Morrisey, Williams Face Off In First And Only Governor’s Debate

Republican Attorney General Patrick Morrisey and Democratic Huntington Mayor Steve Williams fielded questions from West Virginia Metro News host Hoppy Kercheval during the hour-long roundtable.

West Virginia’s Oct. 29 gubernatorial debate was recorded online. Watch it here through C-SPAN.

West Virginia’s candidates for governor took the debate stage at Fairmont State University Tuesday night. 

Republican Attorney General Patrick Morrisey and Democratic Huntington Mayor Steve Williams fielded questions from West Virginia MetroNews host Hoppy Kercheval during the hour-long roundtable.

In closing arguments, Williams noted this was the first and only time the two would debate. As governor, Williams said he would lead with a community-centric approach, using his 12 years as mayor of Huntington as a model.

“My mission is to see that we transform our communities, that we transform our state,” Williams said. “One thing that I think that we can agree on is that West Virginia can be much better than what it is right now.”

Williams said that means making economically advantageous decisions from “a global market” perspective, and not just focusing on local politics.

“Where I part company with my friend here is that I’m not just talking about the backyard brawls,” he said in reference to Morrisey.

Morrisey highlighted his support for former President Donald Trump, a recurring theme in his comments throughout the debate. He also advocated for reducing government regulation, plus auditing and cutting down spending from state agencies.

“I look out and I see the potential of robust competition, making sure that our taxes are going to compete much better with all the states that we touch,” Morrisey said. “We could be thought of from a regulatory perspective the way Delaware is thought of from an incorporation perspective. It’s going to be very powerful.”

Abortion

Kercheval opened the debate by discussing constitutional amendments. He pointed specifically to a May petition from Williams to add an abortion measure on the ballot.

In 2018, West Virginia voters passed a constitutional amendment codifying that the State Constitution does not protect the “right to abortion” or “the funding of an abortion.”. After the overturn of Roe v. Wade in 2022, state lawmakers passed a law to ban abortion with few exceptions.

“I just don’t see that the state has any interest in coming in and interfering in the reproductive choices that women and their partner are going to make,” Williams said.

The U.S. Fourth Circuit of Appeals heard arguments about expanding the state’s ban to also include medicated abortion on Tuesday.

Morrisey defended the current ban, while also expressing support for in vitro fertilization, or IVF. The treatment helps individuals experiencing infertility get pregnant by conducting the egg fertilization process in a laboratory.

Morrisey described IVF protection as “a common sense law that’s being defended right now.”

“Let’s make sure we work through the court system, we get a result,” he said. 

Education

The candidates also differed on their ideas surrounding school choice and educational funding.

In 2021, West Virginia established the Hope Scholarship. The program allows parents of K-12 youth to use funding the state allocates for their child on private school tuition, homeschooling costs or other qualifying educational expenses.

Morrisey said the Hope Scholarship could help improve low public school rankings. Eligibility for the scholarship is set to expand in the coming years.

“I want it to be the broadest in the country,” Morrisey said. “So we can start to show the metrics are improving, and then the public schools are going to be in a robust competition to follow.”

While Williams said he supports HOPE scholarships “used for a very specific purpose,” he expressed concern about taking money from struggling public schools.

“All of this rings to me as code for privatization,” Williams said.

Kercheval asked the candidates about the potential for school district consolidation. Neither expressed direct support for the plan.

“Give the local governments, give the county boards the ability to be able to make some decisions, but also create regional compacts where there can be a consolidation of administrative duties,” Williams said. “I think that’s just a matter of getting people around the table and talking about this.”

Morrisey did not address consolidation directly, but reiterated his broader plans for a government audit and restructuring proposal in response. He also said teachers in West Virginia “deserve a pay raise.”

“One of the things that West Virginia needs to do, it needs to be thinking about how it’s repurposing government into the future,” Morrisey continued. “There is a need for a thorough and efficient education, and if you can get rid of some of the bureaucratic waste, then I think we can do that more effectively.”

