Marshall, WVU Program Aims To Keep Graduates In State

Modeled after Ascend WV, the two year First Ascent program aims to keep recent graduates in the state. It is a collaboration of both Marshall University and West Virginia University.

Modeled after Ascend WV, the two year First Ascent program aims to keep recent graduates in the state. It is a collaboration of both Marshall University and West Virginia University (WVU).

Participants must have recently graduated from one of the two universities and have a remote or hybrid job. They will receive incentives such as access to free co-working space and outdoor recreation equipment, success coaches and professional mentorships and more.

Marshall President Brad Smith and WVU President Gordon Gee announced the initiative at the West Virginia Chamber of Commerce Business Summit Wednesday. Their presentation estimated keeping 1,000 students in the state after graduation will have a $317 million economic impact and will also create more than 900 additional jobs.

Gee said next to energy exports, the state’s biggest export in recent years has been young talent.

“We simply have to make certain that now what we do is we keep our talent here,” he said.

Applicants to First Ascent will be able to choose from five communities: Morgantown Area, Huntington Area, Eastern Panhandle, New River Gorge, Greater Elkins and Greenbrier Valley.

Gee said the effort is part of his and Smith’s “United Universities” approach.

“Between the two of us, we’re the largest employers in the state, we have the most economic value in the state, we drive almost everything that happens here with our colleagues in the legislature, the governor and others,” Gee said. “We make certain that we have a common agenda, a common bond and a common purpose. I think it is working very well, and I can tell you, that will make a real difference for West Virginia.”

Smith said in the meeting the next generation is looking to them to help them see that their future is in the state with meaningful job opportunities. 

“Let’s get creative and innovative and remove the barriers so that our sons and daughters can stay here in this state, stand on the shoulders of the giants who sit in this room and continue to build the great state of West Virginia” he said.

In a press release, WVU said seed funding for the First Ascent pilot program originated from WVU Provost Maryanne Reed’s Innovation Summit and a subsequent award was provided by the U.S. Economic Development Administration’s Build Back Better Regional Challenge Grant to Coalfield Development and WVU.

Ascend Remote Worker Program Adds New River Gorge Location

With the addition of the New River Gorge region, the Ascend West Virginia program now has five destinations that are welcoming new remote working residents to the Mountain State.

With the addition of the New River Gorge region, the Ascend West Virginia program now has five destinations that are welcoming new remote working residents to the Mountain State. By offering incentives of cash and free outdoor adventures, the program hopes to offset the state’s population decline.

Ascend West Virginia began with a $25 million gift to West Virginia University’s (WVU) Brad and Alys Smith Outdoor Economic Development Collaborative. Teaming up with the state Department of Tourism, Ascend selects applicants (more than 20,000 since its launch), who are willing to move to the state. The people selected get $12,000 in cash and another $8,000 in outdoor activity vouchers.  

Tourism Secretary Chelsea Ruby called Ascend a progressive success.

“We have nearly 300 new West Virginia residents that have come over the last two years,” Ruby said. “They are spread across the state in various host communities. And the retention rate is at about 98 percent, so things are going well.” 

Ruby said adding the New River Gorge region to the Ascend community roster offers options.

“They can live anywhere in the New River Gorge region.” she said. “It’s not just Fayetteville, it’s not just Oak Hill. They can basically live anywhere in the area from Summersville down to Beckley and all around. We’re looking for them to put down roots in those communities.”

Ascend executive team member Danny Twilley, a WVU assistant vice president of Economic Community and Asset Development, said the other four Ascend community regions continue to take applicants.

So if you want a college town, you’ve got Morgantown,” Twilley said. “If you want the kind of access to the major metropolitan area in D.C. and in the growth of the Eastern Panhandle, you’ve got that area. If you want that cool art and food culture with some really unique outdoor assets, you’ve got Greenbrier Valley and Lewisburg. And then Elkins is a western gateway to the Monongahela National Forest.” 

