Wheeling Faces Worst Flood In 20 Years, Mayor Says

After a week of inclement weather, the Ohio River is higher in Wheeling than it has been in 20 years.

The Ohio River reached “Moderate Flood Stage” in Wheeling on Thursday, a height of 40 feet. The waters were expected to crest at nearly 42 feet.

Major flooded areas included Water Street at Heritage Port and most of the southern end of Wheeling Island near the Wheeling Island Stadium.

The Mayor of Wheeling, Glenn Elliot told MetroNews “Talkine” that the river last crested this high in 2004, but people who live near the river are accustomed to floods.

Free parking is available to park cars for those in flooded areas in the 10th Street and Intermodal Parking Garage.

According to a release from the City of Wheeling 1-70 Exit 0 and the Bridgeport Bridge will remain open for residents and businesses.

Onlookers in vehicles are being asked to avoid flooded areas.

To prepare for flood cleanup, the Wheeling-Ohio County Health Department offered free tetanus shots Friday for West Virginia residents.

The Ohio River is expected to remain in flood stage across portions of the area through the weekend.

Wheeling Suspends Public Camping Ban

The city of Wheeling has agreed to temporarily suspend its urban camping ban. 

The city of Wheeling has agreed to temporarily suspend its urban camping ban. 

The ordinance bans camping on public property in the city, punishable by a fine of up to $500. City workers cleared an encampment behind the Nelson Jordan Center last week.

The city agreed to exempt a camping site at a leased parking lot near the Catholic Charities Neighborhood Center. Catholic Charities, along with other homeless agency partners, are developing rules for this temporary exemption. It is anticipated that this area will begin immediately. The city said it is a temporary location subject to further discussions with Catholic Charities. 

The city will also temporarily pause enforcement of the ordinance to give people time to move their belongings to the exempted site.  

The American Civil Liberties Union of West Virginia dismissed their suit against the city of Wheeling after the exemption was announced. The suit has asked for an injunction as well as declaratory relief finding that the ban and forced removals are an unconstitutional practice.

In a press release, ACLU West Virginia Legal Director Aubrey Sparks said she and others “hope the city will work with service providers and advocates on solutions that are not just constitutional, but also humane, practical and compassionate.”

First Encampment Cleared Under Wheeling Public Camping Ban

The City of Wheeling has cleared its first urban campsite under a new ordinance that went into effect earlier this month. 

The City of Wheeling has cleared its first urban campsite under a new ordinance that went into effect earlier this month. 

Exemptions to Wheeling’s new public camping ban were discussed at Tuesday’s city council meeting, but there was no exemption for one encampment of unhoused people.

Thursday morning, around seven people camping behind the Nelson Jordan Center were given a two-hour notice to vacate the premises.

Dr. William Mercer provides medical services to Wheeling citizens experiencing homelessness with Project Hope. He was present for the city’s clearing.

“They had two bulldozers, two big trucks, 10 city employees and police,” he said.

Despite the city giving notice of the intent to clear the camp last week, Mercer said the clearing caught the community unaware.

“One guy…was at work this morning,” he said. “His friend Terry had to go get him from work and bring him back so he could start packing his stuff up in bags.”

It was unclear where the displaced will spend the night. 

“I think they were going to be able to maybe try to stay with somebody tonight and store some of their stuff in a friend’s garage,” Mercer said. “They didn’t have a whole lot.”

Wheeling is under a winter weather advisory, and Gov. Jim Justice has declared a state of emergency ahead of a storm Friday.

Citing pending litigation, a representative for the Wheeling city manager declined to comment.

The American Civil Liberties Union of West Virginia filed suit against the city in the Northern District of West Virginia Tuesday evening, Jan. 16. They are seeking an injunction against the camping ban ordinance, as well as declaratory relief, asking the court to find that the ban and forced removals are an unconstitutional practice.

Thursday morning ACLU WV filed an emergency request for a temporary restraining order against the City of Wheeling to stop the city from bulldozing tent encampments belonging to unhoused people. No such order was granted before the city took action.

In a press release, ACLU-WV Legal Director Aubrey Sparks called Wheeling “a bad-faith actor.”  

“The city ignored requests to talk about exemptions to the habitation ban for months, created a new process out of thin air this week, and then destroyed people’s shelters anyway,” she said.

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.

ARC: 'Billions' Coming To Coal Communities From Feds

Massive economic opportunities are available for rural energy communities according to Gayle Manchin, the co-chair of the Appalachian Regional Commission (ARC).

Massive economic opportunities are available for rural energy communities according to Gayle Manchin, the co-chair of the Appalachian Regional Commission (ARC).

Manchin was in Wheeling Wednesday at Northern Community College and met with state and federal leaders representing a variety of government agencies. She and other panelists outlined approximately $200 billion of what was called a “once-in-a-generation investment” targeted at coal-impacted communities.

Increases in funding are anticipated for everything from water and sewage projects, brownfield cleanup, and mineland reclamation, to small business support and regionally collaborative economic development.

“What I find exciting about being here today is that it’s really all about how we can all work together and to see a very strong group from Ohio, West Virginia, and Pennsylvania,” Manchin said. She pointed out that the Appalachian region includes 26 million people and 423 counties — rivaling California and Texas.

