Police Begin Clearing Wheeling Encampment, Advocates Push Back

A new camping ban went into effect in Wheeling this month, but advocates for the unhoused community are pushing back.  

Updated on Thursday, Oct. 18, 2024 at 10:35 a.m

On Thursday morning, Jan. 18 at 8 a.m. Wheeling Police notified individuals encamped behind the Nelson Jordan Center in Wheeling that they would begin clearing the site at 10 a.m. It is unclear at this time to where the displaced individuals experiencing homelessness will relocate. The forecast high in Wheeling for Jan. 18 is 32°, with several inches of snow likely overnight and through Friday, Jan. 19.

Original Story

A new camping ban went into effect in Wheeling this month, but advocates for the unhoused community are pushing back.  

In November, the Wheeling City Council voted 5 to 2 to enact a camping ban on public property in the city, punishable by a fine of up to $500.

The city council once again discussed the ordinance at their Jan. 16 meeting, and its potential impact on some five encampments where anywhere from 10 to 30 people shelter.

Several councilmembers highlighted a clause that gives the city manager discretion to exempt certain camps. Council member Ben Seidler said the city was working towards the goal of having one managed camp, and did not see the need to do away with the entire ordinance.

“There is a process in place for you to request exemptions to specific camps,” he said. “It’s right there in black and white. So I would say, there’s not a need to retract this entire ban.” 

He asked City Manager Robert Herron if any formal requests for exemptions had been made for any of the campsites within city limits. Herron replied he had not received any.

“The discussion, I think, has focused on a managed camp and the rules and regulations associated with long-term camp,” he said. “I’m going to be open to short term exemptions to the camping ban, as long as everyone recognizes that I have the authority to do that.”

Councilmember Rosemary Ketchum, who along with Mayor Glenn Elliot voted against the camping ban, pointed out that the ordinance does not provide a process for the general public to request an exemption, only the authority of the city manager to exempt specific sites.

City council members say the ordinance is necessary for public safety and hygiene, but advocates for the homeless like Dr. William Mercer say the ordinance just criminalizes poverty and addiction. 

“I wish they would quit looking at them as criminals,” he said. “They have a disease, it’s an illness, when you’re addicted, let’s treat it like that.”

Mercer provides street medicine to the city’s unhoused with Project Hope. He spoke at Tuesday’s meeting on behalf of more than 30 service providers, who also sent a letter to the council prior to the meeting, to ask the city to pause the ordinance and ultimately repeal it in favor of other options such as creating individual encampment plans. 

“It’s all about communication,” Mercer said. “I’m hoping we can kind of discuss this and, and be a model.”

Such alternative approaches recognize the reality that experiencing homelessness is a complex issue that affects each individual differently. In previous meetings, council members had expressed hope that the camping ban would coincide with the opening of the city’s winter freeze shelter. But Mercer said shelters cannot accommodate everyone, both due to capacity as well as individual conditions like paranoid schizophrenia. He sad that since opening, the 50 bed shelter has served 120 individuals. With temperatures staying stubbornly below freezing even during the day and snow and ice on the ground, its just not enough protection.

“So no, we don’t have enough beds,” Mercer said. “Shelter beds is one thing. The problem with the shelters are you got to be out from eight o’clock in the morning at night.”

Mercer does credit the city for the efforts it continues to make to help those experiencing homelessness, like creating a daytime warming shelter where individuals can access health and other community resources.

The ordinance has drawn heavy public criticism since it was first proposed in October. The American Public Health Association, of which Mercer is a member, has put out a white paper stating that “forced removals or displacements of encampments.. endanger the health and well-being of people experiencing unsheltered homelessness and impair access to safe, stable housing or shelter.”

Others believe such bans and forced removals are unconstitutional.

On Friday, Jan. 12  the American Civil Liberties Union of West Virginia issued a warning that they would sue if the city did not pause the camping ban over the next 96 hours. After no such action was taken at Tuesday’s council meeting, the ACLU filed suit in the Northern District of West Virginia.

