More Than 100 Years Later, American Chestnut Could Return To Appalachia

Chestnut trees used to be abundant in the Appalachian region until a blight wiped them out at the turn of the 20th century. Now, determined growers are attempting to return the trees using hybrid saplings.

Chestnut trees used to be abundant in the Appalachian region until a blight wiped them out at the turn of the 20th century. 

Now, determined growers like Susan Thompson, a graduate student at Shepherd University, are part of an effort to return the trees using hybrid saplings. They’re combining the American chestnut with the Chinese variant, which is a little bit more sturdy. 

“We’re trying to get as close to a pure American as we can but still retain the quality of resistance to the blight, the fungus,” Thompson said.

Before the blight, chestnuts were used in the region not just as a source of timber for furniture, but as a way to feed your family.

“They’re super nutritious, one of the highest nutritional contents,” Thompson said. “They’re also great for things like people with diabetes, and they have a lot of nutritional needs for people who have challenges.”

Thompson is planting the trees at Shepherd University’s Tabler Farm, which the school uses to reintroduce other native plants like hackberry and serviceberry. But farm coordinator Madison Hale said chestnuts are much more useful economically.

“If you are thinking about how I can make a living off of trees, in farming, the chestnut is a species that you’re going to want to plant because they’re very marketable,” Hale said.

Hale said they’re able to support the project because of Tabler Farm’s status as a university farm, which allows for more experimental crop growing than what commercial farmers can allow.

“Because we are a university and most of what we’re doing is grant funded, we have an opportunity to bring the educational and experimental and research side of farming into this,” Hale said.

Thompson organized the project as part of her coursework for a Master of Arts in Appalachian Studies. 

Sylvia Shurbutt, director of Shepherd University’s center for Appalachian Studies, said this project is one of the programs the course supports to help keep Appalachian traditions alive.

“I think now we’re kind of at our real high point in what we’re able to do, which is to tell the story of West Virginia and to tell the story of Appalachia,” Shurbutt said.

Thompson also had volunteers from her program, as well as around the community, help with the planting through an open sign-up. One such volunteer was Martinique Gray, a history major at the university.

“I have a horse farm,” Gray said. “And I’m really interested in learning how to improve the environment in my farm and how to better improve the kind of living I have and the kind of lifestyle that I’m building for myself.”

Volunteer farmers plant a chestnut tree sapling into the ground. Credit: Shepherd Snyder/West Virginia Public Broadcasting

Thompson and other advocates say the most important use for chestnut trees is its role in recovering the Appalachian Mountains’ already strong biodiversity.

American chestnut trees grew more than 100 feet tall, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. They helped cool the mountains, with the chestnuts themselves helping keep animals fed and abundant.

In the face of a changing climate, animal species are taking advantage of the shelter and food in those same Appalachian Mountains. 

“It’s got hundreds of microclimates there, which they don’t have in other places, because of this mountain biodiversity and this mountain habitat,” Thompson said. “If a species can’t survive in one place, it can move over a little bit to another place.”

Growing American chestnuts is a long-term project – part of it requires figuring out how quickly these trees can grow to full-size. But Thompson said the productivity that comes from the finished crop will be worth the wait.

“Normally, it can take, I don’t know, five to 10 years for a tree to become productive in terms of producing chestnuts,” Thompson said. “You’ll have a tree that produces 6,000 chestnuts per year for 100 years. Talk about food security.”

And Thompson said that the tenacity of the chestnut tree can be a symbol representing the entire region and its people.

“The story of the American chestnut is the story of the Appalachian people — downtrodden, impacted in ways that just really cut it down, but coming back anyway.”

Round Of Funding To Support AmeriCorps W.Va. Volunteers

More than $1.5 million is going to support volunteers engaged in the AmeriCorps Vista program around the state. The program sends volunteers to local organizations that help fight poverty and support education programs.

