader "front-end" investments—the new substations, the thousands of miles of transmission lines, and the upgraded power plants—are paid for by the general customer base. This means that a resident in a small town in the Foothills is effectively subsidizing the very technology that is automating the human connection right out of the local economy. While the average person's bill goes up to cover these speculative risks, Duke Energy is reporting record profits of $4.97 billion, which is an 8% increase from the year before.
The Looming Crisis in Home Insurance
While your power bill is climbing, the cost of keeping a roof over your head is getting hit from another side. The North Carolina Rate Bureau has requested an average statewide increase of 68.3% for dwelling policies over the next 2 years. The plan they've laid out starts with a 28.5% hike scheduled for July 1, 2026, followed by another 30.9% increase in 2027.
Pushing the Working Class Out of the Corridor
You have to understand what a "dwelling policy" actually covers to see why this is a problem for the community. These aren't the standard insurance policies for people who own and live in their own homes. Instead, these policies are designed for non-owner-occupied properties, such as rentals and small investment properties. In the Foothills Corridor, the "builder class"—the technicians, craftsmen, and essential service workers—increasingly rely on the rental market because they don't own their own homes. When these insurance costs go up, landlords pass those costs directly to the renters. This acts as a "demographic eraser" because it slowly pushes the people who keep the region running out of the area, because they can no longer afford to live there.
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The Insurance Trap and the Price of a Roof
The Rate Bureau says they have to raise prices because of climate change and the rising cost of building materials. They point to 28 different disasters in 2023 that cost over $1 billion each as the reason the math has changed. But when you get down to the ground level in places like Lenoir or Hickory, what that looks like is a direct hit to your housing. If a landlord's insurance goes up by $200 or $400 a year, they aren't just going to eat that cost. They have to pass it on to you to keep their business running. For a family that's already trying to keep up with their power bills, a $20 or $40 jump in monthly rent isn't just a nuisance. It’s the thing that forces them to pack up and leave.
The Reach of the Machine
This Phantom Tax Hike doesn’t care about your zip code. It's geography-blind, meaning it hits the whole Corridor no matter where you live. But the way it feels depends on where you’re standing. You might be in North Wilkesboro, where the history is all about moving from the farm to the factory, or you might be in a high-pressure growth zone like Gastonia. In both places, the system is reaching into your house and taking away your options.
The Engine of Hickory and the Pressure Within
Hickory is the biggest part of this machine. It has a population of 45,777 in 2026, and it’s still the place where manufacturing and tech companies want to set up shop, because of its centralized location in the corridor. But if you look at the actual numbers, you see a community that’s being squeezed. It’s a hub for growth, but that growth is putting a massive amount of financial pressure on the people who actually live there.
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The Industrial Core and the Strain of Poverty
Hickory has a poverty rate of 17.12%, which means nearly 1 in 5 residents is living below the poverty line. When you take a population like that and hit them with a Duke Energy rate hike that costs an extra $300 to $400 a year, you aren't just making things tight. You're causing a catastrophic erosion of the money they have left to live on. In Hickory, the "Shrinking Center" is not an abstract concept. It is the lived experience of families with a median income of $64,576 who are watching their earnings get cannibalized by the rising cost of essential services.
The Threat to Stability in Newton and St. Stephens
In Newton, Conover, Claremont, and Catawba, the story is about hard-won stability. These communities have worked for years to build a steady life, but that stability is now being targeted by the "Friction Economy." This is a system that creates constant, small obstacles that eat away at your financial security until there is nothing left to fall back on. It is a slow process of making it more expensive and more difficult just to maintain the status quo.
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Newton’s housing market is heavily defined by ownership (72.6%), but the median household income of $62,015 suggests that these homeowners have very little margin for error.20 The largest demographic living in poverty in Newton consists of females aged 25-34, the very cohort that typically drives household formation and local economic consumption.20 When these households are faced with the Duke Energy "Power Play," the capital they would otherwise use for home improvements or local spending is redirected to corporate cost recovery for AI infrastructure.
North Wilkesboro: The Healthcare Hedge and the Policy Betrayal
North Wilkesboro represents a unique segment of the Corridor, characterized by an "industrious heritage" that has been forced to adapt to a post-manufacturing reality.21 Once a powerhouse of textiles and furniture (and the birthplace of Lowe's Home Improvement), the town lost almost all its factories after 2000 as production moved to low-wage international markets.21
Today, the town has transitioned to a healthcare-based economy, with Wilkes Medical Center serving as the largest employer.21 The repurposing of infrastructure, such as the transformation of the West Park shopping center into a medical park, illustrates this shift.21 However, the "Phantom Tax Hike" presents a new threat. As utility costs outpace the recovery of the "farm-to-factory pipeline," the cost of providing healthcare and local services increases, placing a new burden on a population that has already been "betrayed by policy" in the manufacturing era.21
Gastonia and Kings Mountain: The I-85 Growth Machine
In the southern portion of the Corridor, the towns of Gastonia and Kings Mountain are feeling the pressure of the "I-85 growth machine." Here, the Mirage of progress is most visible in the rapid development of distribution centers and suburban expansion. However, for residents, this growth often feels like a "slow-motion eviction." The rising costs of "progress"—infrastructure upgrades, increased insurance liability in densifying areas, and utility expansion for industrial users—are socialized across the existing residential base, forcing long-term inhabitants to pay for a version of their neighborhood that no longer serves them.
