Alert (March 11, 2026): Our TV translator in Flatwoods is experiencing technical issues. Our engineers are troubleshooting the problem. Thank you for your patience.
On this week's premiere broadcast of Mountain Stage, host Kathy Mattea welcomes The Steel Wheels, Sam Weber, Peter Holsapple, Lily Talmers, and Rylee Bapst Band to the Memorial Auditorium in Athens, OH.
Back To A New School At Herbert Hoover High School
After being destroyed by flooding seven years ago, Herbert Hoover High School will reopen for students Friday morning.Emily Rice/WVPB
Listen
Share this Article
After being destroyed by flooding seven years ago, Herbert Hoover High School will reopen for students Friday morning.
Principal Michael Kelley gave the media a tour of the new facility and said he is proud of his students and his community for their resilience.
“I believe our whole community is excited about the opportunities that are going to be here for our children. Our families and children have stuck with us all the way since the flood. We have continued to achieve at a level higher in every aspect,” Kelley said.
The modern 180,000 square foot construction includes weight rooms, an in-house clinic, an auditorium, media rooms and a career and technical center filled with the latest technology.
“In meetings with with FEMA and the School Building Authority and all kinds of folks after the flood, we were told they would basically try to build back what we lost but up to modern standards,” Kelley said.
Kelley said the best part about the building will be its students and teachers who have operated from FEMA portable buildings since the flood.
“I’m grateful to my staff, my two assistant principals have been working, while I’ve been working on construction and in managing that, they have worked very hard to get school ready to open,” Kelley said. “I think I’m looking forward to seeing the students’ faces tomorrow when they come in this building for the first time.”
Add WVPB as a preferred source on Google to see more from our team
BridgeValley Community and Technical College is expanding workforce development programs in highway construction and welding thanks to federal and state grants.
Miranda Lacy and Harold Rogers became fast friends during their undergraduate years. They both shared their dreams with one another: Rogers wanted to use his education to become a psychotherapist, Lacy a social worker. So, they were delighted to be reunited for graduate school – at an online Master's in Social Work program at West Virginia University. Little did they know, their journey there would be much harder.
On this West Virginia Week, Gov. Patrick Morrisey vetoed 12 bills that made it through the legislative process. We also hear the latest in the battle over which vaccines are required for school attendance in the state. And, a growing interest in data centers has the attention of people around West Virginia – both for and against.