The CPS Process And A New Plant Powered By Solar On This West Virginia Morning

On this West Virginia Morning, two companies are working side by side to build a new titanium plant in Jackson County, powered by solar. Also, even in ideal circumstances, the removal of a child from their home by CPS is always traumatic. We talk with community advocates about the process and resources available.

On this West Virginia Morning, two companies are working side by side to build a new titanium plant in Jackson County, powered by solar. Curtis Tate went to take a look.

Also, in this show, even in ideal circumstances, the removal of a child from their home by Child Protective Services (CPS) is always traumatic. Emily Rice spoke with community advocates about this process and what resources children need to adapt.

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

Volunteer Firefighters Stage Unexpected Walkout In Kanawha County

Several volunteer firefighters with the Tyler Mountain Volunteer Fire Department staged a walkout Monday. Other county agencies are now working to pick up the slack.

Several members of the Tyler Mountain Volunteer Fire Department (VFD) resigned during a departmental training session Monday.

The fire department said Monday that seven of its 25 volunteer firefighters left their positions. But other media outlets have since reported that 10 or more firefighters staged a joint walkout, allegedly due to concerns with the fire department’s leadership.

The sudden departure has left the community of Cross Lanes, which is serviced by the Tyler Mountain VFD, with fewer first responders on standby. The fire department is now reviewing applications for new recruits.

Meanwhile, officials within the fire department and Kanawha County at large are working to ensure that Tyler Mountain VFD’s coverage areas remain protected.

Preexisting mutual aid agreements allow neighboring fire departments to contribute to emergency response efforts in Cross Lanes, the Kanawha County Commission said in a Monday statement.

Kanawha County officials and 911 dispatchers will help coordinate response efforts in the Tyler Mountain VFD’s coverage area, the statement said. This could include contacting fire departments based in the communities of Dunbar, Institute, Nitro, Sissonville and St. Albans to respond to some emergencies in Cross Lanes.

Dunbar Fire Chief Jason Burger said mutual aid agreements between the Tyler Mountain VFD and surrounding fire departments are long standing, and have helped first responders access additional support as needed during emergency response efforts.

“We have had a mutual aid agreement with the Tyler Mountain Fire Department for quite a while,” he said. “If they need help on a call, they ask for us and we respond.”

The Tyler Mountain Volunteer Fire Department has helmed emergency response efforts for the Kanawha County community of Cross Lanes since 1951.

Photo Credit: Tyler Mountain Volunteer Fire Department

Joe Stevens, public information officer for the Nitro Fire Department, said that the agreements make responding to emergencies in Cross Lanes familiar territory, and that the resignations do not pose an added burden to first responders in Nitro.

“This is nothing new,” he said.

Still, Burger said his department has minimal information on the nature of the walkout in Cross Lanes. He received word of the walkout Monday afternoon, but was not informed of the motivations behind it.

“I don’t have any insider information about what’s going on out there,” he said. “Hopefully whatever’s going on, cooler heads can prevail … because ultimately it’s the citizens that will suffer.”

The Tyler Mountain VFD did not respond directly to a request for an interview, but referred West Virginia Public Broadcasting to a departmental statement written Monday.

In that statement, James McDougle, president of the Tyler Mountain VFD board of directors, said that the fire department remains prepared to respond to local emergencies.

Likewise, Tyler Mountain Fire Chief Louie Robinson said his department is committed to continuing to serve the Cross Lanes community. He also thanked neighboring fire departments for their support.

The Tyler Mountain VFD will discuss the walkout during its regularly scheduled public meeting at 6 p.m. Wednesday, held at 5380 Big Tyler Road in Cross Lanes.

For more information, visit the Tyler Mountain VFD’s Facebook page.

Inmates Earn Credentials That May Help After Release

Several dozen inmates at the Lakin Correctional Center in Mason County, West Virginia earned new diplomas and certifications last week that may someday make it easier for them to join the workforce. 

Several dozen inmates at the Lakin Correctional Center in Mason County, West Virginia earned new diplomas and certifications last week that may someday make it easier for them to join the workforce. 

Even behind the barbed wire and steel gates, there was a bit of pomp and circumstance at West Virginia’s only all-female prison. 

Before a crowd of family members, friends and corrections officials, 39 women received diplomas in a variety of programs – everything from high school equivalencies and technical training to culinary, cosmetology and dog grooming certifications.

It makes a difference in self-esteem for many of the students, said Lori Wedge, Lakin’s principal for West Virginia Schools of Diversion and Transition – particularly for those who received their high school equivalencies.

They found that very rewarding, because they have often felt like a failure because they dropped out. And then, you know, you can’t have a really decent job if you don’t have your high school diploma, so they want that or the equivalency,” Wedge said.

Having a felony conviction makes it harder, Wedge admitted, to land a job after their time is up. That in turn affects recidivism rates.

Most of the graduates will be released within five years, she said.

Prison officials hope this achievement helps them to not return.

Special Session On Homeschool Oversight Possible After Death Of Boone County Teen

Gov. Jim Justice said Friday that he is open to calling a special session of the state legislature to reexamine government oversight of homeschooling after the death of 14-year-old Kyneddi Miller.

Gov. Jim Justice said Friday he is open to calling a special session of the West Virginia Legislature to reexamine how state agencies respond to allegations of abuse and neglect against homeschooled children.

The declaration came in response to a question about whether he would pursue legislative changes during the remainder of his term in response to the death of 14-year-old Kyneddi Miller.

“If need be, just for this, I would call a special session. Just for this,” Justice said during a virtual press briefing. “Because this is just not fair.”

Miller, who was homeschooled, died in her Boone County home in April, where she was found in an emaciated state in a case of alleged parental neglect. Miller’s death sparked uproar across the state, and a search for answers from state agencies and members of the press.

