Energy Storage Project Using West Virginia-Made Batteries Gets $100 Million In Federal Funds

This week, the Department of Energy announced it would provide more than $100 million to a “multi-day energy storage project” using batteries from Form Energy’s new Weirton factory, located in Hancock County.

Batteries developed in West Virginia will soon power a major energy storage project in Lincoln, Maine.

This week, the United States Department of Energy (DOE) announced it would provide more than $100 million to a “multi-day energy storage project” using batteries from Form Energy’s new Weirton factory, located in Hancock County.

The project is developing an energy storage facility in Maine using batteries made by the West Virginia plant. The facility will be able to store energy for up to 100 hours without recharging, ready for use. It is also part of a wider $2.3 DOE investment to strengthen the energy grid nationally.

State officials look at West Virginia’s role in the project as an opportunity to support the local economy, and bolster resources for the state’s energy sector.

“For generations, West Virginia has done the heavy lifting, doing everything asked of it to create a legacy as America’s energy and manufacturing powerhouse,” said Sen. Joe Manchin, I-W.Va., in a Thursday press release.

“This investment is great news for Weirton and signals that West Virginia will continue our proud tradition of helping power America,” said Sen. Shelley Moore Capito, R-W.Va.

Mateo Jaramillo, co-founder and CEO of Form Energy, said the newly announced plans mark “the largest energy storage project based on energy capacity announced yet in the world.”

The company is actively finishing construction on its factory in Weirton, breaking ground just over a year ago. It marks Form Energy’s first high-volume manufacturing facility, located on a 55-acre plot.

The company is currently testing its manufacturing lines and recruiting workers to prepare for higher-capacity production by the end of the year.

Jaramillo said the project could also help revitalize Weirton’s economy, “fostering sustainable development and long-term prosperity.”

The company came to the West Virginia community because of its “existing transportation infrastructure” and “strong talent base,” according to a Thursday press release.

West Virginia Secretary of Economic Development Mitch Carmichael said Hancock County’s role in the project shows that West Virginia remains a key player in industry and energy production nationally.

“West Virginians have always been willing to sacrifice for the energy, steel and work ethic needed by our great nation,” he said. “Our state’s interest in continuing our energy heritage with Form Energy is showing dividends.”

Breeze To Add Direct Flight From Yeager To Newark International

Newark, New Jersey, is about a 20-minute train ride into New York City and is a hub for international flights. 

Starting Nov. 14, Breeze will fly directly from Yeager Airport to Newark Liberty International two days a week.

Newark, New Jersey, is about a 20-minute train ride into New York City and is a hub for international flights

“This new route not only enhances access and flexibility for visitors to the New York City area but also offers expanded options for connecting to other destinations,” said Yeager Airport Director and CEO Dominique Ranieri. “Breeze Airways has been a tremendous addition to West Virginia, and we look forward to their continued growth at CRW.”

Breeze began Charleston service in May 2023 and flies directly to Orlando International Airport year-round. The airline offers seasonal service to Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, and Tampa, Florida.

The Breeze flights to Newark, code EWR, will take off on Thursdays and Sundays. Fares on the new route start at $49 and can be booked at flybreeze.com

This will be the first time in more than a decade since Yeager has had a flight to the New York region. Breeze’s current partnership with the state and local governments includes incentives.

Dark Money Group Spins Local Election In National Initiative To Help Big Pharma

Health care officials and political leaders are worried. A dark money group dropped hundreds of thousands of dollars into a local primary election spreading falsehoods about the lieutenant governor and a program called 340B. 

Health care officials and political leaders are worried. A dark money group dropped hundreds of thousands of dollars into a local primary election spreading falsehoods about the lieutenant governor and a program called 340B. 

340B is a nearly $50 billion program, but most people know nothing about it. Black lung centers, HIV clinics and sickle cell clinics are supported by this program. It also helps provide reduced or no-cost prescription medicine, like insulin, to people who can’t afford it. In addition to all this, the program helps keep rural health care centers open.

The federal program is more than 30 years old. In 1992, President George H. W. Bush signed 340B into law. The program aimed to keep rural hospitals afloat and help low and middle-income Americans access expensive prescriptions.

State Legislature Addresses Problem

Over the last few years, pharmaceutical companies have stopped sending discounted 340B medicine to all but one pharmacy location. In effect, this forced some patients to drive an hour or more to reach an entity authorized to sell the medicine at a discounted rate.

Sen. Tom Takubo, R-Kanawha, is a pulmonologist and crafted the bill to protect 340B in the state. He said he sees the struggles of patients seeking health care firsthand.  

On February 2, 2024 Sen. Tom Takubo addressed the Senate on the importance of passing SB325.

Will Price/West Virginia Legislature

“I have patients that have difficulty with just the gas money to get to their clinic visits, much less to drive long distances to get their prescriptions that keep them alive every month,” Takubo said.  