More than $1.5 million is going to support volunteers engaged in the AmeriCorps Vista program around the state. The program sends volunteers to local organizations that help fight poverty and support education programs.

The money will support 102 volunteers statewide, including 65 at three organizations in Charleston. That includes the nonprofits West Virginia Community Development Hub, Education Alliance and Step By Step, which helps disadvantaged youth in the coalfields region.

Thirty-two volunteers at West Virginia University in Morgantown and five at the Rural Appalachian Improvement League in Mullens will also be supported.

Specific funding includes:

  • $455,744 to West Virginia University Research Corporation in Morgantown
  • $448,812 to Step by Step in Charleston
  • $361,440 to West Virginia Community Development Hub in Charleston
  • $248,490 to Education Alliance – Business and Community for Public Schools in Charleston
  • $112,950 to Rural Appalachian Improvement League in Mullens

An initial $8 million was announced last week to help support AmeriCorps programs addressing literacy, diet health and opioid addiction prevention in the state.

Potomac River Cleaner Than It Was A Decade Ago, Report Says

The Potomac Conservancy gave the river a B grade on its “Potomac River Report Card.” That’s a step up from a report 10 years ago.

The Potomac River is cleaner than it used to be, according to a new report. But there is still work to be done.

The Potomac Conservancy gave the river a B grade on its “Potomac River Report Card.” That’s a step up from a report 10 years ago. It’s also a slight improvement from the B-minus grade the conservancy’s last report granted in 2020.

The improvement is in large part because of a sharp reduction in river pollutants like nitrogen, phosphorus and sediment over the past three decades, according to measurements from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s Chesapeake Bay Program. 

Wildlife is also coming back to habitats in and around the Potomac, with the Maryland Department of Natural Resources reporting a return in abundance of American shad.

Runoff pollution, deforestation and climate change were noted as the top threats the Potomac River currently faces against restoration. According to the report, habitats along the river are not recovering as quickly as projected. That means restoration efforts likely won’t reach certain benchmarks by 2025, a goal set by the Chesapeake Executive Council in 2009.

West Virginia’s Eastern Panhandle includes about 100 miles of the Potomac River, from Hampshire County to its confluence with the Shenandoah in Harpers Ferry.

Federal AmeriCorps Funding To Support Service, Education Programs Throughout State

AmeriCorps is sending more than $8 million to five programs across the state as part of its state and national grant program. 

AmeriCorps is sending more than $8 million to five programs across the state as part of its state and national grant program. 

The money will fund a literacy mentorship program at West Virginia University, an education and leadership program in Hillsboro, and an opioid prevention program for grade school students in Charleston.

Other programs receiving funding, but not related to education, include supporting the Appalachian Forest Heritage Area in Elkins and a program that addresses diet-related health disparities in underserved communities in Wheeling.

Specific funding for each of the programs include:

  • $1,724,777 – West Virginia University, Morgantown
  • $1,154,600 – High Rocks Educational Corporation, Hillsboro
  • $894,735 – United Way of Central West Virginia, Charleston
  • $792,000 – Appalachian Forest Heritage Area, Elkins
  • $310,984 – Grow Ohio Valley, Wheeling

AmeriCorps separately announced $1,610,047 in funding for the National Council on Aging branch based in Wheeling Thursday. It’s set to place 72 senior AmeriCorps volunteers in the Northern Panhandle counties into the workforce by the end of its three-year grant cycle.

Volunteer West Virginia is also receiving nearly $1.7 million. The agency will use the money for more statewide resources during the next few months.

Funding comes from the American Rescue Plan Act, the federal stimulus bill passed in 2021. It will affect 555 AmeriCorps volunteers working in West Virginia.

Three W.Va. Students Named U.S. Presidential Scholars

Three high schoolers from around the state have been named to this year’s class of U.S. Presidential Scholars.

Three high schoolers from around the state have been named to this year’s class of U.S. Presidential Scholars.