Manchin said she applauded President Joe Biden’s efforts to infuse Appalachia with financial assistance to help the region transition from coal-dependent to a more diversified economy. Manchin was joined by Brian Anderson, executive director of the Interagency Working Group (IWG) on Coal and Power Plant Communities and Economic Revitalization.

“All of the federal agencies are here to make sure we’re working hand-in-hand with local communities,” Anderson said. He added that the goal is to make sure communities that have been relied upon for national energy independence and security are not left behind as energy trends shift to renewable sources.

Anderson also directs the Department of Energy’s National Energy Technology Laboratory. He expects this funding to be allocated through competitive grant programs over the next five years.

Some of the grant opportunities discussed include those provided through:

Historian Researches Frederick Douglass In W.Va.

Frederick Douglass is well known in history as a former slave and abolitionist. But what is less well known is his travels to West Virginia and the speeches he gave around the state.

Community historian John Muller has been documenting Douglass’ life for more than a decade — in a book and through walking tours in Anacostia and Harpers Ferry. Most recently Muller has developed a lecture on Douglass in the Mountain State. Eric Douglas spoke with Muller to find out more.

This interview has been lightly edited for clarity. 

Douglas: Who is Frederick Douglass? Tell me why he’s important. 

Library of Congress
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Muller: Frederick Douglass was born enslaved on Maryland’s eastern shore in 1818. He escaped slavery in 1838 and got involved with the growing abolitionist community in New England as affiliated with William Lloyd Garrison. He was so compelling in telling his life story, people questioned his actual background as a fugitive slave.

He wrote an autobiography in 1845 that catapulted him to national and international fame. He went to Ireland, Scotland, England and then came back to the United States and launched the North Star newspaper and was a fierce advocate for black rights, civil rights and women’s rights.

Leading up to the Civil War, he was a confidante of President (Abraham) Lincoln. And following the Civil War, he was a champion for the 13th, 14th, and 15th amendments. He traveled all over the country to help local communities. He is known as essentially one of the most consequential American reformists and human rights and civil rights champions of the 19th century.

Douglas: He wasn’t just active up to the Civil War and then he drifted off. He continued working for another 30 years or so after the post Civil War.

Muller: Exactly, he passed away in 1895. He was active up until the day that he passed away; he was going to go speak at a local local church in Anacostia. That’s where the West Virginia chapter of Frederick Douglass’ history begins. Before the Civil War, he did not travel into Virginia. In the post Civil War reconstruction era, West Virginia is within that portfolio of history that I would argue hasn’t really yet been discussed thoroughly. West Virginia is a wonderful state compared to other states in terms of historical markers and presentations, but overall in West Virginia, the Frederick Douglass historical narrative has not been given its proper place.

Douglas: How did you stumble on his connection to West Virginia?

Muller: A decade ago, when I was researching the Frederick Douglass in Washington, D.C. book. Douglass was on the board of Howard University for more than 20 years and served on the board of Storer College in Harpers Ferry. There are many overlaps with faculty and students and many connections between Storer College and Howard University. They’re 60 miles apart, but very different geographical terrains and communities.

I’ve led dramatic walking tours of Frederick Douglass in Harpers Ferry since 2019. And by telling the story of Frederick Douglass in West Virginia, it opens up the local history of these various communities as well as individuals that played the leading role in the founding of the state. It’s been a very educational process for me.

Douglas: Where did Frederick Douglass speak in West Virginia?

Muller: He made more than a half dozen high profile public visits. Speaking in Wheeling in 1867, in Parkersburg in Wood County in 1873. When he was in Parkersburg, he shared the stage with former West Virginia Governor and then U.S. Senator from West Virginia, Arthur Boreman. He spoke in Martinsburg in Berkeley County in 1879. He gave a very well known dedicatory address in Harpers Ferry in 1881. He was a frequent presence on Storer College’s campus from the 1880s until the early 1890s.

Douglas: What was Douglass talking about? What was he working on?

Muller: Douglas was very deliberate in visiting communities and more specifically black communities and black areas, in terms of touching these communities. He could use his networks and influence to make a difference. For example, when he speaks in Wheeling in 1884, he’s speaking at an Emancipation Day event. And Douglass spoke at Emancipation Day events from Virginia, to Elmira, New York to Washington, D.C. He was very deliberate in going to these communities.

He was essentially reaching back or giving back to the community.

Douglass was in many ways a philanthropist speaking in West Virginia. He brought the message to the people, to the communities. Douglass was very aware of West Virginia’s creation as a state. He gave a very important speech in New York in early 1864. In it he says that we now know that the direction of the Civil War is going to lead to the emancipation of the slaves or the eradication of slavery, because look what happened with the creation of West Virginia. West Virginia had been created as an anti slavery state. Douglas is essentially referencing the creation of West Virginia to support his position that the outcome of the Civil War required ending slavery.

He also spoke in West Virginia to reconcile his relationship with John Brown because he actually had to flee the country when he was implicated in being involved with John Brown’s failed raid and Harpers Ferry in October of 1859.

The talk Lost History of Frederick Douglass in Wheeling will be April 5 at noon. Muller and Justin McNeil will also present “The Lost History of Frederick Douglass in Cumberland and Allegany County, Maryland in Cumberland, Maryland on Saturday, February 19.

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