The Friction Economy: Extracting Household Bandwidth
The "Phantom Tax Hike" is not merely about money; it is about "bandwidth." The "Friction Economy" is a deliberate system that treats the household budget and the citizen's time as a resource to be mined. This is manifested through the "ultimate 'back of house' failure": charging customers for a system renovation they will never see while the quality of service slides into automated displacement.1
Automated Barriers and Cognitive Tax
As the cost of utilities and insurance rises, the "friction" at every turn increases. Duke Energy and the insurance industry have replaced local accountability with "automated phone trees" and digital-only interactions.1 This systematic removal of human connection serves two purposes:
Cost Reduction for the Utility: Replacing human agents with algorithms reduces overhead, contributing to record profits like Duke’s $4.97 billion.4
Citizen Exhaustion: The difficulty of navigating these systems acts as a cognitive tax. When a resident experiences a billing spike—such as those reported in the audit petition by 77,000 customers—the time and emotional energy required to contest the charge often exceed the cost of what a working-class household can afford.1
This "friction" is an intended outcome. It reduces accountability and normalizes the extraction of capital from those who have the least time to fight it.
The Two-Tiered Reality of Profits and Consumption
In 2026, the Corridor is operating as a "Two-Tiered Reality." On one tier, Duke Energy reports that its reliability is improving "faster than that of compatible utilities" due to investments in "self-healing technology" that has prevented 2.2 billion outage minutes.13 This tier enjoys record profits and a "balance sheet prepared for growth".4
On the second tier, the "working backbone" of the Corridor is told to "manage their consumption".3 This tier is characterized by:
Disconnection Surges: Utility disconnections have jumped 37% since last year.6
Payment Lag: One in five customers is currently behind on their electric bills.6
Marginal Existence: Families are forced into "impossible positions," choosing between electricity, food, and medication.7
The irony of the Friction Economy is that while customers pay for "self-healing" grids to support AI, their own financial stability is offered no such technological resilience.
Policy Responses and the Path to Transparency
The "Structural Realism" of the 2026 Foothills Corridor requires a shift from passive acceptance of the Phantom Tax Hike to active transparency and policy intervention. The North Carolina Energy Policy Task Force has identified several pathways to mitigate the impact of load growth on residential ratepayers.11
Recommended Interventions
To prevent the socialized subsidy of global tech interests, the following options are being explored by state regulators and advocates:
Bringing the Hidden Gears Into the Light
The goal of this campaign is to remind you that if you feel exhausted by the end of the month, it is not because of a personal failure. That exhaustion is the intended result of a specific economic architecture that was built to work this way. The people in the Foothills have always been known for their grit and their ability to fix things that are broken. Now, we have to turn that energy toward demanding transparency. We need to see exactly how the machine is being run.
The public hearing at the Burke County Courthouse on April 28, 2026, is more than just a regulatory hurdle for Duke Energy to clear. It is an opportunity for everyone who has a stake in this region to demand a seat at the table. You are being encouraged to submit your comments to the North Carolina Utilities Commission and the Department of Insurance. You can use your voice to contest the guaranteed profits these companies want and the way they are moving the costs of AI expansion onto your personal bill.
A Final Word on Reclaiming Our Home
By the middle of 2026, the Foothills Corridor is standing at a crossroads. The "Architecture of Friction" has created a landscape where the "Phantom Tax Hike" systematically eats away at your money and your ability to think clearly about the future. When you look past the Mirage of progress, you see the structural reality of the world we are living in. It is a two-tiered system where residential households are paying for the growth of global technology companies at the cost of their own financial stability.
The solution to this problem is not something you will find in a toolbox. It is found in the collective action of people who share the same interests. It does not matter if you are working in the industrial wards of Hickory, the healthcare hubs of North Wilkesboro, or the residential streets of Newton. The message for 2026 is clear: this Corridor is not just a map for corporate expansion. It is a home for people. Acting like a community means demanding that the cost of "progress" is paid for by the people who profit from it, rather than the people who simply keep the gears turning.
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My Own Time: Guarding the Hours the Machine Tries to Steal
When you get down to it, the most valuable thing you own isn't the equity in your house or the number in your savings account. It’s your time. In the world we’re living in here in the Foothills, that time is under constant attack by what I’ve called the "Friction Economy." Every minute you spend navigating an automated phone tree to dispute a billing error, or every extra hour you have to work to cover a utility hike you didn't vote for, is a minute stolen from your actual life. This system doesn't just want your money; it wants your bandwidth. It wants you too tired and too busy to notice that the gears are being greased with your effort for someone else’s profit.
