Town Of Bethany Votes To Prohibit Anti-LGBTQ Discrimination

On Wednesday, the Bethany Town Council unanimously voted to adopt a local fairness law, which prohibits anti-LGBTQ discrimination in housing, employment and public services.

The Bethany Town Council unanimously voted to prohibit anti-LGBTQ discrimination in housing, employment and public services Wednesday evening.

The council passed a new ordinance known colloquially as a fairness law, which expands nondiscrimination policies locally.

These ordinances provide residents protections from discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity, which are omitted from the West Virginia Human Rights Act.

The small Brooke County community is not alone in passing protections for LGBTQ residents. Eighteen other municipalities across West Virginia have passed local fairness laws as recently as 2022.

LGBTQ advocacy groups like Fairness West Virginia say these laws demonstrate that West Virginia communities welcome diversity, and are taking proactive steps to support LGBTQ residents.

The laws “telegraph to the entire state, and entire country, and the world for that matter, that those communities are inclusive places to live and raise a family,” said Executive Director Andrew Schneider.

Schneider said Fairness West Virginia works with communities to spread awareness about local fairness laws, but that community organizers in Bethany took initiative in pushing for the policy.

“Bethany’s leaders stepped up to protect their LGBTQ friends and neighbors,” he said. “They proved yet again that no community is too small to welcome everyone.”

The idea for the Bethany ordinance arose when Erin James-Brown, a local community leader and West Virginia transplant, learned that the state lacked codified protections against anti-LGBTQ discrimination.

James-Brown serves as pastor of the Bethany Memorial Church, which is “an LGBTQ+-affirming church,” she said. “We have queer people in (our) leadership and we celebrate marriages. They’re an essential part of our life as a church.”

After hearing about Fairness West Virginia’s advocacy work, James-Brown said she approached members of the Bethany Town Council with the idea of passing a non-discrimination ordinance for LGBTQ residents.

Over the course of several months, James-Brown said she watched as the council worked through the policy and, ultimately, settled on a law to pass.

In addition to supporting LGBTQ residents, this brings opportunities for new businesses and tourists to come to the small town, James-Brown said.

“To have it passed, I just broke out into applause,” she said. “The responses I’ve gotten are text messages from people just saying how excited they are.”

Beyond advocacy on the local level, Schneider said his organization has encouraged state lawmakers to pass a fairness law for the entirety of West Virginia.

Fairness laws have been introduced in the West Virginia Legislature before, with a bill prohibiting anti-LGBTQ discrimination proposed just months ago at the start of the 2024 legislative session.

But these bills rarely get traction, despite support from advocacy groups. This year’s bill was sent into a committee on the first day of the regular session, where it sat for all sixty days.

Despite setbacks like these, Schneider said that the success of fairness laws on the local level shows growing support for the LGBTQ community across West Virginia.

“We hope that, eventually, (as) more communities adopt these laws, it will put increasing pressure and influence on their state legislators to take the action to get the law passed statewide,” he said.

No Funds To Repair, Replace Closed Ohio River Bridge

On Dec. 21, the department shut down the Market Street Bridge, which crosses the Ohio River from Brooke County to Steubenville, Ohio.

State transportation officials closed a bridge in the Northern Panhandle last month, and the funds are not there to fix or replace it.

State Transportation Secretary Jimmy Wriston told lawmakers Tuesday that none of the nearly 7,000 bridges in West Virginia would be open if they were not safe.

On Dec. 21, his department shut down the Market Street Bridge, which crosses the Ohio River from Brooke County to Steubenville, Ohio.

The closure of the bridge, built in 1905, angered local officials. But Wriston estimated the bridge would cost tens of millions of dollars to fix – funds he doesn’t have.

“If we were fortunate enough to get an earmark, one of our senators sent me a $60 million down here today and said, ‘Have at it.’ Oh, we’ll start the process today,” Wriston said Tuesday. “But I don’t have Market Street in our six-year plan. It’s not there.”

Federal funds have been made available under the 2021 infrastructure law to fix bridges.

