Gayle Manchin Discharged From Hospital, Driver Apprehended After Car Accident

Gayle Manchin, ARC federal co-chair and wife of U.S. Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., was released from the hospital Wednesday following a Monday car crash in Alabama.

Gayle Manchin, federal co-chair of the Appalachian Regional Commission (ARC), and wife of U.S. Sen. Joe Manchin, was released from an Alabama hospital on Wednesday following a Monday car crash.

Manchin and Guy Land, ARC congressional liaison, were heading to an ARC event in Birmingham, Alabama when a driver fleeing police struck their vehicle.

Police officers allegedly attempted to stop the driver, Tradarryl Rishad Boykins, in relation to a felony warrant and traffic offense, al.com reported Wednesday. Boykins attempted to evade the officers, resulting in a seven-minute car chase and the ensuing collision.

Boykins is now charged with two counts of felony assault, attempting to elude police and illegal possession of a firearm, the Associated Press reported. He is being held on a $2 million bond, and court records do not yet show whether he has legal representation.

After his wife’s discharge Wednesday, Sen. Manchin released a statement noting that she had returned to West Virginia to receive further care from family members.

“We want to thank everyone for the outpouring of support,” Manchin said.

Land is still receiving treatment at a hospital in Birmingham. In a Wednesday press release, the ARC said he “is continuing to receive excellent medical care” from staff at the medical facility.

Gayle Manchin Admitted To Hospital Following Alabama Car Crash

Sen. Joe Manchin’s office said Gayle Manchin and Guy Land, a congressional liaison, were in Birmingham for a grant workshop when another car struck their vehicle on Monday.

Gayle Manchin, the federal co-chair of the Appalachian Regional Commission, and the wife of U.S. Sen. Joe Manchin, is in a hospital in Birmingham, Alabama, after she and a commission staff member were involved in a car crash.

The commission and Sen. Manchin’s office said Gayle Manchin and Guy Land, a congressional liaison, were in Birmingham for a grant workshop when another car struck their vehicle on Monday.

Land and Manchin were transported to the University of Alabama-Birmingham hospital. Gayle Manchin is in stable condition, her husband’s office said, and she will remain there for a few days as a precaution.

Gayle Manchin was nominated to lead the 13-state commission in 2021 by President Joe Biden and confirmed by the Senate. She’s the first West Virginian to serve in that role in the commission’s 59-year history.

Joe Manchin, a Democrat, is not running for re-election to the Senate.

Manchin On His Senate Retirement And America’s Energy Future

Curtis Tate spoke with Manchin Wednesday about that decision, what he wants to do next and what he accomplished during his time in office.

U.S. Sen. Joe Manchin announced his retirement from the Senate last month. Curtis Tate spoke with Manchin Wednesday about that decision, what he wants to do next and what he accomplished during his time in office.

Manchin also spoke about U.S. energy policy and electricity prices in West Virginia. Manchin is the chairman of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee and has had a prominent role in shaping national energy policy in recent years.

This interview has been edited for clarity and length.

Tate: You said when you announced your retirement from the Senate that you’d accomplished what you set out to do for West Virginia? Could you name maybe three of those things?

Manchin: Oh, I could. I mean, there’s so many things we’ve done there. But let me just give you some things that we passed in West Virginia. First of all, we got the Mountain Valley Pipeline. Next, we had the ARCH hub hydrogen hub. That’s your major turning points for us, the hydrogen. The MVP is going to create a lot of opportunity. We’re producing an awful lot of gas, there’s going to be an awful lot of opportunity to the industry coming. With the Inflation Reduction Act that we passed to help West Virginia, we got Form Energy up in the Weirton area that’s going to be producing tremendous amounts of battery storage. We have Nucor Steel coming along the Ohio River, Mason County. The opportunities continue to keep coming. We’ve got another hydrogen plant going on in Mingo County, down in southern West Virginia. It’s Adams Fork, using methane coming off the coal seams and turning it into hydrogen. 

So we have put ourselves in a position to transition as the country and the world is changing. And we’ve got to be carbon conscious. But the bottom line is we’re producing more fossil (fuel) today cleaner and better than anywhere in the world. So we reduced our emissions for the last two decades. And then during that one of the things I’m most proud of, I was able to fight like the dickens and we were able to get the miners of West Virginia and all across the country – coal miners – their lifetime pensions and their lifetime health care benefits that they were promised and were going to be robbed from. We got that into law. Now, it’ll never happen.