PEIA

During a special session of the West Virginia Legislature that ended in October, lawmakers passed $87 million in stop-gap funding for the state employee health insurance program after an unanticipated reserve shortfall.

Kercheval asked if the candidates supported a state employee pay raise to accommodate PEIA cuts, an approach Gov. Jim Justice has supported. Neither directly supported the raise.

“I’m not looking to create a pay raise,” Williams said. “I’m looking for a permanent fix.”

After the debate, Williams said his experience leading local government in Huntington would help him with financial decision-making as governor.

“We will involve teachers, we will involve public employees, and we will gather around and find a way that we make sure that this is funded properly for the last time,” Williams said. “I did this in Huntington, certainly on a smaller scale, but we were about to lose our health care plan … And now we’re operating with a deficit free budget.

In 2017, Huntington cut its budget deficit in half.

Morrisey again said reviewing state expenditures could be a catch-all solution.

“So I think we have to do what I mentioned before, do a close review and audit,” he said.

Jai Chabria, senior strategist for the Morrisey campaign, clarified to WVPB after the debate that Morrisey was cautious to commit to a fixed solution to PEIA too soon.

“While this might be a building problem, we’ve just now learned about how this has unfolded,” Chabria said. “I think there’s a very deliberate way in which we have to make sure we fix it, so it’s a long-standing fix and not something in the short term.”

Vaccination

During this year’s regular legislative session, West Virginia lawmakers passed a bill expanding vaccine exemptions for students. Gov. Justice later vetoed the bill. Kercheval asked both candidates where they stood on the issue.

Williams described the bill as an “overreach.”

“They’re getting into everybody’s business, and it’s none of their business,” Williams said.

Morrisey said he supported religious exemptions.

“West Virginia right now is an outlier with respect to that it’s not recognizing, at minimum, a religious exception,” Morrisey said. “It shows respect for the First Amendment, and I would make sure that that provision changes when I’m governor.”

Addiction Crisis

Williams said his experience as mayor during the opioid crisis in Huntington would help him better respond to the crisis on the state level. He said his opponent has a worse track record surrounding addiction.

“You were representing some of those same companies that we ended up suing,” Williams said to Morrisey. “Frankly, as I started looking more at this, I got angry.”

“He knows that we weren’t involved in any of those issues,” Morrisey rebutted.

Morrisey said he helped address the opioid crisis through successful litigation to distribute abatement money across the state, with Huntington opting out of the larger case. Huntington’s independent litigation is currently pending appeal.

“A couple years ago we put together an abatement structure for all 55 counties that earned the support of every county of virtually every municipality,” Morrisey said. “It passed unanimously through the legislature … Did the Attorney General not look out for Cabell County and Huntington? We did. We didn’t play politics there.”

Medically Assisted Suicide

This year, West Virginia voters will see a amendment on their ballot that would codify the illegalization of medically assisted suicide in the State Constitution. 

The passage of Amendment 1 comes down to voters, although the practice of medically assisted suicide is already illegal in West Virginia.. The candidates were divided in their opinions on the measure.

“I’m for that amendment, and I think that we should protect our most vulnerable from physician assisted suicide,” Morrisey said.

“As I have said a few times, freedom is on the ballot here,” Williams said. “When someone is facing health decisions with their physician, it’s their business.”

Foster Care

Kercheval also asked candidates whether they would raise compensation for foster care families to address a growing foster care crisis in the state.

“We definitely need to raise the reimbursement for child, for foster care,” Williams said. Williams added that immediate tax cuts could reduce funding available for this goal.

Morrisey said a solution to shortages in West Virginia foster care providers lies in financial decision-making and recruitment efforts.

“I think that this is an area that’s really going to benefit from a lot of the auditing, the performance reviews, and I think [Williams] would agree with this, to be able to find the right people,” Morrisey said.

Past Experience

Toward the end of the debate, Kercheval asked the candidates about  differences in their political experience.

Williams said his experience in Huntington qualified him for statewide executive office.

