Group Receives ARC Grant To Strengthen Community Health

A new grant will help train and place community health workers to strengthen behavioral health systems in 20 W.Va. counties.

Last week, the Community Education Group (CEG) was awarded $7.7 million from the Appalachian Regional Commission (ARC) for their new project, Help Our People Expand the Ecosystem (HOPEE).

This multistate initiative comes from the ARC’s Appalachian Regional Initiative for Stronger Economies (ARISE), which drives economic transformation through collaboration.

For their project, CEG will be working with the Kentucky Rural Health Association (KRHA), Shaping Our Appalachian Region (SOAR) Kentucky, the West Virginia-based SUD Collaborative (SUDC), and the Virginia Rural Health Association. 

Together, CEG and their HOPEE project partners will work to train and place new community health workers to strengthen behavioral healthcare systems in a 56-county region. Twenty West Virginia counties will be included.

According to Executive Director of CEG, A. Toni Young, this project will expand on CEG’s community health worker training program, CHAMPS, which trains individuals with lived experience in substance use disorder recovery to become community health workers.

“So what we wanted to do is to take individuals from towns, hollers, communities networks, and say, if we trained you to do the HIV screening, trained you to do the hepatitis C screening, trained you to do motivational interviewing or networking, could we train people that folks knew and were comfortable with and could listen to,” Young said. “And those folks may be more willing to come back into the community or come back for treatment for HIV or screening for HIV, or for some sort of a medically assisted treatment and management before or some other behavioral health services.”

According to CEG, its overarching goal is to improve socioeconomic disparities in Appalachia while addressing pressing and overlapping syndemics eroding the region’s broader economy, workforce and health outcomes.

A syndemic is two or more illness states interacting poorly with each other and negatively influencing the mutual course of each disease trajectory.

“Many things coming into effect one person, or one community, or one town or one state, that we’re taking a syndemic approach,” Young said. “So rather than saying, we only want to talk to the individuals about substance use disorder, right, we only want to get them to that MAT (Medically Assisted Treatment) provider to deal with substance use, we don’t want to just do that. We want to get them to there to talk about HIV, and when get them there to talk about hepatitis C, and we want to get them there to talk about PrEP.”

CEG said it will work with its partners and health care and behavioral care providers, including Medication Assisted Treatment (MAT) providers, will train, hire, and support community health workers. The project will build capacity in communities to address the substance use, HIV, and viral hepatitis syndemic and increase support and infrastructure for health care providers–all while providing coinciding workforce development and job training support.

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting with support from Marshall Health.

ARC Grant To Help Rural Communities Access Federal Funding

The $100,000 ARC award will help the counties and the municipalities expand staffing to better utilize, access, and implement available federal funding through both the America Rescue Plan Act and the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act. 

Fayette, Greenbrier, Nicholas, Pocahontas and Webster Counties are splitting a $100,000 grant from the Appalachian Regional Commission (ARC). 

The award will help the counties and the municipalities expand staffing to better utilize, access, and implement available federal funding through both the America Rescue Plan Act and the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act. 

The commission’s initiative “READY Appalachia” has been working to help underrepresented communities and economically distressed areas increase their capacity to create positive economic change. 

ARC is expected to announce additional funding opportunities through READY Appalachia by early 2024.

Four Counties To Receive $12 Million To Improve Water, Wastewater

Recent federal legislation has brought billions of dollars to communities nationwide to address their water and wastewater needs.

Four West Virginia communities are getting nearly $12 million from the Appalachian Regional Commission for water and wastewater projects.

The city of Williamson in Mingo County is the biggest recipient, with $4.2 million for water system improvements for 222 commercial and 1,520 residential customers.

In Lincoln County, $3.3 million will go to the Hamlin Public Service District to upgrade sewers for 101 businesses and 586 households.

In Webster County, the Cowen Public Service District will get $3 million to extend nearly 11 miles of water line to 58 homes and two businesses.

In Barbour County, the town of Junior will receive about $1.5 million to replace water infrastructure serving 395 households and bringing the water system back into compliance with state regulations.

Recent federal legislation has brought billions of dollars to communities nationwide to address their water and wastewater needs.

Sens. Joe Manchin and Shelley Moore Capito are members of the Senate Appropriations Committee. Manchin’s wife, Gayle, is federal co-chair of the Appalachian Regional Commission.

Federal Funding At Work: Building Infrastructure And Jobs In Appalachia

The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, along with the Inflation Reduction Act of last year and other programs are bringing a lot of federal dollars to places like Wheeling.

U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg got a friendly reception from residents in Wheeling recently. He was there to promote the Biden administration’s infrastructure law, enacted by Congress and signed by the president in 2021.

The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, along with the Inflation Reduction Act of last year and other programs are bringing a lot of federal dollars to places like Wheeling. The city is using a $16 million grant from the infrastructure law to improve its Main Street.

While the construction work was underway outside, Buttigieg spoke at a restaurant downtown

“This infrastructure bill is so big in its proportions, it’s really testing the capacity of the United States,” he said. “And that’s true on everything from raw materials to workforce.”

