Turn This Town Around Project Proposals Getting Final Polish

We continue our coverage of the Turn this Town Around Project. The towns of Grafton and Matewan are turning themselves around through a special collaborative project between West Virginia Public Broadcasting, West Virginia Focus magazine and the West Virginia Community Development Hub. 

The application deadline has passed, but teams now have a two-week window to edit their proposals before funding decisions are finalized.

Grafton teams met Monday night. Amanda Yager, Director for Community Strategies for the West Virginia Community Development Hub, says there was a strong turnout of more than one hundred people. She says the teams spent a good chunk of their time helping each other through a peer exchange.

 “So we asked the folks to take their application, go to another table and hand it to that other team,” says Yager. “And it was really great to see them reading over each other’s applications and you could see people writing notes and making recommendations and really just working as a whole community.  

Yager says 37 teams have applied for funding in Grafton. Each team hopes to receive up to $2,500 for their community-improvement project. There is enough to fully fund 20 projects, although some teams have requested less than the maximum amount.

Yager says a lot of the applications were still very vague, so they’ve asked them to use these two weeks to provide more detail. She encourages them to talk things through with one another and reach out to her if they have questions.

The Grafton teams who will receive funding will find out at their next meeting on September 8, 2014. 

Yager is working with teams in Matewan as well as Grafton and says she can sense the excitement in both communities.

“It’s definitely been building,”  she says. “The momentum’s been building. I am really hopeful that that will continue, and I think that it will. And I like see that a lot of the projects have already kind of started even though they don’t necessarily have that money yet. You can see them meeting and coming up with the plans and they’re – you can really see the communities coming together.”

Grafton Welcomes Swimmers for Summer Championship

  

For more than half a century, swim teams in north central West Virginia have gathered in Clarksburg for an annual summer competition. But the pool that served as the invitational’s home has closed. Organizers have decided to continue the tradition, but rotate its location from year to year. 

For 52 years, young swimmers from across north central West Virginia converged on the Stealey Pool in Clarksburg to breast stroke, back stroke, crawl and butterfly their way to medals, honor and glory.

But with that pool now closed, the fourteen teams involved voted to rename the event (now the North Central West Virginia Summer Swim League Championship) and to hold it this year in Grafton.

Grafton city officials are very pleased with the opportunity and with the turnout they’ve seen. They’ve lined up shuttle busses to get participants and their families and fans to and from the Grafton Municipal Pool and have put local businesses on alert to expect a large influx of people.

City Public Works Manager Busty Weber estimates that at least one thousand people turned out for the event, some coming as early as five in the morning to stake out their spot for the meet.

Organizers expected more than 250 swimmers to compete during the Friday/Saturday championship.

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