“The difference between the city and the state is nothing but zeros,” Williams said. 

Williams also questioned the necessity of Morrisey’s audit proposals, given that the state already has an auditor in place.

“As the state attorney general, I’ve had to put broad coalitions together to get really big things done,” Morrisey said. He argued that reducing government spending would return money to taxpayers.

In the past, Williams has described Morrisey’s aims to reduce government regulation and spending as “Project 2025 for West Virginia,” referring to a conservative plan for a presidential transition that Trump has distanced himself from.

Speaking for Morrisey’s campaign, Chabria rebutted the characterization.

“That’s pretty much uniform on the Democratic side right now, trying to scare voters into something that it’s absolutely not,” Chabria said. “He’s going to cut taxes. He’s going to try to eliminate the income tax. He’s going to try to make sure that government works better. But he’s actually going to deliver on an audit.”

After the debate, Williams stood by his previous assertion.

“I do believe that when they’re saying ‘rightsizing’ government, they’re looking at privatizing and Project 2025,” Williams told WVPB.

Williams said Trump has only distanced himself from the plan as a political strategy.

Morrisey and his campaign team are “just following the political playbook on the R side,” Williams said.

Off Stage

Williams said it was a “shame” the two candidates were unable to debate more often, and that their only discussion came days before Election Day.

Tuesday’s debate came after a scheduling controversy in September, when a previously proposed WOWK debate did not come to fruition. The Williams campaign had called for multiple debates entering this year’s election.

Chabria emphasized that Morrisey was committed to participating in a debate.

“It was very important to Patrick Morrisey to actually have a debate, to make sure that people got to hear from him directly and to debate his opponent,” Chabria said.

In the state’s race for United States Senate, Gov. Jim Justice, the Republican candidate, declined to debate his opponent, Democrat and former Wheeling Mayor Glenn Elliott.

Outside of the debate hall, supporters for Libertarian candidate Erika Kolenich protested third party candidates’ exclusion from the gubernatorial debate.
By the close of polls on Monday, the Secretary of State’s office recorded 176,709 votes already cast. Early voting runs through Nov. 2 at locations throughout the state, and Election Day is Nov. 5.

Libertarian Candidate Protests Gubernatorial Debate Exclusion

Republican Attorney General Patrick Morrisey pulled up to the outside of Wallman Hall on Fairmont State University’s campus Tuesday night for a televised debate with Democratic Huntington Mayor Steve Williams — and a crowd of a dozen protestors shuffled out of the way.

Republican Attorney General Patrick Morrisey pulled up to the outside of Wallman Hall on Fairmont State University’s campus Tuesday night for a televised debate with Democratic Huntington Mayor Steve Williams — and a crowd of a dozen protestors shuffled out of the way.

As the red SUV pulled through, the protestors reassembled, chanting “Let Erika debate!”

The protestors were with Libertarian gubernatorial candidate Erika Kolenich, one of three third-party candidates West Virginia MetroNews did not invite to the debate.

Outside the debate hall, Kolenich pointed to Morrisey’s small primary margin and West Virginia’s general low voter turnout in promoting her specific policy proposals to voters.

“I have not run into many people on the campaign trail who aren’t ready for a third option,” Kolenich said.

Talking to WVPB after the debate, Williams pointed to an Oct. 8 Marshall candidate forum he attended with Constitution party candidate Marshall Wilson where all five candidates running for governor were invited. This time around it was the two front runners representing the two major parties.

“I wanted to make sure that I was able to have one on one time with Patrick Morrisey,” Williams said. “If [Kolenich] could have been involved, I wouldn’t have objected at all.”

The Morrisey campaign did not directly comment on the exclusion of third party candidates.

Kolenich attended a nearby public watch party at the university’s civic institute hosted at the student center. About twenty people attended the watch party, around a dozen of whom were the protestors. Kolenich held an informal half hour forum to discuss issues afterwards.