The bill he sponsored passed almost unanimously, and the governor signed it into law. 

It fines any pharmaceutical company that fails to send medicines to all 340B contract pharmacies $50,000 dollars a day per prescription. 

The Lies Start Flying

But just months later there came a fury of smear campaign ads against 340B and Senate President Craig Blair. 

This is one the images that was sent out in the May Primary.
Screenshot of one of the “Stand For Us” Pac campaign ad.

Some ads said things like, “Craig Blair has supported 340B and caved to the far right.” Others linked his support for 340B to supporting free health care for undocumented immigrants. 

He said there is zero truth to this. 

Anybody that knows me knows that that is not in my DNA. I wouldn’t be part of it,” Blair said. 

The far-right Super PAC, Stand For Us, behind the ads dumped $400,000 of dark money into the race. West Virginia Public Broadcasting has not been able to trace the expenditures or original donors to this PAC. 

The ads fused together different issues: 340B and immigration, or 340B and transgender rights. In the eyes of his constituents, this put him on the wrong side of the issues. 

Blair lost his bid for re-election.

“There were a lot of lies that were put forward. And then they’ve taken victory laps since then,” Blair said. 

The Super PAC put out a press release. It outlined how and why it used disinformation. Then it warned other Republicans.

“Stand for Us isn’t going anywhere, and the results of our efforts have only emboldened us to increase our initial investment,” the group said in a press release. “Republicans are now on notice that they support 340B or non-citizen voting at their own political peril.”

The group went on to take credit for Blairs lost election. The group says that Blair failed his district (Senate District 15) by protecting the federal 340B program. The 340B program is not taxpayer funded and is in no way related to immigration policy.

Screenshot of one of the “Stand For Us” Pac campaign ad.

Sen. Eric Tarr, R-Putnam, is part of the state Senate’s leadership. He said the campaign against Blair threatens the health of West Virginians.

“To say that effort was supporting illegal immigration into West Virginia in any way was an outright lie. And they dropped about $400,000 in two weeks to push that lie,” Tarr said. 

Sen. Eric Tarr, R-Putnam, chairs the Finance Committee.

Will Price / West Virginia Legislative Photography

He said it also poses a threat to the health of the state’s democracy.  

“So aside from just the attack on our citizens that need those medications, there was an attack on our elections process and truth in elections,” he said. 

Tarr, Takubo and Blair are all considering both legislative and legal courses of action. 

Health Care Workers Worry

Aaron Norris is a pharmacist at Mace Pharmacy, in the small Barbour County town of Phillipi. Mace Pharmacy is under contract by a health center that is enrolled in the 340B program. 

“340B allows healthcare to come to places where health care would not be,” he said.  

Mace Pharmacy is an independent community pharmacy. It has two locations. Workers at the pharmacy said they know most of the people who walk through the doors.

Briana Heaney/West Virginia Public Broadcasting

Norris said his community, where 1 in 4 residents live in poverty, relies on the program to receive reduced price medications and health care. The 340B program helps people who make too much to qualify for Medicaid but can’t afford all their health care costs. For example, it would help someone pay for insulin, which can cost thousands of dollars a month even with insurance. 

“Patients, that, whenever they look at their insurance, their insurance falls short,” Norris said.  “So they say, especially toward the end of the year, ‘I can’t afford to take this medication. So I’ll just go without.’”

340B fills in that gap at the cost of Big Pharma’s bottom line. The federal legislation requires that any medication reimbursed through Medicaid or Medicare also be made available to certain rural or low-income, not-for-profit, health care providers at a discounted rate. The discount can range from 10 to 90 percent. Those providers can then sell the medications at the discounted rate or sell them at the same rate and put the money back into the community in various ways. 

Jim Kauffman is the president of the West Virginia Hospital Association. Helping keep many of his not-for-profit hospitals open is one way he says the savings are used in West Virginia.

Kauffman said this disinformation campaign and other opposition against 340B only stand to benefit one group: The pharmaceutical industry. 

“If that program goes away, who benefits? Pharma. Who stands to suffer? The local community,” Kauffman said.  

Kauffman said the 340B program costs pharmaceutical companies billions of dollars a year in lost profits. 

“If I’m not mistaken, when you look at the margins of pharmaceutical companies, they’re doing very, very well.” Kaufman said.  “I was just at a hospital yesterday.  Their budgeted margin for the year is 1 percent. Most of the hospitals in West Virginia are operating in the red.” 

If 340B goes away or sees a seismic contraction then the health care landscape in the state could start to look a lot different Kauffman said.

If 340B flatly didn’t exist, what you would see is all that savings right now that hospitals, federally qualified health centers, black lung clinics received disappear. Then those community programs that are being supported disappear. And all those dollars go to the bottom line of Pharma,” Kauffman said.  