“Ascenders,” as they are called, hail from 34 states and two countries. Ruby said they are a diverse lot.

”We’ve got some that are singles, we’ve got some couples, we’ve got some families,” Ruby said. “I think we even have a couple of new babies that have been born into Ascend families since they’ve moved here.”

Ruby said the Ascend remote workers come from a variety of businesses and industries, highlighted by health care, advertising and educational services. 

“Just skimming the list, you know, we’ve got folks from Deloitte Consulting, KPMG, Ocean Spray, UnitedHealthcare, Vivid Seats, Walgreens,” she said. “They really are a very broad spectrum. They come from nearly every industry.” 

Twilley said a majority of Ascenders have advanced education. 

“Whether it’s a four year degree, a master’s or beyond, 25 percent of them have a very direct connection to the state and 75 percent don’t have a family member or have lived here before,” Twilley said. “It’s a relatively broad swath. We’ve had applications from over 80 different countries and all 50 states.” 

The goal is to have 1,000 Ascend families come to West Virginia in the next six years. Twilley said one new group target will be military veterans.

“West Virginia produces more military veterans per capita than any other state in the country and we have the least amount to return home, right?” Twilley said. “They learn tremendous skills, they have lived a life of service, they have built a sense of community and what it means to be a military veteran. We had the highest population in 1950. Over the next 71 years, we lost over 200,000 people – about 12 percent. I think we can replenish it back to that era of a population. That’s really a long-term goal that we’re focused on.”

Ruby said what Ascend is selling is the kind of outdoor lifestyle a remote worker can have in West Virginia. 

“I firmly believe it is the nation’s premier remote worker program,” she said. “I’m really excited about the results that we’ve seen over the first two years and am really excited about the future.” 

Library Benefits And Remote Working Opportunities To Offset Population Decline, This West Virginia Morning

On this West Virginia Morning, summer is the perfect time for students of all ages to relax, but it’s also a time when learning loss can occur. One of the best resources to avoid the so-called “summer slide” is the library. Chris Schulz has the story.

On this West Virginia Morning, summer is the perfect time for students of all ages to relax, but it’s also a time when learning loss can occur. One of the best resources to avoid the so-called “summer slide” is the library. Chris Schulz has the story.

Also, in this show, with the addition of the New River Gorge region, the Ascend West Virginia program now has five destinations that are welcoming new remote working residents to the Mountain State. With the incentives of cash and free outdoor adventures, the program hopes to help offset the state’s population decline. Randy Yohe reports.

West Virginia Morning is a production of West Virginia Public Broadcasting which is solely responsible for its content.

Support for our news bureaus comes from Concord University and Shepherd University.

Caroline MacGregor is our assistant news director and produced this episode.

Teresa Wills is our host.

Listen to West Virginia Morning weekdays at 7:43 a.m. on WVPB Radio or subscribe to the podcast and never miss an episode. #WVMorning

Ascend West Virginia Adds Another Community To The Program

Elkins will be the fourth community in the Ascend West Virginia program.

Elkins will be the fourth community in the Ascend West Virginia program, which aims to attract remote workers to the state with more than $20,000 in incentives, including cash and free outdoor recreation.

The program is the brainchild of Brad and Alys Smith. Ascend has already placed 75 remote workers and their families in Morgantown and the Greenbrier Valley, with another group of 22 coming to the Eastern Panhandle in early 2023.

Robbie Morris, executive director of the Randolph County Development Authority, said he was grateful for the opportunity the announcement presents for Elkins.

“Elkins and this entire region of West Virginia has a tremendous amount to offer. For remote workers, for families, for a wide array of businesses and industries,” he said. “We could not be more proud to be a part of the Ascend community as the fourth community.”

Since its launch in April of 2021, the program has received more than 20,000 applicants, including more than 2,900 to make the move to the Eastern Panhandle.

Applications are now open for the Elkins location, as well as the other three Ascend communities, at ascendwv.com.

