Sen. Shelley Moore Capito will lead a Senate hearing in southern West Virginia about the Clean Power Plan.The Clean Air and Nuclear Safety Subcommittee…
Sen. Shelley Moore Capito will lead a Senate hearing in southern West Virginia about the Clean Power Plan.
The Clean Air and Nuclear Safety Subcommittee meeting will be Wednesday afternoon at Chief Logan Conference Center. Capito is the subcommittee chairwoman.
The meeting will address regulations stalled in court that limit carbon pollution from coal-fired power plants to stem climate change. Many West Virginia officials oppose them because they target coal.
Republicans are inviting Eugene Trisko, United Mine Workers of America counsel; local coal miner Jimmy Dale “Bo” Copley II; and Wayne County Commission President Robert Pasley.
Democrats are inviting Karen Ireland, West Virginia Solar United Neighborhoods Program Director, and James M. Van Nostrand, professor and director of the West Virginia University College of Law’s Center for Energy and Sustainable Development.
West Virginia regulators are conducting a two-day hearing on Mountaineer Gas Co.’s proposed $45 million natural gas distribution line expansion in the Eastern Panhandle.
The hearing before the state Public Service Commission is set to begin Wednesday in Charleston.
The distribution line would run 56 miles through Morgan, Jefferson and Berkeley counties.
Charleston-based Mountaineer Gas has said a 27-mile distribution line would run from a Columbia Gas transmission line in Pennsylvania to Berkeley Springs and then onto the north end of Martinsburg. The proposed second phase would run a 29-mile line extension from Martinsburg to Charles Town and Shepherdstown.
The company says the project would facilitate economic development in the Eastern Panhandle.
An environmental group opposes the project.
Mountaineer Gas has about 220,000 customers and nearly 6,000 miles of pipelines.
More cuts could be on the way after West Virginia started the budget year with three straight months of revenues below what state officials predicted.
The Department of Revenue announced Tuesday that the state is $81.2 million behind revenue estimates and $15 million behind prior year revenues.
Department spokeswoman Lalena Price says Revenue Secretary Bob Kiss will make recommendations in the next several weeks, likely including a continued hiring freeze and some cuts, either across-the-board, targeted or some combination.
The September totals were $32.3 million below estimates, largely due to drops in personal income and corporate net income tax revenues.
Consumer sales tax and severance tax, which has fallen due to the declining coal industry and low natural gas prices, have been problematic in previous months, but exceed estimates this month.
The current President of the Kentucky Coal Association is leaving the energy industry, for a job back in his hometown of Huntington.
Bill Bissett will be the next President and CEO of the Huntington Regional Chamber of Commerce starting November 1st.
Coming home.
The 50-year-old father of two decided being in his home state and hometown was more important than leading the coal association in Kentucky.
“Huntington is home,” Bissett said. “I grew up here, I have three degrees from Marshall University. You have when you’re a West Virginian and you move to another state, a gravitational pull that seems to happen, especially if you hear Country Roads or something like that. It’s exciting to come home and just like everywhere we there are a lot of challenges and a chamber of commerce can be a solution for economic challenges, but other challenges as well.”
Dealing with a drug epidemic from the business side.
Bissett understands, though, he’s trading one controversial job for another that’s fraught with challenges. He says the ongoing drug epidemic in the region isn’t something the chamber of commerce can ignore, but he wants to highlight the positives of businesses and existing programs.
“I think everyone knows that the drug issues of this country go well beyond the borders of Huntington or this region, into Southern West Virginia and Kentucky, we see very similar issues in Eastern Kentucky, to anywhere where there are challenges like this,” Bissett said. “People with money have these problems as well, so this is a bigger issue than just Huntington, but Huntington has to come up with solutions as well.”
Bissett says solutions that Huntington has come up with, such as the Drug Control Policy Office, a needle exchange program and naloxone training for the community need to be highlighted. He hopes those efforts will show businesses and shoppers that it’s ok to come to the area. He definitely wants the chamber to have a seat at the table when it comes to discussing how to deal with these issues and how they affect the community.
“I do think that making sure the full story of Huntington is told is important,” Bissett said. “And I’m not talking about changing a perception, that would be doing a disservice to it. The chamber has to know it’s role, what it’s mission is and what it does and if that’s to benefit the people providing livelihoods in these two counties than that’s what we need to do.”
Connecting Huntington to Charleston.
It seems like Charleston and Huntington are two cities that are no long 500 miles apart, but are now 50 miles apart. — Bill Bissett
One of Bissett’s goals is also to create better ties with Charleston. He says the region would be economically stronger if these two cities were more closely aligned.
“It seems like Charleston and Huntington are two cities that are no long 500 miles apart, but are now 50 miles apart,” Bissett said. “The collaboration between the two mayors, we need to be working together. Every other state does that, we see that in Kentucky with Louisville and Lexington. We see an even greater opportunity to work more together and benefit both cities.”
Bissett is a former Chief of Staff at Marshall University, as well as the Director of Communications for the Departments of Agriculture and Transportation in the state.
The international refugee crisis caused by people fleeing the war-torn Middle East has been a high-profile issue in the presidential campaign.
Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton told CBS’s “Face the Nation” last year that “the U.S. has to do more” to meet what she called the worst refugee crisis since the end of WWII.
Republican opponent Donald Trump told a rally in New Hampshire that as president he would turn away refugees from nations such as Syria. “If I win, they’re going back!” he said.
