Hancock County Businesses Eligible for Disaster Loans

Small businesses in Hancock County are eligible for disaster loans as a result of drought conditions last year.Hancock County

The U.S. Small Business Administration said Hancock County is eligible because it’s contiguous to one or more primary counties in Pennsylvania.

The Economic Injury Disaster Loan program is available to eligible farm-related and nonfarm-related entities that suffered financial losses as a result of the drought between May 1 and Dec. 10. Other than aquaculture enterprises, SBA can’t provide disaster loans to agricultural producers, farmers or ranchers. Nurseries are eligible to apply.

The loan amount can be up to $2 million.

Loan applications can be downloaded at http://www.sba.gov/disaster , or apply online at https://disasterloan.sba.gov/ela . The deadline is Dec. 5.

For more information, call the SBA at (800) 659-2955 or email disastercustomerservice@sba.gov.

Cable Company Call Center Closing in Parkersburg

A telecommunications call center in Parkersburg will be closing this summer, putting nearly 170 people out of work.

Altice USA is shutting down the Suddenlink Communications call center this summer. Altice purchased Suddenlink more than a year ago.

Altice USA spokeswoman Lisa Anselmo says investments in technology, tools and other resources have resulted in a 20 percent drop in customer call volume over the past year.

She says customers will notice no changes from the move.

The company says other operations will remain in Parkersburg, including a customer walk-in center. Technical support will continue to operate locally.

Some of the affected employees will have an opportunity to apply for other positions within Altice USA.

Work Begins on 2nd Tesla Charging Station in West Virginia

Construction has begun for a Tesla Supercharger station in Charleston, making it the second in West Virginia.News outlets report the station, which will…

Construction has begun for a Tesla Supercharger station in Charleston, making it the second in West Virginia.

News outlets report the station, which will be exclusively for Model S and X cars, will occupy eight parking spaces of the Courtyard by Marriot hotel.

Property owner Charlie Wendell says construction will be finished in May. He says the “Supercharger” classification means it can replenish up to 170 miles of range for Tesla vehicles in 30 minutes.

Wendell says there is one Supercharger in the Northern Panhandle, but there isn’t one in the body of the state.

Tesla vehicles can’t be purchased in the Mountain State. Direct-to-consumer car companies are unable to open stores in West Virginia, following the passage of a 2015 Senate bill.

Charleston Civic Center Expansion Cost Climbs by $1.2M

A new change order has brought costs for the Charleston Civic Center expansion project up to nearly $93.6 million.

The Charleston Gazette-Mail reports the Charleston City Council approved the $1.2 million change order Monday.

City Manager David Molgaard says some of the items included were unexpected. The city received a $380,000 bill to replace water pipes that would have burst if used, and spent $170,000 to construct a flood wall to meet new regulations.

The order also includes $130,000 for exterior LED lights and $265,000 for digital signs and software. Other costs include kitchen asbestos removal, a new dishwasher and a repair of a crack to avoid carpet damage.

Revenue Stream: How an Environmental Law Creates Jobs in Coal Country

When President Donald Trump visited Kentucky for a recent rally he returned to a common theme from his campaign: environmental regulations are job-killers.

“I have already eliminated a devastating anti-coal regulation,” he said, referring to a measure he recently signed overturning a Department of Interior stream protection rule. “And that is just the beginning,” the president continued, pledging to turn the Environmental Protection Agency “from a job killer into a job creator.”

But in parts of coal country environmental regulations aren’t killing jobs, they’re creating them. Stream restoration made possible under the Clean Water Act is a multi-billion dollar industry and some former coal miners are finding work thanks to this revenue stream.

Credit Courtesy CVI
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Stream restoration work in progress on an old mining site in West Virginia.

 Banking on Streams

Hydrologist Ed Watson with Canaan Valley Institute, or CVI, is in the business of fixing broken streams, and business is good. From the inside of his truck Watson pointed up to a hillside towering behind a shopping center in Logan County, West Virginia. His organization just finished a five-year project restoring an entire watershed here.

“The watershed was mined ‘pre-law’,” Watson explained, meaning before the Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act which requires coal companies to try to reclaim land.

Credit Alexandra Kanik / Ohio Valley ReSource
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Ohio Valley ReSource

“We decided we could actually do something and possibly put some streams back where streams haven’t flowed for 50 or 60 years.” 