I look at the people in this Corridor—the mechanics in Newton, the nurses in North Wilkesboro, and the families in Hickory—and I see a collective "working backbone" that is being tested. We’re being told to "manage our consumption" while the big players prepare their balance sheets for record growth. It’s easy to feel like you’re just a small part of a map designed for corporate expansion. But this place is more than a resource to be mined. It’s a home. The "Structural Realism" of our situation is that if we don't start demanding transparency, we’re going to be edited out of our own future.
So, as we head into the heart of the Spring of 2026, I’m asking you to protect your own time. Don’t let the "Mirage" of progress make you feel like your struggle is a personal failure. It’s a systemic outcome. When you show up at that courthouse in Burke County or send that comment to the Utilities Commission, you aren't just fighting a rate hike. You’re reclaiming your seat at the table. You’re saying that the people who keep the gears turning in this Corridor deserve more than just the friction of the machine. We deserve a future where the cost of "progress" is paid for by the ones who profit from it, leaving us with the time and the means to actually live our lives.
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My Own Time Ω
Guarding the Hours the Machine Tries to Steal
When you get right down to it, the most valuable thing you own is not the equity in your house or the balance in your savings account. It is your time. In the world we are living in here in the Foothills, that time is under a constant, calculated attack by what I call the "Friction Economy."
The extra money you have to spend on higher food costs, housing, healthcare, and energy comes directly from the hours of your life you must trade to pay for those things. When costs go up, you have to work more, which means you own less of your own life. Then there is the time you lose to the technical gauntlets—those digital hurdles and complicated systems you are forced to wade through. These are created by the government and the institutions looking to pad their margins and protect their own interests. They build these barriers to make their narratives look good, and they do it at the everyday person’s expense.
It is becoming harder to tell where big companies end and where big government begins. For the most part, they are working together in a way that benefits them while costing you. You can see it in how much time we lose to increased bureaucracy, inefficient processes, and the endless red tape of corporate governance. These bureaucratic institutions are designed to move slow, but they move at the expense of ordinary folks who do not have time to waste.
Think about how you have to scramble to make ends meet because of the constant rate hikes from energy companies. Your internet bills keep rising, but it is the exact same wire that has been in the ground for decades. These companies say their costs are rising, but you know that you have done nothing to make those costs go up. While their stock prices keep climbing, you are paying more and working more to keep the lights on. You are forced to cut back and manage with less money at the end of every succeeding month, all to support their bottom line.
This money and this time are actually being stolen from you. This system does not just want your money; it wants your "bandwidth"—your energy and your attention. It wants you to be too tired and too busy to notice that the gears of the machine are being greased with your effort for someone else’s benefit.
I look at the people across this Corridor and I see the reality of this struggle. I see the forklift operator at the Target warehouse who lives in Newton. I see the nurses living in legacy towns like North Wilkesboro, and the families still trying to make a go of it here in Hickory. This is the collective "working backbone" of the region, and it is being tested. We are being told to "manage our consumption" while the big players prepare their balance sheets for record growth. It is easy to feel like you are just a game piece on a board designed for a corporate expansion contest.
Our communities should be more than just places where these gamers come to extract our resources and expand their fortunes. This is our home. Your time is your most personal resource, and it is the one thing you can never get back once it is gone. I know the people at the top want to devalue the commodity of time. AI and robots have no concept of time, and that is a reality that living, breathing humans are soon going to have to face. But the "Structural Realism" of our situation is that if we do not start demanding transparency and accountability now, we are going to be edited out of our own future.
As we head through the rest of 2026, I am asking you to protect your time. When you protect your time, it helps me protect mine, and together we protect the value of everyone’s time. Do not let the "Mirage" of progress make you feel like you owe these institutions anything, and do not allow them to bully you into devaluing your own hours. You own your time. Do not give it away on the cheap. When we allow our time to be stolen, it is more than a personal failure—it is a systemic outcome that they have already planned for, because they do not care about the individual. Your time is just another resource for them to chew up and waste, just like the other resources we see being thrown away.
When you challenge the status quo, you are doing a favor for everyone. When you question the rate hikes that only serve to pad profit margins, boost stock prices, and increase stock options for management, you are drawing a necessary line in the sand. You are saying that the "Borg" of corporate interests cannot have everything.
Our government commissions need to understand that average folks deserve real representation. They deserve a seat at the table. These commissions need to see that the people who keep the gears turning in places like this Corridor deserve more than just the friction of the machine. When you work hard, you should have time left over to play hard. Life is not supposed to be just a cycle of working and paying bills. That is what peasants did in feudal colonies, and we are supposed to be beyond that. We deserve a future where the cost of "progress" is paid for by the ones who profit from it. That would leave the rest of us with the time and the means to actually live our lives and experience the beauty and magnificence that life has to offer.
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