But beyond the heated political rhetoric, the work of finding new homes for asylum seekers continues at a dozen refugee resettlement areas in Kentucky, Ohio, and West Virginia. And as new new refugees arrive from Syria, those who have already made the transition to a new life in America are lending a hand.
The International Center of Kentucky, in Bowling Green, will be resettling 40 Syrian refugees this month. They’ll join a community of more than 10,000 asylum seekers from around the world that the center has helped to resettle since beginning operation in 1981.
I sat down with a former refugee to better understand his journey, and how the small business he has started is creating a community of support for refugees making their new Kentucky home.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XK3nAQMianE
From the Middle East to the Midwest
In 2013 Wisam Asal opened Jasmine International Grocery, a small family run store with sweets, religious items and food from many countries.
Credit Becca Schimmel / Ohio Valley ReSource
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Ohio Valley ReSource
Asal’s Jasmine International Grocery has become an important part of the community of refugees in Bowling Green.
Asal walks across the street wearing a baseball cap to his new restaurant, Babylon. People chat and catch up at the counter as they order shawarma and falafel sandwiches. He’s found a way to bring a bit of his home country’s culture to Kentucky and create two businesses that have quickly become important to Bowling Green’s international community.
Asal said it wasn’t easy starting a business here but the community of refugees and other people in Bowling Green helped him succeed.
“We have friends who are at the same time our customer,” Asal said. “They help us, they encourage us.”
Credit Becca Schimmel / Ohio Valley ReSource
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Ohio Valley ReSource
Wisam Asal left his native Iraq as a refugee. Now he owns two small businesses in Bowling Green.
Life During Wartime
In his native country, Iraq, Asal taught English until the U.S. war when he became a translator for the U.S. Army. The work made him and his family potential targets. Even his trips between home and work became hazardous, as kidnappers and assassins would strike translators or their loved ones during these daily routines.
Credit Alexandra Kanik / Ohio Valley ReSource
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Ohio Valley ReSource
“Some of my friends work as translator, interpreter has been killed or like kidnapped. Nobody has idea about them,” Asal said.
It took two years before Asal got approval to move to America through a refugee resettlement program. He packed up and moved to Bowling Green with his wife and two daughters in 2010. His son was born in 2011.
When Asal first got here there weren’t many jobs. So, like many other refugees, he worked in a chicken processing factory. He then worked as a teacher’s aide before deciding that he wanted to start his own business.
Love Of Food Becomes A Business
Asal saw a need for other refugees to get the Halal food that they were used to. Halal means food prepared in ways permissible under Islamic practices. Some were driving as far as Nashville to get Halal meats.
“They say they were suffering to get what they like or their kind of food,” Asal said.
Credit Becca Schimmel / Ohio Valley ReSource
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Ohio Valley ReSource
Wisam Asal’s Bowling Green restaurant, Babylon.
Asal and many other refugees get halal food for their home from the Amish community. The Amish keep knives in a separate area that are used specifically to prepare halal meat.
“Some of them they make private place for Muslim people,” he said. “Even the knives and things they tell us, ‘This is for you.’”
Asal said he realizes that many Americans might not understand the lengths he and other Muslim immigrants go to for properly prepared food. “It is religion, we have to,” he said. “It is not like something small you can give up.”
Credit Alexandra Kanik / Ohio Valley ReSource
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Ohio Valley ReSource
Asal has found food is an important part of culture and identity for new arrivals in the country. He says even many children of refugees who grow up in America still prefer to eat the way their parents do.
Credit Alexandra Kanik / Ohio Valley ReSource
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Ohio Valley ReSource
The grocery store isn’t just a place to buy food. It’s a place for people to keep in touch, find out whose family will be coming to America next, what events are being planned and what’s going on in the world. It’s also a place where newcomers come to get help.
“People keep coming to us asking for help, how to go to doctor, how to buy cars or things,” he said. “Even sometimes we close our business to go with them, because maybe they are refugee,” Asal said. His business has become much more.
“I call it, this is another international center.”
Credit Alexandra Kanik / Ohio Valley ReSource
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Ohio Valley ReSource
A Balance Of Cultures
As Asal explained his work and home life, it was clear he’s hoping to find a balance between assimilating in his new home and keeping in touch with his old one. He and his wife continue teaching their children Arabic in hopes it will help them maintain their culture. Although they prefer American cartoons, Asal encourages them to watch cartoons in Arabic.
“The TV has big effect on anyone. So we have our channels they can watch these channels and keep them learning Arabic and what is going on in our countries,” Asal said.
Some of his descriptions of parenting sound much like any other parent’s concerns. He worries that his children don’t get to roam free outside as much as they did before, when they had a large yard, and could play without being watched by their parents.
“When we grew up there it was safe for you to play outside because most people, they know each other. But here you can’t let them go out for long time, you have to watch them,” Asal said.
Although it’s different living in America Asal considers this home now and he says over time the differences between people have disappeared. He likes the people and the safety he has here.
“The people they are nice and when you ask them something they help you. They keep smiling,” Asal said.
Asal doesn’t feel homesick for his home in Iraq. Rather, when he goes back to visit he finds himself missing his home here in America.
West Virginia University researchers say economic indicators show West Virginia is further emerging from a recession.
The university said in a news release that the Mountain State Business Index has posted gains in four of the past six months. The index combines seven economic indicators to measure the expected swings in the state’s economic activity.
But the statement says the state’s recovery from the recession has been lackluster compared to previous business cycles due to the devastating floods in June and other economic issues.
WVU Bureau of Business and Economic Research director John Deskins says it remains uncertain if stronger economic growth will occur in the coming months.