Tate: What does American energy security look like in 2030, 2040, 2050?

Manchin: You can’t eliminate but you can innovate. If we create the technology and show them how, if you’re going to use carbon, if you’re going to use fossil, are you capturing the carbon, so you don’t emit it? If you’re producing natural gas, are you capturing the methane so it doesn’t escape in the atmosphere, which is very, very harmful? Are we doing everything we can by innovating technology? And then entice the other countries and say, “Well, you can’t tell me what to do and what I can do, I can burn anything I want, I can do it any way I want to do it.” OK, you’re a sovereign country, we don’t have jurisdiction over you. But if you want to compete in our market, if you want to be part of the greatest economy, and the greatest economic market in the world, the United States, then these are our conditions. And you can’t do something that’s not feasible. It’s not reasonable. Perfect example, they tried to make us do things before, the technology was never there. We never perfected carbon capture, we couldn’t do it in a feasible way. And then they basically said “the war on coal,” they were putting benchmarks and if you use coal, this is what you had to do. But there was no way to get to those benchmarks, because the technology wasn’t there. So that’s what has happened in the past. That’s what we’re preventing now. 

We’re going to make sure we have the technology that we can remove and limit and basically undo an awful lot of the damage that has been done and still have the fossil energy that we need and still have the renewable. To give you another perfect example, Curtis, you have coal-fired plants around the country. And even in West Virginia, they’re closed down, they get old and timed out. No one’s building new ones. I think we all agree to that. And the United States, those coal-fired plants that have burned that have shut down, are in a perfect position for small modular reactors (SMR). These are new technologies of nuclear, nuclear energy, that are safe. That’s basically dispatchable. We can put it in those areas that we had coal fired plants, because all the switch gears are right there. It’s almost like a plug and play. And it keeps the vitality of those communities. It has revenue and has jobs. That’s what we’re looking for.

Tate: Is that something though, that can help lower the cost of electricity for West Virginians?

Manchin: Well, we’ve got to that’s where the federal government comes in. We’ve got to make sure everything that you have, whether it’s internet, or anything modern, today’s modern society, usually came through our energy labs. We have 17 labs around the country. And those labs are kind of experimental. DARPA (Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency) and all the different things from the internet, all the way up to AI and everything they’re talking about. We can and we will be able to do that. But we’ve got to get those costs down. The demand for fossil fuel is what’s driving the cost of gasoline, it’s driving the cost of energy that we use in our house. Because of the demand for coal, coal prices are higher. Today, we’re producing 5 percent more coal than we did last year in West Virginia, we’re paying higher prices than we’ve ever paid in the history of our country for coal, to have thermal coal and also for steelmaking. But the rest of the world has such an appetite, they’re driving the price of this up. So we have to have other alternative energy to drive it down. And that’s what we’re trying to do to give you more options. Wind and solar is your cheapest, but you know what, it’s intermittent power. It doesn’t give you 24/7 reliability.

Tate: But those batteries that you mentioned that Form Energy is going to build. Those can can help fill the void, can’t they?

Manchin: They sure can, Curtis. We don’t have the battery storage right now that we can give you 24/7 energy that’s produced only six or seven hours a day. When we get to that point, we’re trying very hard, but also with SMRs, these micro reactors. There’s so many things that we can do there. Another up in Ravenswood, the old Ravenswood plant. We have that’s where we –  I’m trying to think how they describe that. But it’s a new power grid that’s all renewable. And it’s used basically for all the industry in that area is going to be there. And it’s done by Berkshire Hathaway. So it’s a tremendous opportunity there. This is going to revolutionize how we use energy for manufacturing and things of that sort. But right now, it’s ridiculous. I was in this conversation yesterday. When I was governor, we were paying around eight, nine cents a kilowatt hour for residential, five, and six cents for commercial because our coal fired energy has always been an advantage for us for manufacturing, to have reliable, stable power. Dependable, reliable and affordable. Now the price is 14 cents. 

Tate: People who retire from Congress, they go on to become lobbyists, they might be university presidents or serving in Cabinet posts or ambassadorships, corporate boards. Are any of those things on the table for you next?