Aubrey Sparks, legal director of ACLU WV, said the ban makes certain facets of just being a person, such as eating, sleeping, or storing items, illegal outdoors. 

“The reason we think that is unconstitutional is because you can’t say that someone’s status is illegal, you have to say that an action they’re taking is illegal,” she said. “So long as there are fewer beds and shelters in Wheeling, then there are people experiencing homelessness, then some number of people are going to have to sleep outside every night, and therefore they’re going to be in violation of the ban, and it’s not going to be a choice on their part.”

The ACLU’s suit is seeking an injunction as well as declaratory relief, meaning they are asking the court to find that the ban and forced removals are an unconstitutional practice. Sparks said legal precedent both in West Virginia and across the country is in their favor, but the exemption clause does provide the city with an avenue towards constitutionality.

“We’re not sure what the city of wheeling plans to do in terms of this new process that they’ve created for considering exemptions in terms of their potential destruction of camps,” she said.  “There’s a lot up in the air right now.”

The city could begin conducting sweeps and removals of encampments as soon as this week, although Mercer and others do not believe that will happen.

Camping Ban In Wheeling And State Lawmakers Talk DHHR Restructuring, This West Virginia Morning

On this West Virginia Morning, a new camping ban went into effect in Wheeling this month. But as Chris Schulz reports, advocates for the unhoused community are pushing back. 

On this West Virginia Morning, a new camping ban went into effect in Wheeling this month. But as Chris Schulz reports, advocates for the unhoused community are pushing back. 

Also, in this show, in our latest episode of The Legislature Today, Emily Rice sat down with Del. Amy Summers, R-Taylor, and Sen. Charles Trump, R-Morgan, to discuss why the Department of Health and Human Resources (DHHR) was broken up into three separate agencies and how it is going.

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 Shepherd University.

Eric Douglas produced this episode.

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

Alternative Lodgings, 'Glamping,' Enhance W.Va. Tourism Destinations

Many vacationers seek out suitable lodgings near whatever indoor or outdoor experience they are venturing to see. But that trip can become richer when the shelter becomes part of the experience.

Many vacationers seek out suitable lodgings near whatever indoor or outdoor experience they are venturing to see. But that trip can become richer when the shelter becomes part of the experience.

Alternative lodging and glamping can turn a weekend stay into a little adventure. Randy Yohe and his wife Vickie said if you haven’t stayed in a treehouse, wigwam, or caboose – consider expanding your horizons.

Between shoveling coal into the locomotive firebox, or checking the water level to produce enough pressure for the engine to produce steam, Cass Railroad fireman Justin Gay said he enjoys his job, most of the time.

“You get to meet people from all around the world,” Gay said. ”You got people from different countries and neighboring states, then you got to deal with difficult coal that doesn’t burn too hot.”

The all wheel drive Shay locomotive was designed for the roughest mountain duty under the worst possible conditions.The antique Locomotives that tourists ride at the Cass Scenic Railroad State Park are among the few remaining anywhere.

Gay said in its heyday a century ago, this railroad didn’t stop, and this lumber town was busy.

“This line here was the main line that went up the mountain,” Gay said. “The track beside us was with C & O, which went up to Durbin and then Durbin connected into Western Maryland and Maryland. They did a whole lot here. They clear-cut that whole mountain. This giant parking lot was nothing but a lumberyard.”

No lodge, cabins or tent campground evident at this state park highlighted by a grand old train. My wife Vickie and I crossed one off our bucket list by staying in one of the 20 or so refurbished Cass company houses. Similar homes in a row built in the early 1900’s for the workers at the lumber mill and the machine shop.

