Federal Funds Awarded To WVU Transit System For Improvements, Updates

WVU’s transportation system will receive federal funds for improvements.

The mass transit system many students at West Virginia University (WVU) use to get around campus is about to get some upgrades.

WVU’s Personal Rapid Transit system (PRT) has been awarded $6.5 million from the U.S. Department of Transportation.

The PRT system was designed and developed in the early 1970s by Boeing and first opened in 1975. It serves as the university’s primary mass transit system that connects the three areas of the WVU Morgantown campus and downtown. When school is in session, WVU estimates 15,000 people ride the PRT every day and more on game days. 

The money will fund the PRT Passenger Station and Guideway Modernization Project, which will update all five of the PRT stations and guideway to meet federal standards.

An Operational Mountain Valley Pipeline, New Director Speaks On Opioid Settlement And A Review Of The State’s Safety Nets, This West Virginia Week

On this West Virginia Week, we hear from residents living near the now operational Mountain Valley Pipeline as well as from the man who will oversee the distribution of millions in opioid funds across the state.

On this West Virginia Week, we hear from residents living near the now operational Mountain Valley Pipeline.

We also have the latest on the systemic issues that failed to prevent the death of a 14-year-old girl, and we hear from the man who will oversee the distribution of millions in opioid funds across the state.

We also get an update from a politician recovering after an animal attack, and the sounds of some of this week’s celebrations.

Chris Schulz is our host this week. Our theme music is by Matt Jackfert.

West Virginia Week is a web-only podcast that explores the week’s biggest news in the Mountain State. It’s produced with help from Bill Lynch, Briana Heaney, Chris Schulz, Curtis Tate, Emily Rice, Eric Douglas, Jack Walker, Liz McCormick and Maria Young.

Learn more about West Virginia Week.

High Tech Ag Lab Coming To WVSU

A new $50 million, state-of-the-art agricultural laboratory is being built at West Virginia State University in Institute. 

A new $50 million, state-of-the-art agricultural laboratory is being built at West Virginia State University in Institute. 

On Tuesday Gov. Jim Justice made good on a promise that dates back to his State of the State address in January to appropriate the funds for the cutting edge facility. 

He held a ceremonial signing of the bill passed by the legislature in May. 

The new facility will house laboratory space for both WVSU and the West Virginia Department of Agriculture. 

It will also help to create a new School of Agriculture, Food, and Natural Resources at WVSU.

WVSU President Ericke Cage said the agricultural laboratory will help the university address a worldwide challenge through research and training.

“Food insecurity continues to be one of the world’s most persistent challenges,” Cage said. 

“Together we will help to ensure that we are creating a sustainable pipeline of agricultural workers and together we will help to improve our state,” he added.  

Plans For The Opioid Settlement And Understanding What Happened To Kyneddi Miller On This West Virginia Morning

On this West Virginia Morning, the foundation responsible for divvying up West Virginia’s opioid settlement money chose its executive director in March. After taking on the position full-time at the beginning of May, Executive Director Jonathan Board sat down with Appalachia Health News Reporter Emily Rice to discuss his qualifications for the job and plans for the future.

On this West Virginia Morning, the foundation responsible for divvying up West Virginia’s opioid settlement money chose its executive director in March. After taking on the position full-time at the beginning of May, Executive Director Jonathan Board sat down with Appalachia Health News Reporter Emily Rice to discuss his qualifications for the job and plans for the future.

Also, in this show, Kyneddi Miller was found dead in her home in April. A police report said the 14-year-old girl was found in a near skeletal state. Her grandparents and mother have been charged with abuse and neglect. There are conflicting reports about the actions of state agencies involved in the case. Now, officials are pointing fingers at what organizations and policies created the crack that Miller fell through. Briana Heaney has the story.

West Virginia Morning is a production of West Virginia Public Broadcasting which is solely responsible for its content.

Support for our news bureaus comes from Shepherd University.

Chris Schulz produced this episode.

Listen to West Virginia Morning weekdays at 7:43 a.m. on WVPB Radio or subscribe to the podcast and never miss an episode. #WVMorning

‘That’s All They Care About, Putting This Pipe In The Ground’

After a decade of planning and construction, residents of Bent Mountain, Virginia, said they still worry the Mountain Valley Pipeline could affect their safety, their water quality and their property values.

It isn’t easy to get a clear view of where the Mountain Valley Pipeline burst during a water pressure test in early May.

So Robin Austin, who lives nearby, guides a reporter through the woods where the Blue Ridge Parkway connects to U.S. highway 221.

At the edge of the fence, a giant trench comes into view. It is filled with workers and heavy construction equipment. They’re replacing the damaged section of pipe that burst on May 1.

“This is a site where we’ve had water problems in the past,” she said. “Just the topography of the land and the way this watershed is. It runs off. It’s a wetland right against 221. And it enters the culverts and goes to the streams.”

The day the pipe broke, Austin called her neighbor, Kathy Chandler, and told her brown water was pouring across her property. Chandler reported it to the Virginia Department of Environmental Quality.