Academic Opportunity For Students In Foster Care Formally Launched

State leaders including Gov. Jim Justice and Senate President Craig Blair, R-Berkeley, attended a ribbon cutting Friday to celebrate the opening of The Middle College at Fairmont State University (FSU).

The program aims to provide youth in foster care a high school diploma and an associate’s degree in two years, plus guaranteed admission to FSU. Middle College students live on campus, attend classes, participate in on-campus activities, and receive services to support their success.

“What a wonderful opportunity. We’re taking the less than advantaged to being gainfully advantaged in the long run,” Blair said. “This may be the first one there is in the state of West Virginia, but mark my word. In 10 years, this will be replicated all over the country. The one thing that needs to be changed up, the federal government’s got to make the waivers in place or make the changes in the rules that allow the money to follow the child to be able to make this work properly.” 

Diana Phillips, provost and vice president of academic affairs at FSU, said students in foster care have already been on campus for a month, attending classes and engaging in on-campus activities.

“We’re here to celebrate them and their work as well,” she said. “It’s historic, because middle colleges have existed in the United States since the late 60s. But this is the first one, the very first one, that has ever focused on youth in care, youth in foster care, and so here we are in the state of West Virginia, making historic inroads, not only at Fairmont State.”

The Middle College is a collaboration between FSU, KVC West Virginia – a nonprofit child welfare organization, Marion County Schools and the West Virginia Schools of Diversion and Transition. 

Prichard Hall, the home of the Middle College program on Fairmont State University’s campus.
Chris Schulz/West Virginia Public Broadcasting

Brent Lemon, executive vice president of the Middle College Program at KVC, said students in foster care often struggle in school because they lack support.  

“We know we need to create a solution connecting foster youth in foster care to psychological, emotional, social and academic support that they deserve,” he said. “Middle College is more than just a program. It’s a link to a community, a pathway to opportunity, and a place where young people in foster care can find the connection they need to write their stories and begin to fulfill their individual dreams.”

The program has a lot of room for growth. 

Sarah Marshall Roy, regional director for KVC at Middle College, said 18 students are currently enrolled in the program, with 25 more being actively recruited. She said the original goal was to enroll 50 students for the fall.

“In order to be admitted to Middle College, students have to go through a thorough evaluation of an interview, along with meeting with different academic folks from the Department of Education, and so it is a process,” Marshall Roy said. “All of the students walked through that process, they had to complete different academic requirements and so forth. Because of all of that, I think some of the students you know that maybe it wasn’t the best fit for them, decided to opt out of this type of program. We did connect those students with other opportunities.”

State Summer Symposium Supports Biomedical Research

The 22nd Summer Research Symposium of the West Virginia IDeA Networks of Biomedical Research Excellence – or INBRE – was held in Morgantown last week. Dozens of undergraduate researchers packed into a hotel conference hall to show off their summer’s work.  

An annual, statewide symposium is enhancing biomedical research in West Virginia’s colleges and universities. 

The 22nd Summer Research Symposium of the West Virginia IDeA Networks of Biomedical Research Excellence – or INBRE – was held in Morgantown last week. Dozens of undergraduate researchers packed into a hotel conference hall to show off their summer’s work.  

Gary Rankin is the lead investigator for the program. He said the symposium is a highlight of the year because it brings scientists together to support the next generation of researchers.

“The quality of the presentations this year has been really good,” Rankin said. “They range from looking at diabetes, to cancer, to environmental pollution, to all sorts of health effects, and particularly those that are appropriate to West Virginians.”

West Virginia INBRE is funded by the National Institute of General Medical Sciences.  Through a statewide research consortium it has promoted biomedical research in the state  for more than 20 years. The meeting is the culmination of a nine week summer research program where undergraduates from across the state present their work and discuss it with faculty. 

Two such undergraduate researchers were Doris Agyemang of Glenmont State University and Katie Long of Fairmont State University. They partnered up while in the program to look at genes and gene therapies related to type two diabetes.