“The company houses are great. They’re the original structures, Vickie said. “Of course, they’ve been fitted with modern amenities, shower heat, air conditioning, but it’s just a nice experience to take a look back at the history of Cass, yet be comfortable. You can do anything offered there in the community: trail biking, take a ride on the railroad, or you can just sit on the porch and relax and wave at your neighbors.”

My wife and I like hotels just fine, but we also enjoy staying in creative places that offer a new experience.

“We’ve stayed in a treehouse in the Virgin Islands, a wigwam off Route 66, the Castaway Caboose in West Virginia, a really wonderful experience. That’s just to name a few,” Vickie said.

West Virginia tourism secretary Chelsea Ruby said the state is getting into the alternative camping and glamping game. Ruby says “Tentrr” campsites sprouting up in state parks put visitors in the heart of the adventure. A short hike is required to access these campsites; many are surrounded by spectacular views.

Tentrr sites come equipped with a pre-set canvas tent on its own wooden deck platform, a queen-size memory foam mattress, side tables, a propane tent heater, picnic table, fire ring, solar shower and more.

Ruby said advertising West Virginia’s alternative lodgings in national tourism publications is drawing travelers to the Mountain State.

“Last month, it was one of our top performing ads,” Ruby said, `”We had an ad that featured a treehouse cabin and one that featured the fire tower. And both of those were among the top and most clicked on ads just because people are interested in these new types of places you can say.”

Our most recent glamping stay was at a farm and forest setting near Alderson, aptly named WV glamping domes.com. Vickie found it by googling West Virginia glamping.

“It was nice. It was beside a stream. You could hear all the sounds in nature, but yet, you’re close to amenities,” Vickie said “Most people want a shower facility, kitchen, running water, even a hot tub. The dome itself was very interesting. It was open partially to the outside so you can see the night sky, the trees, the woods.”

“There’s a river running right through the middle of it. It sits in two counties, and there’s a walking bridge that’s reminiscent of one of the bridges you might find in England or Paris.”

That was Tim Luce. Tim and his wife Angela Luce left their city jobs behind to establish WV Glamping Domes.com in Greenbrier County. Tim said the pandemic helped him find his marketing niche.

“We found that because of the pandemic, rural destinations like ours were up about 300 percent,” Luce said. “That showed me there was a demand from the consumer base for something like this. And so we opened and we booked up an entire year’s worth of reservations in a week for our first dome. And so we rolled all of those reservations as cash flow into building the next ones.”

“We wanted to focus on a connection with nature so the giant window faces the stream,” Tim Luce said. “We also have another dome we’re building right now that’s going to be a mountain view with a huge panoramic view. And then a thing that our guests really love is the skylight.”

From a railroad company house to a Caribbean tree house – from a not-so -rustic tent – to a hot-tub-enhanced glamping dome – finding lodging on part or all of any trip seems only limited these days by imagination and a sense of adventure.

“The Thorny Mountain Fire Tower, that’s what I’m waiting on,” Vickie said. “We are on the waiting list and I hope to do that soon.”

And I plan to join her.

Justice Announces Timeline To Complete Corrections Testing, RNC Unlikely To Come To W.Va.

This story was updated at 3:55 p.m. on June 3, 2020 to include additional comments by Gov. Jim Justice. 

 

All inmates at West Virginia’s correctional facilities are set to be tested for the coronavirus by June 12, Gov. Jim Justice said at a virtual press conference Wednesday morning. 

The system-wide testing comes after an outbreak at the Huttonsville Correctional Center, in Randolph County. As of Monday afternoon, there were 119 prisoners at Huttonsville and eight employees who had tested positive. 

Justice said seven of the employees and 21 inmates have since recovered.

“Everything is moving in the direction that we want it to move,” Justice said. 

He said testing was underway at additional facilities — three regional jails, two prisons and two juvenile centers —  in the state’s two panhandles, with facilities in the Northern Panhandle expected to be fully tested Wednesday. 

There are about 9,300 people incarcerated in state-run prisons and jails.