Manchin: I haven’t looked at anything. And I haven’t thought about any of that, because I’ve still got a heck of a job to do for the next 13 months. And I’ve been working my tail off on that one. There’s a lot of things I want to accomplish. And I have a great staff and they’re fighting like the dickens. No one’s giving up. We’re basically going to give it every week, everything we have for the last man to the last day. And that would be early January of 2025. So but I’m more concerned about my country than ever before. And you hear me talk about it all the time. People say, “Oh, you’re gonna run for president,” this and that. And I said, let me just tell you something. I don’t have a burning desire to run for president. But I do have an overwhelming burning desire to save our country. And if I can get people understanding that the political process that we live in today in America has been weaponized. 

That means if you’re on one side, the other side has to be your enemy. And you have to villainize the other side, to create the fervor you need in order to beat them or defeat them. We’re not the enemy, a Democrat and Republican, we are not enemies and should not be. We might be competitors with different ideas of how to fix the same problem. But we’re on the same side. That’s America side. They’re losing that because Washington is making you pick a side. What side are you on Curtis? And you figure you got to pick? Well, I’m not crazy about either one, but I think I would relate more to this than that. Then you push clear to the left or the right. That middle has been evaporating and gone. There’s no place. I think there’s more people today that are unsatisfied with the opportunities and assistance that’s going to be provided for them for the next election. And what we’re going to do is see if there’s enough good people out there that want to re-engage. That’s it.

Tate: No other Democrat currently holds statewide office in West Virginia. Do you have somebody in mind to run as your successor and do you plan to endorse anyone?

Manchin: Well, I haven’t gotten into that because I just made the decision late. The Democrats have one outstanding, I mean, truly an outstanding leader in (Huntington Mayor) Steve Williams running for governor. I’ve known Steve for many, many years. I was in the legislature with him, and I’ve watched him perform and those difficult challenging times in Huntington, and how he’s been able to turn that around the whole economy, that whole vibrancy of that area. So he’s going to be a tremendous worthy opponent, a candidate, I think that most West Virginians could rally around, someone with that stature in that experience level. I really believe that, as far as on my side, the Senate side, haven’t gotten there yet. We’ll look and see if there’s an independent if there’s basically a Democrat, or who we think it’d be best for the state. I would like people to look not at the identity of what party they belong to. But basically, the content and the content of what the person is and what they’re about, and what type of experience level they’ve had. What’s your temperament? You know, if you’re looking at basically trying to find an enemy, rather than trying to find a solution? You’re not going to be very helpful for the people in West Virginia.

Tate: How much was your family involved in your decision to not seek reelection? And especially your wife, Gayle?

Manchin: She’s my Bellwether. She’s my confidant. And we talked about all of this. I started 1982. So what, 42 years, I’ve been my public service, I think it was a calling when I got involved. And my family has sacrificed an awful lot. But the people have been so absolutely wonderful, supportive and generous and kind. And working with me. I couldn’t ever do anything by myself. But I knew as West Virginians, if we were working towards a goal, we could achieve it. And we’ve done an awful lot together, whether it’s as Secretary of State, and we had the SHARES program, saving history and reaching every student, we got young people involved, and how important it was. A 17 year old, if they turn 18 before the election day, they’re able to vote in a primary when they’re 17. People never knew these things. So we got them involved. 

We changed the whole process of how we did corporations, streamlining that making it easier for businesses to do business in West Virginia. And then as governor, I think we moved to a whole ‘nother level. We had mine safety coming in, we had basically, the value of a human being is irreplaceable, and you can’t put a price on it. So we did everything to keep them safe. We had horrible mine tragedies, we stuck together. And we created opportunities. We came through the downturn in 2008 and 2009. And the federal government wasn’t sending out billions and billions of dollars of assets and help and money to states back then like they are now. 

Over $10 billion has come to the state of West Virginia during COVID. And now I hope they have themselves in position to be able to live within their means. So my family had a tremendous amount. I want to spend a little more time with them. I have two younger grandchildren, two identical seven-year-old boys out in Houston. And I have a little granddaughter out in Houston who is 10. Those are my youngest, the rest of my 10 grandchildren, the other seven are pretty much grown. And I’ve missed an awful lot. And I don’t want to miss a whole lot more.