That’s how the public first knew that the pipeline test had failed. The federal agencies that regulate pipelines said little about the incident. But on June 11, they approved the pipeline to begin carrying large volumes of gas, at high pressure, from West Virginia to Virginia.

“Once the gas is in the line, we don’t have any control now,” Austin said, “but at least we have action we can take.” 

Chandler, Austin and other Bent Mountain residents have been fighting the project for a decade. 

Last month at the Bent Mountain Center, a converted school building, they said they still worry the pipeline could affect their safety, their water quality and their property values.

“I don’t want to be known as the girl with the muddy creek,” Chandler said. “That is an issue for us up here. Horrible, repeat events to our water, our surface waters. But the real life-threatening event for our neighborhood is that a pipe split open under pressure.”

Equitrans Midstream, the builder of the Mountain Valley Pipeline, has repeatedly insisted that the failed pressure test poses no safety risks. On May 10, Todd Normane, an Equitrans senior vice president and general counsel for the pipeline, wrote to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission that the incident demonstrated that the testing worked. He criticized pipeline opponents for asking the commission to delay or deny its approval to begin service.

John Coles Terry III and his wife, Red Terry, in Bent Mountain, Virginia, on Friday, May 10, 2024.

Photo by Curtis Tate/West Virginia Public Broadcasting

Uphill Battle

Bent Mountain sits on a plateau just inside Roanoke County. It is about 17 miles, and 30 minutes down a twisting road to Roanoke, the most populated city in southwest Virginia.

Coles Terry, who lives in Bent Mountain with his wife, Theresa, or “Red,” said he’s not convinced local emergency response agencies have the materials or a plan for a fire should the pipeline fail again. Bent Mountain residents are miles away from a municipal water connection. Most rely on wells and springs.

“If it does catch fire,” Coles Terry said, “the county has got $50,000 worth of foam, somewhere.”  

“They won’t tell us where,” Red Terry said.

“They won’t tell us where,” Coles Terry said. “They won’t tell us how they plan to get it up here. They won’t tell us how they plan to get it where the fire is raging.”

Coles Terry, his brother Frank and sister Liz were part of a court-ordered settlement of more than $500,000 for the pipeline easement on their property. A U.S. district judge cut the award in half, but the Fourth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals last month ruled the Terrys should receive the higher amount

U.S Sen. Joe Manchin

Manchin’s Move

The Terrys were among hundreds of residents the pipeline builder sued to gain access to their land via eminent domain. Many tried to challenge the decision by FERC to grant the pipeline the authority to use eminent domain, but were ultimately not successful.

Pipeline opponents had been successful in challenging the project’s permits, bringing construction to a halt for prolonged periods.

That all changed a year ago, when Congress enacted the Fiscal Responsibility Act, a spending deal that required the completion of the pipeline.

One of the pipeline’s chief supporters, West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin, a Democrat turned Independent, attached the provision to the bill.

“This is a great day for American energy security and an even greater day for the state of West Virginia,” Manchin said at the end of July last year after construction resumed on the pipeline.

According to Chandler, Austin and Terry, it resumed at a pace they had not seen before.

“If this is a matter of national security, then it should be the safest pipeline in the country,” Chandler said. “It should absolutely be the tip-top safest. And with this recent event, that cannot be assured.”

Kathy Chandler, a resident of Bent Mountain, Virginia, looks at the site of a failed pressure test on the Mountain Valley Pipeline near her property.

Photo by Curtis Tate/West Virginia Public Broadcasting

‘We’re just the landowners’

Austin and Chandler showed some other places in the area where the pipeline crosses farms and wetlands and also where it begins to ascend steep slopes.

Chandler says the topography and geology of Bent Mountain makes it a risky place to build a pipeline.

“Bent Mountain plateau, our neighborhood, has every geohazard known to pipeline construction,” Chandler said. We have the steepest slopes, we have rocky soil, we have highly erodible soils, we have water crossings, we have shallow water, we have a seismically active zone.

Coles Terry says the pipeline’s builder and its regulators haven’t listened to residents’ concerns. 

“We’re just the landowners,” he said. “Everything we said would happen has happened. Everything we told them was bad and wrong has come true. We’ve had people way smarter than me come in and tell them the same thing. But the pipeline, the MVP, the companies, they have one job, one job, that’s to put the pipe in the ground. That’s all they care about, putting this pipe in the ground.”

They wrote letters, they made phone calls, they attended public meetings. They visited lawmakers in Richmond and Washington. In Red Terry’s case, she camped out in a tree in 2018 until a judge threatened to fine her $1,000 a day.

The residents have taken time away from their families to campaign against the pipeline and have lost loved ones along the way. They say it has also affected their health.

“My blood pressure will never be normal again,” Coles Terry said.

In some places, the break in the landscape is so subtle, you wouldn’t even know a major piece of fossil fuel infrastructure was just below the surface. The Mountain Valley Pipeline might not be visible, but it is on the minds of the people of Bent Mountain.