After years of disinvestment, federal funds are coming to Appalachia.

The goal, say people familiar with Appalachia’s strengths and needs, isn’t simply to put people to work on jobs that have an expiration date. Rather, it’s to build skills that last a whole career.

“So they can hop from client to client to client and keep, you know, keep a continuous pipeline and flow of projects to where they can continuously employ and maintain their organization and grow exponentially,” said Jacob Hannah, chief conservation officer for Coalfield Development in Huntington.

His organization trains solar workers, often former coal miners. He expects the influx of federal dollars will create even more opportunities in solar in the region.

Some of those solar projects could be built on mine sites reclaimed with newly available federal dollars, including one in Hannah’s native Mingo County. It will provide 100 percent of the power the local high school needs.

“So we’re trying to help catch up the workforce to meet the demand of solar companies that are meeting the demand of this big funding opportunity that’s happening,” he said.

Gayle Manchin, the federal co-chair of the Appalachian Regional Commission, said the infrastructure law has brought a wealth of new opportunity for the state and region.

Sometimes it only takes a little bit of retraining to build a workforce that’s ready for new jobs that are coming to Appalachia, she said, whether it’s aerospace or power plants fueled by hydrogen. 

“Where they’re talking about coming in with hydrogen plants, they say that if you worked in a coal fired plant, then you would be able to work in a hydrogen plant – (the) skillsets are almost identical,” she said.

And from a regional perspective, Manchin said it’s OK for surrounding states to benefit from businesses expanding in West Virginia. Whether it’s the Nucor steel plant in Mason County or the Form Energy battery factory in Hancock County, the new plants in West Virginia may need workers from Kentucky, Ohio or Pennsylvania.

“That’s just my personal belief that it can’t just be a West Virginia project. It can’t just be West Virginia workers,” she said. “It’s got to be a regional development in which everyone has the opportunity to grow and benefit from this industry.”

But some observers are concerned that the workforce may not be ready, and the jobs may not sustain the people who need them the most.

Joseph Kane, a fellow at the Brookings Institution in Washington who focuses on infrastructure’s economic role across different regions, said states may be tempted to put the cart before the horse when there’s a window of federal funding available.

“We have this gold rush mentality, nationally, where places are just like tripping over themselves trying to get to the buckets of federal money while they can, and kind of like, well, we’ll solve the workforce stuff when it comes to it,” he said. 

For example, Kane said a local water utility might have five workers, and two or three are eligible to retire. Or, they might seek higher-paying jobs in other states. Losing 40 percent to 60 percent of your workforce at a time when federal money is flowing into water infrastructure isn’t ideal, he said. 

“They’re not really stepping back to rethink their prevailing training and hiring and retention strategies,” Kane said. 

Kane said states need to create a pipeline of skilled trades to do the work over the coming decades. That could be for initial construction or ongoing operations and maintenance.

“We need to create a talent pipeline,” he said. “The need is to have a bigger pool of talent, in general, even over the next five years, 10 years, 20 years, 30 years that all these employers can pull from.”

If the talent pool is too small, states risk competing with each other for a scarce resource.

“We’re going to compete against each other for those few people,” Kane said. “And then it’s kind of a race to the bottom where we can’t find people to do the work.”

It’s not just boots on the ground, Kane said. Some communities don’t have the people they need to write the grants to get the competitive funds in the first place.

“They’re sitting on over $100 billion in competitive grants that they can award places,” he said, “and the concerns I’ve heard from places is not even do they have the staff to do these projects, they don’t even have the grant writers to get those competitive grants or to apply for them.”

Manchin said you can’t just throw money at a city or a county government and expect them to know what to do with it.

“I think money just passed out without any structure or guidance can sometimes not be a blessing at all but be a hardship,” she said.

That’s part of the Appalachian Regional Commission’s modern mission. The agency was conceived by President Lyndon B. Johnson’s White House as a federal antipoverty program.

In the past, the ARC focused on hard infrastructure, such as a 3,000-mile network of improved highways in the region. (Decades later, it’s still under construction.) In more recent years, the ARC has turned its focus to human infrastructure: education, training, workforce development and entrepreneurship.

Kane said it won’t be enough to say you spent a certain amount of money to create a certain number of jobs. A true return on investment would be a build-out of durable skills that workers can use until they retire.

“Maybe people will get some jobs, but maybe the bigger point is the fact that they’re getting licenses and certifications and skills that allow them to do other sorts of work once that construction project ends?” Kane said. “I haven’t gotten a clear answer to that, which is concerning, because the money’s already going out there.”

Hannah said big, one-time projects can still deliver benefits to a region that’s been in distress.

“Those one off projects, they’re valuable, they’re beneficial, they’re not permanent, long term, but they help sort of get a shot in the arm, a jumpstart, you know, for a community in a region,” he said. “And then what we want to do is be able to place those folks into other opportunities that may be more long term and long lasting.”

Hannah said he’s optimistic about the federal funds that are available from several agencies. And that the federal government is making coal communities a priority for the investment.