Four Counties To Receive $12 Million To Improve Water, Wastewater

Recent federal legislation has brought billions of dollars to communities nationwide to address their water and wastewater needs.

Four West Virginia communities are getting nearly $12 million from the Appalachian Regional Commission for water and wastewater projects.

The city of Williamson in Mingo County is the biggest recipient, with $4.2 million for water system improvements for 222 commercial and 1,520 residential customers.

In Lincoln County, $3.3 million will go to the Hamlin Public Service District to upgrade sewers for 101 businesses and 586 households.

In Webster County, the Cowen Public Service District will get $3 million to extend nearly 11 miles of water line to 58 homes and two businesses.

In Barbour County, the town of Junior will receive about $1.5 million to replace water infrastructure serving 395 households and bringing the water system back into compliance with state regulations.

Recent federal legislation has brought billions of dollars to communities nationwide to address their water and wastewater needs.

Sens. Joe Manchin and Shelley Moore Capito are members of the Senate Appropriations Committee. Manchin’s wife, Gayle, is federal co-chair of the Appalachian Regional Commission.

Federal Funding At Work: Building Infrastructure And Jobs In Appalachia

The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, along with the Inflation Reduction Act of last year and other programs are bringing a lot of federal dollars to places like Wheeling.

U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg got a friendly reception from residents in Wheeling recently. He was there to promote the Biden administration’s infrastructure law, enacted by Congress and signed by the president in 2021.

The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, along with the Inflation Reduction Act of last year and other programs are bringing a lot of federal dollars to places like Wheeling. The city is using a $16 million grant from the infrastructure law to improve its Main Street.

While the construction work was underway outside, Buttigieg spoke at a restaurant downtown

“This infrastructure bill is so big in its proportions, it’s really testing the capacity of the United States,” he said. “And that’s true on everything from raw materials to workforce.”

After years of disinvestment, federal funds are coming to Appalachia.

The goal, say people familiar with Appalachia’s strengths and needs, isn’t simply to put people to work on jobs that have an expiration date. Rather, it’s to build skills that last a whole career.

“So they can hop from client to client to client and keep, you know, keep a continuous pipeline and flow of projects to where they can continuously employ and maintain their organization and grow exponentially,” said Jacob Hannah, chief conservation officer for Coalfield Development in Huntington.

His organization trains solar workers, often former coal miners. He expects the influx of federal dollars will create even more opportunities in solar in the region.

Some of those solar projects could be built on mine sites reclaimed with newly available federal dollars, including one in Hannah’s native Mingo County. It will provide 100 percent of the power the local high school needs.

“So we’re trying to help catch up the workforce to meet the demand of solar companies that are meeting the demand of this big funding opportunity that’s happening,” he said.

Gayle Manchin, the federal co-chair of the Appalachian Regional Commission, said the infrastructure law has brought a wealth of new opportunity for the state and region.

Sometimes it only takes a little bit of retraining to build a workforce that’s ready for new jobs that are coming to Appalachia, she said, whether it’s aerospace or power plants fueled by hydrogen. 

“Where they’re talking about coming in with hydrogen plants, they say that if you worked in a coal fired plant, then you would be able to work in a hydrogen plant – (the) skillsets are almost identical,” she said.

And from a regional perspective, Manchin said it’s OK for surrounding states to benefit from businesses expanding in West Virginia. Whether it’s the Nucor steel plant in Mason County or the Form Energy battery factory in Hancock County, the new plants in West Virginia may need workers from Kentucky, Ohio or Pennsylvania.

“That’s just my personal belief that it can’t just be a West Virginia project. It can’t just be West Virginia workers,” she said. “It’s got to be a regional development in which everyone has the opportunity to grow and benefit from this industry.”

But some observers are concerned that the workforce may not be ready, and the jobs may not sustain the people who need them the most.

Joseph Kane, a fellow at the Brookings Institution in Washington who focuses on infrastructure’s economic role across different regions, said states may be tempted to put the cart before the horse when there’s a window of federal funding available.

“We have this gold rush mentality, nationally, where places are just like tripping over themselves trying to get to the buckets of federal money while they can, and kind of like, well, we’ll solve the workforce stuff when it comes to it,” he said. 