Ascend’s Remote Workers Help Elevate State Tourism

The pandemic changed the ways people work. Over the past year, Ascend West Virginia has taken advantage of that change to attract remote workers – and their friends and family – to the state.

The pandemic changed the ways people work. Over the past year, Ascend West Virginia has taken advantage of that change to attract remote workers to the state.

Two years ago, Jordan Hyde didn’t think much of West Virginia. That isn’t to say she had a low opinion of the state.

“I just didn’t really have a perception of West Virginia, like I hadn’t heard much about it, didn’t know anyone from here, had never been,” she said.

So when Hyde told her friends and family last year that she was planning on moving to West Virginia from Iowa, where she lived for the past 10 years, there was a bit of confusion.

“They’re kind of like, ‘Why do you want to go out there? Like, there’s nothing there.’ And it’s like, Well, it sounds like a fun adventure,” she said.

Hyde is a member of Ascend West Virginia, a remote work and talent recruitment program founded by former Intuit CEO and president of Marshall University Brad Smith and his wife Alys Smith. The program aims to attract workers with existing jobs to move to the state and create a base of skilled employees that will then attract larger business investment. It’s a reverse of the traditional model of attracting businesses.

The program offers workers with remote jobs incentives to move. Those incentives are estimated to have a value of $20,000 and include $12,000, access to a free cowork space, and a year of free outdoor recreation. Fifty people were selected for the first group of participants, called a cohort, in Morgantown. In August applications closed for the program’s second cohort in the Greenbrier Valley.

Hyde says she’s always been inclined towards the outdoors, and the outdoor incentives only helped cement her choice. She says she looked at other programs such as Tulsa Remote in Oklahoma or Life Works Here in Bentonville, Arkansas but ultimately West Virginia’s beauty won her over.

“I think that was kind of the initial hook,” Hyde said. “But just like looking more into West Virginia, I’d never been to West Virginia and it was like, very new to me, I’ve never lived in the mountains. Again, I’m from the Midwest. So it was just exciting and beautiful, as we were looking into it, just breathtaking.”

Hyde isn’t keeping the discovery to herself.

“It is a ripple effect,” she said. “Other friends and family, my boyfriend’s and uncle that are coming, have kind of seen our parents and their experience here. And they’re like, ‘Oh, man, I want to get out there and see what it’s all about and visit them.’ So I think the tone has definitely changed for the better.”

Paris Winfrey is the experience coordinator for Ascend’s Morgantown cohort. He says that Hyde’s experience of winning over skeptical friends and relatives is not unique.

“That is one of many stories of people who have brought their loved ones and their families here,” Winfrey said. “The lack of actual experience in West Virginia is the big barrier. Once you come and experience West Virginia, it makes sense, it clicks, it immediately clicks. You see the kindness and the people, you see the beauty and nature and it all makes sense; why someone would want to live here and why someone would want to come and recreate and be a part of this.”

Winfrey, who helps Ascend cohort members make use of their outdoor benefits and plan excursions around the state, says he’s also seen a lot of in-state tourism from the group.

“They’re really interested to know Appalachia, and really interested to know West Virginians,” he said. “A lot of other people externally try to tell our story, but there are lot of people who are now interested in coming here to actually hear our story from us, which I think is a unique position that West Virginia hasn’t been in for a long time.”

West Virginia Secretary of Tourism Chelsea Ruby says that from the outset, Ascend leaders knew there would be an added benefit of cohort members attracting other people to the state. Which is why her office got involved. The scale, however, has come as a surprise.

“We knew there would be spouses, there would be partners, there would be children, but I don’t think what we calculated was the mother-in-law, the great aunts, the uncles, the friends, the others that are coming along with them,” Ruby said.

Ruby says surveys and studies her office has conducted bear out Hyde’s experience: negative public perception isn’t what’s holding West Virginia back when it comes to tourism.