Pharma

A major nationwide pharmaceutical lobby, PhRMA, which said it is not involved with the disinformation deployed against Blair, said there are problems with the rapid expansion of the 340B program and transparency in reporting. Other academics who study health care policy have noted these as flaws of the massive 340B program as well. The group said it could not comment on the disinformation that was sent out in Blair’s primary election.

West Virginia Public Broadcasting reached out for comment from Super PAC Stand For Us, which was responsible for the disinformation used in Blair’s election. No response was received from the group. 

Graphic courtesy of the 340B report

The group also worked to pressure the Republican governor of Virginia, Glenn Youngkin, who vetoed a similar bill that was passed into law in West Virginia. In Missouri, the group may have poured millions of dollars into the ongoing Missouri gubernatorial race which has its primary elections on Aug. 6. One of the front runners in that race, Jay Ashcroft,  has come out against 340B, echoing falsehoods similar to those spread in West Virginia. 

As New Fiscal Year Begins, State Revenue Meets Estimates But Sees Minimal Growth

West Virginia took in more than $335 million last month, narrowly exceeding state estimates. The state also collected slightly more money last month than it did the July prior.

The state’s revenue collections for July narrowly surpassed monthly estimates, as well as the total collections by this time last year.

West Virginia took in more than $335 million last month, exceeding estimates from the West Virginia State Budget Office by less than 1 percent. The State Budget Office is a staff agency for the governor that oversees budget and revenue information.

The state also collected slightly more money last month than it did the July prior. In July 2024, West Virginia’s state revenue was less than 1 percent higher than it was in July 2023.

July marks the first month of a new fiscal year for the state. A 4 percent cut to personal income taxes will be implemented at the start of the new calendar year, and additional tax cuts will likely be considered by state lawmakers.

If the state revenue follows trends from the most recent fiscal year, these reductions likely mean the state will take in less money this year than last. After sweeping tax cuts in 2023, the state collected 12 percent less revenue last fiscal year than the fiscal year prior.

Gov. Jim Justice has touted the tax cuts as a way to empower consumers in West Virginia, and to attract new residents and businesses. He also voiced aims to cut income tax further, with an ultimate goal of “getting rid” of the state’s personal income tax altogether.

“It’s the people’s money,” Justice said in a virtual press briefing in late May. “It’s not our money.”

Likewise, Justice has made reducing government spending a focal point of his tenure. During this year’s legislative session, the governor advocated for a flat budget, meaning one that does not increase year by year even if inflation or operating costs rise.

Justice’s financial decision-making has not been met without opposition. Some residents and state lawmakers have expressed concern that less money for the government means less funding for state services, like Medicaid and public education.

To secure further tax cuts during the months that remain of his tenure as governor, Justice would have to convince state legislators to pass additional reductions during a special legislative session.

He has expressed an intention to call lawmakers back to the state capitol to discuss further cuts by September, but a date for any such session is yet to be finalized.

Back-To-School Sales Tax Holiday Slated For This Weekend

In preparation for a new school year, sales taxes will be waived for some qualifying back-to-school purchases from Aug. 2 to Aug. 5, according to the office of Gov. Jim Justice.

A four-day sales tax holiday beginning this week aims to help families save money during back-to-school shopping.

Gov. Jim Justice announced Monday that the state would drop its sales tax on certain school-related purchases from Aug. 2 to Aug. 5, part of an annual tradition also implemented in neighboring states like Virginia and Tennessee.

With some restrictions, the following purchases are exempt from the state’s sales and use tax during the holiday:

  • Clothing that costs $125 or less
  • School supplies that cost $50 or less
  • School instruction materials that cost $20 or less
  • Laptop or tablet computers that cost $500 or less
  • Sports equipment items that cost $150 or less.

The first day of school varies from county to county, landing between Aug. 16 and Aug. 29 for each of the state’s public schools.

Justice’s office said Monday the average customer will save 6 to 7 percent on every qualified purchase.

For more information and a full list of qualifying purchases, residents can visit the West Virginia Tax Division website.

Southern W.Va. Union Members Getting Wage Increase In New Contract

Communications Workers of America (CWA), union members have ratified a new contract with Optimum Telecommunications. 

Communications Workers of America (CWA) union members have ratified a new contract with Optimum Telecommunications. 

After months of negotiating, the CWA approved an agreement Wednesday that translates to nearly an 8 percent wage increase over the course of the three-year contract.  

Shannon Flink, a staff representative, said the union polled workers for what they wanted in a new contract then took those items to the negotiating table with Optimum. 

“I would say that this was better, you know, with wages,” Flink said. “You know, one always hopes for better, but we felt like this was a good start.”

Flink said the contract also maintained previous negotiations from the last contract that preserved job security. 

The new contract covers Optimum workers in areas across Raleigh and Logan Counties. This is the second contract that the union has reached with the company. The first contract was ratified in 2020. 

Optimum is a subsidiary of Altice Telecommunications. Altice is the fourth-largest telecommunications provider in the country. 

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