For example, Kane said a local water utility might have five workers, and two or three are eligible to retire. Or, they might seek higher-paying jobs in other states. Losing 40 percent to 60 percent of your workforce at a time when federal money is flowing into water infrastructure isn’t ideal, he said. 

“They’re not really stepping back to rethink their prevailing training and hiring and retention strategies,” Kane said. 

Kane said states need to create a pipeline of skilled trades to do the work over the coming decades. That could be for initial construction or ongoing operations and maintenance.

“We need to create a talent pipeline,” he said. “The need is to have a bigger pool of talent, in general, even over the next five years, 10 years, 20 years, 30 years that all these employers can pull from.”

If the talent pool is too small, states risk competing with each other for a scarce resource.

“We’re going to compete against each other for those few people,” Kane said. “And then it’s kind of a race to the bottom where we can’t find people to do the work.”

It’s not just boots on the ground, Kane said. Some communities don’t have the people they need to write the grants to get the competitive funds in the first place.

“They’re sitting on over $100 billion in competitive grants that they can award places,” he said, “and the concerns I’ve heard from places is not even do they have the staff to do these projects, they don’t even have the grant writers to get those competitive grants or to apply for them.”

Manchin said you can’t just throw money at a city or a county government and expect them to know what to do with it.

“I think money just passed out without any structure or guidance can sometimes not be a blessing at all but be a hardship,” she said.

That’s part of the Appalachian Regional Commission’s modern mission. The agency was conceived by President Lyndon B. Johnson’s White House as a federal antipoverty program.

In the past, the ARC focused on hard infrastructure, such as a 3,000-mile network of improved highways in the region. (Decades later, it’s still under construction.) In more recent years, the ARC has turned its focus to human infrastructure: education, training, workforce development and entrepreneurship.

Kane said it won’t be enough to say you spent a certain amount of money to create a certain number of jobs. A true return on investment would be a build-out of durable skills that workers can use until they retire.

“Maybe people will get some jobs, but maybe the bigger point is the fact that they’re getting licenses and certifications and skills that allow them to do other sorts of work once that construction project ends?” Kane said. “I haven’t gotten a clear answer to that, which is concerning, because the money’s already going out there.”

Hannah said big, one-time projects can still deliver benefits to a region that’s been in distress.

“Those one off projects, they’re valuable, they’re beneficial, they’re not permanent, long term, but they help sort of get a shot in the arm, a jumpstart, you know, for a community in a region,” he said. “And then what we want to do is be able to place those folks into other opportunities that may be more long term and long lasting.”

Hannah said he’s optimistic about the federal funds that are available from several agencies. And that the federal government is making coal communities a priority for the investment.

“I think right now we’re at a very exciting time because the government is willing to invest in that experimentation period,” he said.

Hannah’s organization helped grow Solar Holler into the biggest solar installer in the region.

“You know, 10 years ago, there wasn’t even a solar installation company in our region,” he said. “And so we’re trying to catch up really quickly.”

Now there are six or seven solar companies in the region, Hannah said. 

Still, Hannah said it’s a stretch to transform the workforce in just 10 years when the economy has been based on a single extractive industry – coal – for more than a century.

Coalfield Development is retraining out-of-work coal miners to work in solar. He said the Inflation Reduction Act and the infrastructure law will spur even more development of solar and renewable energy, often on reclaimed mine or power plant sites.

This month, Coalfield Development is beginning a one-month training course to teach the basics of solar. Anyone can apply and each participant will receive a $2,000 stipend.

Solar jobs won’t replace coal jobs on a 1-to-1 basis, he said. West Virginia has one of the lowest labor participation rates in the country. It’s a challenge just to get people to go to work.

There’s no silver bullet, Hannah said, no ideal job creator to save West Virginia or Appalachia.

“It’s an uphill battle. It’s not an easy one,” he said. “And so we’re trying our best to feel those needs without trying to just rely upon outside forces and outside labor to come rescue the day, but to help incubate the people that have been left behind in those communities that we’re working directly with, and have them be the change agents and the owners of that change that’s happening.”

Solar Holler is an underwriter of West Virginia Public Broadcasting.

——

This story is part of the series, “Help Wanted: Understanding West Virginia’s Labor Force.”

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:

Exit mobile version