Watson studied old topographical maps and clues in the land to figure out where streams used to exist. He pointed to a reconstructed hillside – a really steep one – with a small stream built in complete with rocks, woody debris, and native trees and shrubs planted alongside.

“We built a stream as though it has sorted itself out over over time — but in year one instead of year 10,000.”

“For us it’s always been about making the region a vibrant place to live,” said Jennifer Newland, executive director of CVI. “When you live in West Virginia you want to be able to fish and you want to be able to go take your kids out and look for salamanders under the rock and log,” she said. “That’s why we live here. And we want to be able to have that while we also have the ability to have other kinds of economic development.”

Creating Currency

CVI was hired to design this project when a private company bought the land to see it permanently restored. That company, Ecosystems Investment Partners, or EIP, owns about 70,000 acres of land throughout the county that is either restored or in the process of being restored in what are called “mitigation banks.”

Credit Jennifer Newland / CVI
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CVI
Restored perennial (year-round flowing) stream in Logan County, West Virginia. Woody debris helps control flow and provide habitat.

Mitigation bankers like EIP often work with state and federal agencies to identify and acquire disturbed properties, and develop restoration plans which must include long-term protection (typically through a land conservation trust or through a state program). These properties are monitored for at least a decade during which ecological value is determined using a variety of scoring systems.

Stream restoration and mitigation banking are controversial among scientists. Click here to learn why.

Companies are awarded credits from state and federal agencies based on “ecological uplift.” Any developer that intends to impair or destroy a stream or wetland as part of a permitted project – be it an extractive industry, a Walmart, or a highway project – can buy those credits to offset the damage done.

EIP’s properties are just a small piece of the national mitigation banking pie. About 2000 banks exist throughout the U.S. The National Mitigation Banking Association estimates the ecological restoration industry as a whole creates $25 billion each year and a recent conference focused on the potential for more private investment.

Environmentalists & Capitalists

Ed Watson with CVI does this kind of work because he loves working to improve the environment. He also loves a paycheck. And so do the the contractors hired to turn his designs into reality.

“Our basic business is a construction business that specializes in rebuilding streams and wetlands,” said Chris White, who co-founded a company called Appalachian Stream Restoration about 13 years ago in rural Lincoln County, West Virginia.

White says many people assume he’s an environmentalist.

“I prefer to think of myself as a capitalist,” he said.

Credit Glynis Board / Ohio Valley ReSource
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Ohio Valley ReSource
Chris White’s company, Appalachian Stream Restoration, employs about 30 people in West Virginia coal country.

White grew up in what he calls “hit or miss coal mining,” where work may be plentiful one year and gone the next. He now employs about 30 people, some of them displaced miners. They travel all over the region fixing broken streams and wetlands with backhoes and other heavy machinery. He says he makes a $2 million payroll, annually.

“It’s a huge economy that requires specialized training, requires specialized people, and can create high paying jobs,” White said.

Skepticism Among Science

There’s a lot of heated debate in scientific circles about stream mitigation, and the science of restoration is far from fine-tuned. Ecologist Matthew Baker, a professor and researcher at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, explained that around the globe we’re seeing stream and wetland degradation at a historic pace, and our understanding of how these natural systems interact and function is limited.

“Because it is tough to design what we don’t fully comprehend,” Baker said, “more often than not our restorations are a partial fix, a ‘Disneyfication’ of reality.”

Credit Courtesy CVI
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Stream restoration and mitigation banking remain controversial among scientists. “It is tough to design what we don’t fully comprehend,” one ecologist said.

But as long as the Clean Water Act remains intact, and land continues to be developed at the rate we see today, White and others restoring ecosystems expect to remain employed and making bank.

West Virginia Senate Considers Hike in Video Lottery Wager

West Virginia’s Senate has begun advancing legislation to increase the maximum wager to $5 for a single video lottery game.

The bill approved by the Senate Finance Committee also would set the state share of gross profits from limited video lottery revenues at 50 percent starting July 1.

The current wager limit is $2.

The state profits share has ranged from 30 percent to 50 percent, rising with the average daily gross income per terminal.

The legislation is poised for a vote by the full Senate.

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