They are Dalton S. Cook from Westside High School in Clear Fork, Rania Zuri from Morgantown High School and Isabella Mackenzie Herrod from Liberty High School. 

Herrod was specifically named a Presidential Scholar in Career and Technical Education.

They’re part of a group of 161 students selected for the accomplishment nationwide. This year, more than 5,000 candidates qualified through either their performance on the SAT or ACT exams, or through nominations from school officers or organizations.

The program was created in 1964 to recognize the nation’s most distinguished high school seniors. In 2015, it was extended to recognize students going into career and technical education fields.

The program selects scholars from the pool of candidates each year through a review committee, which evaluates students based on their “academic achievement, personal characteristics, leadership and service activities and an analysis of their essay,” according to its website.

Cook, Zuri and Herrod have been recognized for their achievements in statements from U.S. Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona, as well as Sens. Joe Manchin and Shelley Moore Capito.

“U.S. Presidential Scholars have always represented the future of our country and the bright promise it holds. I want each of these remarkable students to know: your passion and intellect, pursuit of excellence, and spirit of service are exactly what our country needs,” Cardona said.

All three students will be honored with an online recognition program this summer and will be awarded with the U.S. Presidential Scholars medallion.

Lawmakers Discuss Uses, Concerns Of AI Tech In Legislative Interim

Members of the Joint Standing Committee on the Judiciary discussed the potential uses, and concerns, of artificial intelligence technology with representatives from tech companies including Microsoft, DataRobot and ROC.AI during an interim meeting Monday morning.

Members of the Joint Standing Committee on the Judiciary discussed the potential uses, and concerns, of artificial intelligence technology (AI) with representatives from tech companies including Microsoft, DataRobot and ROC.AI during an interim meeting Monday morning.

“It’s inevitable at some point in time, you will probably need to start thinking about some rulemaking in this space,” Scott Swann, CEO of ROC.AI, said. “And so as I talk to you, really what the messages I want to throw to you is just to give you a little bit better understanding that not all AI is bad, but they’re absolutely things you should probably be concerned about.”

He told the committee that AI programs, like ChatGPT, take in vast amounts of information used for pattern recognition that could be used to analyze documents, bolster school security and recognize license plates on traffic camera footage.

But it also comes with privacy concerns and questions about what’s actually within the programs’ codes.

Swann spoke about the origin of the “AI supply chain” and the need to be wary of “black boxes” from other countries in the technological arms race, like China and Russia. 

He previously worked for the FBI, helping create their Next Generation Identification biometric program for criminal identification.

“The problem is that if you train these kinds of algorithms, then you have the power to put in these embedded rules, so no one is actually going to be able to scan for that,” Swann said.

But another panelist, Ted Kwartler of AI company DataRobot, disagrees. He argues that, in the near-term, much of these new programs can be manageable with the right know-how.

“I don’t think that AI is really a black box,” Kwartler said. “And I know that’s a hot take. But I think that if you are technical, or that it’s explained to you in the way that you can understand it, and it’s contextualized, anyone in this room, by the end of today, I can get them running code to actually build it out.”

Del. Chris Pritt, R-Kanawha, said he is concerned about how to regulate such technology.

“If nobody who’s in charge of enforcing this has the skills, I mean, if it’s so unique, it’s so emerging, that nobody can enforce those guardrails, what’s the solution?” Pritt asked.

Others on the committee, like Del. Evan Hansen, D-Monongalia, have experimented with using ChatGPT to write proposals. He asked about the ethics of using AI in the policymaking process moving forward. 

“Is it ethical or okay for state employees to use ChatGPT to write a proposal or write a report?” Hansen asked. “Or is it okay for vendors for the state of West Virginia to do that? Are there states that are regulating that? And if so, where’s the line?”

“I think this body would have to think about what makes sense for them,” Kwartler said.

Earlier this year, the West Virginia Legislature passed House Bill 3214. The law creates a pilot program that will collect data on the health of state roads using AI.

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