‘It All Happened So Fast’: Former Lawmaker Recounts Devastating Copperhead Attack

Former lawmaker Doug Skaff was bit by two copperheads in May. Reporter Jack Walker caught up with him and asked what his recovery process has been like so far.

In May, former legislator Doug Skaff was taking down signs for his secretary of state campaign when he felt a sharp sensation in his foot.

He only realized what happened when he looked down and saw a copperhead. By the time he got away, Skaff was bitten four times by two separate snakes.

One month after the incident, Jack Walker caught up with Skaff about what happened, and the status of his recovery.

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Walker: Doug, can you walk us through your visit to Boone County and what led up to your snake bite?

Skaff: [The] day after Election Day, May 15, just like I do every year, I go around and start taking my campaign signs down. I ran for secretary of state, so this year I had signs all around the state. I had a lot of signs out. I take pride in putting them up myself with other people. And also I take pride in taking them down as fast as we can every year. But this is the first time I ran outside of Kanawha County. So I had some signs down Route 119 in Boone County and Danville. … I was with my eight year old son, and he was just going around taking some signs down with me wherever we could. He was out there at school that afternoon.

Walker: And that’s where you encountered the copperhead, right? What happened next?

Skaff: I go up, I grab this sign and I pull one side out. It’s a two-foot by four-foot sign, a little bigger than normal. And long story short, I felt like I tagged my shoe on some barbed wire or some glass, or just something sharp, like a nail or something. And it ripped the top of my shoe on my right baby toe of my shoe. And I didn’t see anything. I just thought I snagged it, but it kind of stung for a minute. It kind of stung and it wouldn’t go away. I was like, man, maybe I cut it on something, but then it wouldn’t go away. And then about 15 seconds I take the other side of the sign down like, “Oh man! I jammed it on some barbed wire again!” And I look down, and this time it wasn’t barbed wire of course. I see this snake, which now I know to be a copperhead. I didn’t at first know what type of snake it was because it all happened so fast, but it was a good size snake, about three inches round in diameter.

Walker: Once you realized you had been bitten by a snake, how did you react?

Skaff: So it latched on. What I did was I swung my leg around. I remember grabbing my quad, swinging my leg around and banging that snake against the shrub right there, trying to get it to fall off my leg. And so it finally did and I hobbled down about eight feet back down on the ground. I kind of scoot myself on my butt over towards my car and I lean my head back and bang on the car. My son had just gotten back in the car and he gets out. He’s eight years old. I give him my phone. I was like, “I need some help buddy, snakes, snakes!” And I said, “Don’t go over there.” He was pretty cool and collected, so he’s getting my phone from the front seat, so we call 911.

Former House Minority Leader Doug Skaff was hospitalized for seven consecutive days in May over a series of four copperhead bites.

Photo Courtesy of Doug Skaff
After being discharged from the hospital, Skaff was told to use a wheelchair or walker to manage his muscle pain.

Photo Courtesy of Doug Skaff

Walker: What did the first responders do when they got you into an ambulance?

Skaff: Within probably 25 minutes I think, we got to the ER. Then there, they quickly tried to service me and get me this anti-venom stuff. [I] forgot what it’s called, CroFab or something. I don’t remember, some anti-venom stuff. And what that does is it’s supposed to stop the spreading.

Walker: Did that work?

Skaff: It did stop the spreading that first day OK. But the morning I woke up, and it started spreading again. It started going up my knee, up my leg, through my thighs, through my quads, all the way up to my waist. Same discoloration, same burning sensation. It was the worst feeling I’ve ever felt in my life.

Walker: So how did they get the spreading under control?

Skaff: They ended up giving me six more doses of that stuff, so I had ten vials of the anti-venom.

Walker: What has your recovery process been like since then?

Skaff: This is week four, and what does it feel like now? So I’m still taking pain medicine and all that. I’ve been pushing it and walking, standing up on it, hobbling around. I’m still supposed to use a walker and wheelchair when I go long distances, but I’ve really pushed it trying to get my strength back. But it still hurts. I’m not gonna lie. I mean, my ankle is really hard right now. My muscle feels weird. And I don’t know, the top of my foot — it just feels like it swells up and goes down and swells up, and the bottom of my foot is still bruised. But they say my muscle, it can take a long time before my muscle gets back to normal, if it ever gets back to normal.

Walker: This sounds like a really difficult experience. I’m wondering if there’s anything you’ve taken away from this that you want to share with our listeners?

Skaff: Well, it’s just funny because I wasn’t even thinking. [There are] so many campaign signs you saw out there, and people just stepping in the same grass I did and they don’t even think. Think about how many people are cutting your grass this summer, doing the weed whacker or hitting a golf ball. And the thing I really want to stress is, anything you can do to help people, the kids. Please tell your kids to be careful when they’re out there playing in the yard and in the grass. I mean, if my eight-year-old would’ve got hit four times, I don’t know if he could have survived it.

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