“I think right now we’re at a very exciting time because the government is willing to invest in that experimentation period,” he said.

Hannah’s organization helped grow Solar Holler into the biggest solar installer in the region.

“You know, 10 years ago, there wasn’t even a solar installation company in our region,” he said. “And so we’re trying to catch up really quickly.”

Now there are six or seven solar companies in the region, Hannah said. 

Still, Hannah said it’s a stretch to transform the workforce in just 10 years when the economy has been based on a single extractive industry – coal – for more than a century.

Coalfield Development is retraining out-of-work coal miners to work in solar. He said the Inflation Reduction Act and the infrastructure law will spur even more development of solar and renewable energy, often on reclaimed mine or power plant sites.

This month, Coalfield Development is beginning a one-month training course to teach the basics of solar. Anyone can apply and each participant will receive a $2,000 stipend.

Solar jobs won’t replace coal jobs on a 1-to-1 basis, he said. West Virginia has one of the lowest labor participation rates in the country. It’s a challenge just to get people to go to work.

There’s no silver bullet, Hannah said, no ideal job creator to save West Virginia or Appalachia.

“It’s an uphill battle. It’s not an easy one,” he said. “And so we’re trying our best to feel those needs without trying to just rely upon outside forces and outside labor to come rescue the day, but to help incubate the people that have been left behind in those communities that we’re working directly with, and have them be the change agents and the owners of that change that’s happening.”

Solar Holler is an underwriter of West Virginia Public Broadcasting.

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This story is part of the series, “Help Wanted: Understanding West Virginia’s Labor Force.”

Cybersecurity Workforce Training Planned At Glenville State University

The program’s aim is to create a sustainable economic future for West Virginia’s coal-impacted north central region. Anyone living in north central West Virginia in counties defined as “distressed” or “at-risk” can receive free training and certification in cybersecurity-related fields. 

Glenville State University is partnering with the Appalachian Regional Commission to offer residents in distressed counties free cybersecurity training. 

Demand for people with cybersecurity skills in West Virginia and other states is climbing steadily and that trend is projected to continue.

The program’s aim is to create a sustainable economic future for West Virginia’s coal-impacted north central region. Anyone living in north central West Virginia in counties defined as “distressed” or “at-risk” can receive free training and certification in cybersecurity-related fields. 

“Our POWER grant with ARC allows for the development of free boot camps, and will provide each participant with all the training materials, study guides and exams at no cost,” Peggy Runyon, Glenville State’s project director for the initiative, said. 

Participants in identified counties will receive training and eventual certification in cybersecurity-related fields. 

“We are making strong efforts to bring the training to the people in these counties,” Runyon said. “This training would cost several thousand dollars if you were paying for it out of pocket, so I sincerely encourage individuals to take advantage of this exclusive opportunity.”

West Virginia counties defined as “distressed” or “at-risk” include Barbour, Braxton, Calhoun, Clay, Doddridge, Fayette, Gilmer, Grant, Greenbrier, Harrison, Lewis, Mercer, Nicholas, Pocahontas, Ritchie, Roane, Summers, Tucker, Upshur, Webster and Wirt. Other West Virginia counties will be considered as well.

The first class, CompTIA Network+ is scheduled from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday, June 24; Sunday, June 25; and Saturday, July 1. No prerequisites are required but seating is limited. 

The free training program is made possible through a Partnerships for Opportunity and Workforce and Economic Revitalization grant for the university’s Cybersecurity and Safety Workforce Development Initiative.

A total of $1,402,408 in local and federal funding is being provided for the project.

To sign up for the course or for more information, contact Peggy.Runyon@glenville.edu or call (304) 462-6383.

Federal Money Helps Fund Wide Array Of State Programs

Millions of federal dollars are coming to the state for a variety of programs ranging from affordable housing to mental health training.

Millions of federal dollars are coming to the state for a variety of programs. 

Sen. Joe Manchin, D-West Virginia, Tuesday announced more than $12 million for projects ranging from affordable housing to mental health training. 

More than $1 million from the Appalachian Regional Commission will support increasing staffing and strengthening administrative capacities for 13 projects across the state.

The bulk of the money, close to $10 million from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, will bolster 20 community-based efforts across the state to address homelessness. 

The largest individual awards will go to the Huntington, West Virginia Housing Authority and the West Virginia Coalition to End Homelessness, that will each receive close to $1.8 million to help connect individuals and families currently experiencing homelessness with vital supportive services.

Additionally, $1.5 million from the U.S. Department of Education’s Mental Health Service Professionals Demonstration Program will be split between West Virginia University and Concord University to support the training of school-based mental health service providers for employment in schools and local educational agencies across West Virginia.  

The program provides funding to establish innovative partnerships between institutions of higher education and local schools and educational agencies. It trains school counselors, social workers, psychologists and other mental health professionals qualified to provide school-based mental health services, with the goal of expanding the pipeline of these workers into low-income public schools to address shortages of school-based mental health service professionals.

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