The Division of Highways plans to inspect the 1,800-foot bridge later in the month without a live load. It said the steel strands inside the bridge’s support cables have been rapidly deteriorating.

W.Va. 911 Centers File Complaint Against Frontier Communications

The agency tasked with operating West Virginia’s 911 centers has filed a complaint against Frontier West Virginia Inc.

The West Virginia Public Service Commission was asked Wednesday to investigate a complaint against Frontier Communications that 10 emergency call centers were unable to field 911 calls for up to 10 hours during a three day period last month.

According to the complaint the WVE911 Council, the umbrella agency that operates 911 centers in the state, alleges that within the past 24 months, several Public-Safety Answering Points (PSAPs) within the state have experienced lengthy outages of 911 service.

The most recent outage was from Nov. 28 through Nov. 30 where Brooke, Ohio, Marshall, Wetzel, Tyler, Doddridge, Ritchie, Harrison, Taylor and Mingo County residents were unable to call 911 for up to 10 hours.

Dean Meadows, executive director for the council, filed the complaint and said the telephone provider has inadequate backup to ensure telephone service to many centers when telephone lines are subject to vandalism or bad weather.

Meadows’ complaint asked the Commission to ensure that Frontier provides proper backup services so “no resident will ever lose the ability to call 911 for emergency assistance.”

“We’re really at our wit’s end about what ought to be done,” Meadows said in a press release.

Electric Pontoon Boat Manufacturer Coming To W.Va.

Gov. Jim Justice announced that the Pure Watercraft company will build electric pontoon boats in the Northern Panhandle’s Brooke County.

Speaking at the West Virginia Chamber of Commerce annual summit at the Greenbrier on Wednesday, Gov. Jim Justice announced that the Pure Watercraft company will build electric pontoon boats in the Northern Panhandle’s Brooke County.

Justice said the company will set up an 80,000 square foot facility on a revitalized steel plant site at the Beech Bottom Industrial Park.

The company expects to invest at least $5 million in the plant, creating 100 full time jobs by 2025.

“I like the fact that they’ll go to a maximum speed of 23 miles an hour,” Justice said. “So that way, I’ll be safe at all times.”

Pure Watercraft, out of Seattle, Washington, is a direct-to-consumer provider of high-performance electric boats. The company will produce the Pure Pontoon Boat here in West Virginia, being developed in collaboration with strategic investor General Motors.

June 1, 1880: Colliers Hosts World Championship Bout

A world championship prize fight was held in the Brooke County town of Colliers on June 1, 1880.

At the time, boxing was illegal in every state. To avoid big-city police, promoters often held matches in rural railroad villages. Colliers was a perfect location, being close to Pittsburgh and several Ohio towns.

The bout paired 44-year-old defending champ Joe Goss against 28-year-old Paddy Ryan. Promoters set up a makeshift boxing ring by driving four stakes into a grass meadow and stringing a rope around them. Goss and Ryan sparred by the popular bare-knuckles rules of the day. The fight was even through the first 35 rounds. By the 45th, Goss was on the ropes but somehow rallied back. By the 70th, Ryan was again in charge. Between the 80th and 86th rounds, Ryan continually knocked the helpless Goss to the ground, but the champ astonishingly fought on. Finally, Goss was unable to answer the call for the 87th round. The nearly hour-and-a-half bout at Colliers had produced a new world champ: Paddy Ryan. Ryan lost his title two years later to the great John L. Sullivan.

Treatment Court for Military Veterans Set to Debut in W.Va.

A court for military veterans and active service members is set to debut in West Virginia.

State Supreme Court justices are scheduled to be on hand for the launching of the program Wednesday at the Brooke County Courthouse in Wellsburg.

The court was part of a bill introduced during this year’s legislative session. A Supreme Court statement says that the court will be part of existing drug court programs.

Qualifying participants have to be charged with criminal offenses related to their military service, such as addiction or other mental health disorders. Treatments will be tailored to participants’ needs.

Brooke County Republican Sen. Ryan Weld is an attorney and a former assistant prosecutor. He says the court will offer rehabilitation instead of incarceration and give veterans the second chance they deserve.

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