“Basically, all the methods used for this research were from what we learned during the boot camp for the month,” Long said. “We also got to work directly with the people who invented some of the newer stuff that we were using that hasn’t really been used a lot in the science field yet.”

Agyemang said they haven’t broken new ground with their work, but it’s still encouraging to contribute their research, and further conversations with other scientists and faculty working on the issue.

“Giving them another way or view on it is also interesting to us and hopefully, we get more chances like this in the near future,” she said. 

Travis Salisbury is an associate professor at Marshall University whose own research focuses on gene expression. He said the symposium allows undergraduates – who don’t have as many opportunities to conduct their own hands-on research – a unique opportunity to find the spark that will set them on their own career paths.

“I think that’s what it is, it’s just exposing them to research to see if they’re interested in doing research further on, because that’s really how most of us got started, is just a science project,” Salisbury said. 

Salisbury also said the symposium is an opportunity for working scientists like him to rekindle their passion for research and be assured the future of their work will be in good hands.

Three Projects At Fairmont State University To Receive Federal Funding 

Fairmont State University will receive close to $7 million from several federal agencies for three improvement projects on campus.

Fairmont State University (FSU) will receive $6,890,000 from several federal agencies for three improvement projects on campus.

“Receiving federal funding for these projects will have a tremendous impact on campus,” said Christy Burner, director of Grants and Sponsored Programs at FSU. “These appropriations will go directly towards improving essential educational facilities, enhancing campus security, and providing our students with the learning environment they need to achieve excellence.”

The Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), an agency of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services will provide $3 million for the relocation and expansion of the College of Nursing’s Simulation Center. FSU aims to help address the vacancy rate of licensed professional nurses, which is reaching 20 percent. 

HRSA is the primary federal agency for improving access to health care services for people who are uninsured, isolated or medically vulnerable.

An additional $2.1 million from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development will spur the first phase of renovations to the Ruth Ann Musick Library. 

The remaining $1.7 million from the U.S. Department of Justice’s Byrne Discretionary Grant Program will be put towards campus security system upgrades, including shifting to exclusively card access of interior and exterior doors in residence halls.

Campus Carry Goes Into Effect Across State

Campus Carry passed the West Virginia Legislature during the regular session in 2023 and is now in effect at universities and colleges across the state.

A law allowing concealed carry permit holders to carry a firearm onto the campus of any of the state’s higher education institutions goes into effect July 1. 

On a morning in late June, Brian Selmeski demonstrated the utility of one of Fairmont State University’s new gun locker rooms on the ground floor of a residence hall. The lockers were set into the wall, just big enough to hold a holstered firearm along with a small amount of ammunition.

“For this side of campus, we’ve installed 24 safes,” Selmeski said. “In the other residence hall, we have 48 gun safes. They are both in rooms that are cinder block construction, they will have electronic access, which will be set by the University Police Department. They have cameras internally so we ensure that we have eyes on these firearms at all times.”

Fairmont State University Director of Housing and Residence Life Jeremiah Kibler opens the door to one of the two residence halls on campus equipped with gun lockers.

Photo by Chris Schulz/West Virginia Public Broadcasting

Selmeski is the chief of staff at Fairmont State University, where the infrastructure is largely in place for the implementation of Senate Bill 10, commonly known as Campus Carry. The law requires all colleges and universities to allow concealed carry permit holders to have weapons on campus with certain limitations, such as large campus events and residence halls. Hence the lockers.

Selmeski said the university is looking at Campus Carry as an opportunity.

A closeup of some of the stickers used on Fairmont State University’s campus to designate firearm storage and prohibited areas for Campus Carry.

Photo by Chris Schulz/West Virginia Public Broadcasting

“We have constituencies that have strong opinions, some pro, some con,” he said. “How do we ensure we are ideologically neutral and use this as an opportunity to model the sort of civil discourse that universities are here to help foster and that our country really desperately needs right now?”

After many attempts spanning more than five years, Campus Carry passed the West Virginia Legislature during the regular session in 2023.