“We find that people who are exposed to our ads have a different perception of West Virginia, not because they necessarily had a bad perception before, but because they had no perception,” she said. “They weren’t thinking about West Virginia, we weren’t on their radar as a place to visit or a place to live.”

Ascend worked closely with the state’s tourism office from the onset, hoping to change- or some might argue create – external perceptions of the state.

“All the things that make West Virginia a great place to visit, also make it a great place to live,” Ruby said. “If you think back to the governor’s inaugural address, he talked in that about how we need to change our state’s image. We need to change the way the outside world thinks of West Virginia, and I’m proud to say that I think five years later, we’ve really started to do that.”

One of the biggest criticisms of Ascend is that it has prioritized – and paid – non West Virginians to come to the state rather than doing the same to help native residents stay. According to the 2020 census, West Virginia experienced the largest population loss in the country as 3.2 percent of the state’s residents left. Winfrey himself left the state, and the country, for several years before returning for his job with Ascend.

“The solution can be one of two things, either you bring new people in, or you keep people from leaving,” Winfrey said. “This is not the one solution to fix anything. But we talked a lot about changing the narrative of the state. When we opened up our application, we had 10,000 people fill out an application and say, ‘I want to move to West Virginia.’ That’s huge, that is against the trends that we were heading towards.”

The Ascend West Virginia program continues to expand as another cohort moves into the Greenbrier Valley, and applicants are chosen for the program’s third cohort in the Eastern Panhandle. The hope that each group will continue what Morgantown started, and keep spreading the good word about West Virginia across the country.

State Legislators Receive Update On Ascend WV Program

State legislators got an update on the Ascend West Virginia program from Chelsea Ruby, Secretary of the West Virginia Department of Tourism and Danny Twilley, Assistant Vice President of the West Virginia University Brad and Alys Smith Outdoor Economic Development Collaborative

During Monday’s legislative interim meetings, Chelsea Ruby, Secretary of the West Virginia Department of Tourism, and Danny Twilley, Assistant Vice President of the West Virginia University Brad and Alys Smith Outdoor Economic Development Collaborative, gave the West Virginia Legislative Oversight Commission on Workforce Investment for Economic Development an update on Ascend WV.

In exchange for moving to the West Virginia towns of Morgantown, Shepherdstown, and Lewisburg, workers were paid $12,000, given access to professional development through West Virginia University, co-working facilities, and one year of free passes and two years of free rentals for outdoor recreation as part of the Ascend WV Program.

For the Ascend program in Morgantown, 7500 people applied for 50 spots. The applications came from all 50 states and from more than 70 countries.

Of the people who eventually moved to Morgantown, 23 percent originally hailed from the Mountain State. One of the new Morgantown residents hailed from Berlin.

“We’ve really seen a very diverse set of applicants,” said Ruby.

Contrary to earlier estimates, the program didn’t primarily appeal to people working remotely in the tech industry.

“There’s healthcare, computer systems, manufacturing, management, and then professional services,” she said.

The primary challenge was finding housing for new residents. Ruby indicated that the tax incentives from the recent passing of the Build WV Act will make it easier to find housing for new residents.

“The hope is that we can find some private developers to help us do that work rather than the state or WVU taking on that type of rehabilitation,” Ruby said.

Danny Twilley told legislatures that Ascend WV doesn’t just incentivize individuals to West Virginia, but tries to help them join the local community with events.

“We ask them to bring their families along with their significant others because, again, it’s all about building that sense of community and sense of belongingness,” said Twilley.

Secretary Ruby said the program was successful in presenting the state as a place to work remotely and even retire. She added that data shows Ascend advertising having a positive effect on the state’s image.

“The exposure of this Ascend program is really starting to get some traction. People are really starting to think about West Virginia as a place to work remotely,” she said. “That data shows Ascend advertising having a positive effect on the state’s image. These tourism ads layering on top of the remote worker ads are also starting to help, and we are continuing to improve West Virginia’s image overall.”

Ascend WV looks to expand to 1000 remote workers across five West Virginia towns.

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