In the wide-ranging briefing, Justice also announced that beginning on June 10, all state and private park campgrounds would be open to out-of-state guests. The state is asking those guests to stay one week or less.  

Meanwhile, another round of free COVID-19 testing was announced in Grant, Hampshire and Hardy counties for June 13. The testing will be held from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the following EA Hawse Health Center locations:

  • Grant County: 64 Hospital Drive #5, Petersburg

  • Hampshire County: 22338 North Western Turnpike, Romney

  • Hardy County (three locations): 17978 WV 55, Baker; 8 Lee Street #127, Moorefield; and 106 Harold K. Michael Drive, Mathias

The effort is a part of a state-wide initiative to increase testing for minorities and other vulnerable populations disproportionately affected by the coronavirus. 

Scott Adkins, acting commissioner of WorkForce West Virginia also provided an update at the news briefing. He said the agency has received 250,000 unemployment claims over the last 10 weeks — five times the number of claims the agency received in all of 2019 He noted that agency officials are still processing about 5 percent of claims. 

National Convention Unlikely

During the press conference, Justice stepped out to take a phone call from President Donald Trump. 

Justice said he recently extended an invitation to Trump and the Republican Party to consider moving the Republican National Conventionfrom North Carolina to West Virginia. The event is scheduled to be held in Charlotte, N.C., in August.

North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper had expressed concerns about the influx of out-of-town visitors and the ability of a full-scale gathering to adhere to CDC guidelines to protect against the spread of the coronavirus. 

During the Wednesday briefing, Justice characterized his decision to extend the invitation to host the RNC in West Virginia as a way to continue to put the state “on the radar” of the president. 

“The reality is just this: It is such a long-shot, and it is just something that I will continue to do to market West Virginia, he said, adding “… It’s probably not going to become a reality.”

Later in the briefing, Justice said the call with the president was focused mostly on incidents of unrest across the country in response to the killing of unarmed black people by police. Justice praised West Virginia for holding largely peaceful protests and demonstrations. 

He added that he believes his relationship with Trump ultimately benefits West Virignians.

“I wanted him to always know just how welcome he is in West Virginia. And any president, you know,” Justice said. “And we should absolutely welcome all — maybe not Barack Obama — but nevertheless, we’ll welcome any president.” 

 

In a press release sent Wednesday afternoon, Justice said his comments about Obama were “in jest” and related to the Obama administration’s environmental policies.

“Everyone knows that President Obama made it a specific strategy to destroy our coal industry and power plants which, for more than a century, had been the lifeblood of West Virginia’s economy,” Justice stated.

Most industry analysts say low natural gas prices and the continued decline in cost of renewable energy are the main factors driving the decline of coal.

Beech Fork State Park to Offer Online Campsite Reservations

Beech Fork State Park is making it easier to reserve campsites.

Beginning Thursday, visitors can reserve campsites online for up to a year in advance. The 24-hour online reservation option will be available for 176 of the 275 campsites managed by the park.

Beech Fork superintendent Matt Yeager says reservations of campsites for up to a year in advance will only be available online.

Mail-in applications will be accepted beginning Feb. 15, followed by phone-in reservations beginning March 15. Walk-in reservations can be made beginning April 1.

W.Va. Campgrounds Opening for Season

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is preparing to open campgrounds at five West Virginia lakes.
 
The corps says the Bakers Run and G.R. Freeman campgrounds at Sutton Lake will open April 18. The Bee Run campground opened on April 1.

At Burnsville Lake, the Riffle Run and Bulltown campgrounds will open April 25.
 
The Battle Run campground at Summersville Lake opens May 1, followed by the East Fork campground at East Lynn Lake on May 9.
 
R.D. Bailey Lake’s Guyandotte campground will open on May 19.
 
The corps says East Lynn Lake’s overlook day use area above the dam will open for the season on Monday. The lake’s East Fork and Lick Creek day use areas will open April 18.
 

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