Previously, each university decided for themselves whether to allow firearms on campus, with most opting against. West Virginia University President Gordon Gee and Marshall University President Brad Smith published a joint statement during the session in opposition to the law, as did some of the state’s smaller universities.

“We don’t have the luxury of taking an opinion or taking a position on this law,” Selmeski said. “We need especially to model that civil discourse that I keep coming back to, make students who choose to exercise this right feel comfortable. We also need to be cognizant of the fact that it makes some of their student peers uncomfortable. So the last thing we want to do is comply with the letter of the law in a way that creates tensions between students. That’s how we’re approaching the lockers.”

SB 10 included no state funding for its implementation, and at the onset there were concerns about the ultimate cost. Fairmont State estimates they spent just over $13,000 on signage and gun lockers, but that does not include other line items including new cameras and card readers. Marshall University appropriated around $300,000 to prepare for Campus Carry.

Officials at WVU estimate they have spent around $1 million across their three primary campuses to comply with the law.

Gov. Jim Justice signed SB 10 in March of 2023, and schools had the ensuing 16 months to prepare. They’ve used all the time given to them, forming committees and holding campus conversations. WVU’s Board of Governors approved their campus carry rule in April. Fairmont State’s governors approved theirs less than three weeks ago, in June. 

Corey Farris is the dean of students at West Virginia University, where students will be able to access gun lockers at residence halls at a cost of $140 per semester.

“I’d say we’re pretty much ready,” Farris said. “I mean, we still have probably a few stickers to put up on some of the offices and then just this last minute communication, just reminding people that July 1 the law takes effect.”

WVU allows single-occupancy offices to be exempt from campus carry. Speaking in front of a gun locker room in a residence hall on WVU’s Morgantown campus, Farris said just over 320 staff members have requested their offices be exempt. 

That is significantly higher than the number of students that have requested access to the new lockers so far, of which there are 120 on the Morgantown campus alone.

“We’ve had four students who are living in the residence halls who’ve made that request,” Farris said. “Potomac State zero students have made that request WVU Tech, one student has made that request for a locker.

Most universities exempt on-campus health and mental health clinics from the Campus Carry requirements.

Photo by Chris Schulz/West Virginia Public Broadcasting

West Virginia is now the twelfth state to allow campus carry, and officials at all of the schools that WVPB contacted for this story said they had spoken with their counterparts in states like Georgia, Texas and Tennessee that have already implemented their own versions of campus carry. Farris said colleagues at other state schools have told him implementation is the hardest period.

“We weren’t doing a one-time build,” he said. “We’re building this out for many years. We just want to be ready and not underprepared. It’s better to be over prepared.”

Schools across the state will be reassessing their approaches to storage, restrictions and many of the other smaller details of campus carry for years to come.

“Until we get it up and running and tweaking it, no plan survives first contact. So we’ll see how it works out,” said James Terry, director of Public Safety for Marshall University. He said their emphasis will be on personal responsibility.

“We put the responsibility on the permit holder,” Terry said. “If they’re gonna live in the residence hall, they have to lease a gun safe from a vendor, which we already have. We did not build a safe room or gun room.”  

Terry said education is just as much for concealed carry permit holders on campus, as well as for the rest of the population.

“The big cultural shift for us will be, in my opinion, just educating the public on what concealed carry is,” Terry said. “You read the law, it has to be concealed at all times. But if it prints on the shirt, it’s still concealed if it’s underneath that shirt, you know, so we’re, we’re talking about our responses to that.”

That is one of the intangibles that schools will have to address moving forward, especially the perceptions around having firearms on campus and in classrooms. Selmeski said the gap between being safe and feeling safe on campus can create tension.

“Statistically, campus carry does not increase the risk of gun violence on campus,” he said. “That does absolutely nothing to make people feel safe. It’s a number, it’s not their lived reality. So how do we address the lived reality? We, we have open fora, we have robust communication, we make the complex more simple so folks can understand it.”

Whether the school communities are ready or not, the schools themselves have the necessary infrastructure in place.

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