Justice, whose term ends in January 2025, has the authority to convene members of the legislature for special sessions over specific issues. Last month, Justice exercised this power and reconvened lawmakers for further discussions on the state budget.

For state officials, Miller’s death has deepened calls to reexamine state policies surrounding homeschooling, which has proven a contentious issue in the Mountain State.

Lawmakers like Del. Mike Pushkin, D-Kanawha, raised concerns about a lack of regulation over homeschooling during the regular legislative session

“We keep hearing of these horrific incidents that could be prevented if we could actually do something meaningful here to protect these kids,” Pushkin said. “If we save one kid’s life with this, it’s worth it.”

And calls for more oversight have been especially pronounced regarding parents with histories of child abuse or neglect.

Under state law, Miller’s parents were required to submit homeschooling assessments to the state in June 2023, at the completion of her eighth grade year. But, according to state officials, Miller’s assessments were never received.

County officials have the ability to perform in-person check-ins on households that do not submit these assessments, but state education officials say these check-ins are rarely conducted. In Miller’s case, no such visit was reported.

During a Thursday press update on a state investigation into Miller’s death, Brian Abraham, the governor’s chief of staff, underscored that Justice supports school choice and parental rights in education.

Still, he acknowledged that the state must ensure its policies provide sufficient oversight on children who are homeschooled to keep them safe.

“The governor wholeheartedly supports school choice and the parents’ right to choose homeschool. But, you know, we can see it has potential ramifications,” he said. “It’s a tradeoff, we have to find the sweet spot.”

Other state officials were more explicit in their calls for increased government regulation over homeschooling.

West Virginia State Superintendent of Schools Michele Blatt said during the same press briefing that her agency would like to “strengthen the guardrails” around homeschooling.

Senate President Craig Blair, R-Berkeley, said in an email statement Thursday that he is eager to “improve our regulations related to homeschooled children to ensure that no children suffer this same outcome.”

Unless Justice calls another special session — or three-fifths of both the West Virginia Senate and the West Virginia House of Delegates vote to convene, per state code — lawmakers will have to wait until February 2025 to take action on the state’s homeschooling policies.

But Blair said preparations for new legislation will need to begin long before lawmakers return to the Capitol to ensure the state protects its youth.

“We encourage our colleagues in the House of Delegates to sit down with us as we start working toward these plans,” he wrote. “We must act quickly to ensure that something of this magnitude doesn’t happen again.”

Joe Manchin Isn’t A Candidate 5 Months Before The Election. But He Still Has Time To Change His Mind

It’s five months before the general election, and Joe Manchin of West Virginia isn’t running for office. What he has done over the past year is announce he won’t run for reelection as a Democrat, changed his party registration to independent, and ruled out a third-party run for president.

Every election cycle, it seems, Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia tries to find the best fit for himself, dragging both sides of the political aisle — and an entire home-state electorate — along for a wobbly ride.

Five months before the general election, he’s still not a declared candidate for any office, but he’s hitched up the guessing-game wagon one more time. And there’s still time, albeit shrinking, to mull potential runs for governor, the Senate or even the U.S. presidency.

After recently switching his party affiliation from Democrat to independent, the 76-year-old Manchin is content to leave the Senate in January “and be able to hold a more normal life, if you will.”

But in true Manchin fashion, he leaves the gate open just a crack.

“Never say never, because you never know,” he said.

The rutted path he’s chosen, while not necessarily surprising, leaves voters who haven’t lost interest altogether once again trying to figure out where Manchin is headed. One who has tried to keep up, retired West Virginia Wesleyan political history professor Robert Rupp, brings his own metaphor to the discussion.

“This is a whirling dervish,” Rupp said.

Career Crossroads

Career-changing moves for Manchin have come in bunches lately.

Manchin announced his party registration switch on June 1, saying he wanted to “continue to fight for America’s sensible majority.” Manchin had been thinking about it at least as far back as last August.

In November, Manchin announced he wouldn’t run for reelection as a Democrat.

Then in December at a Washington roast, Manchin teased a potential third-party run for the White House, joking that the nation could use someone slightly younger than the leading contenders. But in February, Manchin announced he would not run for president, saying he didn’t want to be a “spoiler.”

Manchin had been in the Senate since 2010, when he won a special election following the death of Robert C. Byrd during Manchin’s second term as governor. He’s been there ever since, though he considered returning home to run again for governor in 2016. Instead, he endorsed Jim Justice, who won as a Democrat before himself switching to the Republican Party months after taking office.

In 2019, rather than make another run for governor in the 2020 election and take on Justice, who had become a rival, Manchin decided to remain a senator. That decision proved fruitful as he emerged as a linchpin vote and must-have dealmaker for Democrats in the closely divided Senate. Key Biden administration initiatives on energy and infrastructure likely would not have happened without his buy-in.

Another Run For Governor

When Manchin switched parties last month, ears perked up and whispered questions began to circulate: What’s he up to now? The logistics of several possible paths forward offered a glimmer of possible answers.

When he registered as an independent, Manchin met a deadline — barely — in West Virginia for candidates to file their political affiliation 60 days prior to an Aug. 1 deadline to run in this year’s election. That has fueled speculation that he could decide to seek a third term as governor, an office where he was popular. He received nearly 64% of the vote to win his first term in 2004 and 70% of the vote in nabbing a second term in 2008.

West Virginia has turned heavily Republican since then. Former President Donald Trump overwhelmingly won the state in the 2016 and 2020 presidential elections. Both chambers of the state legislature now have GOP supermajorities. About 40% of registered voters are Republicans, compared with 30% for Democrats and about 25% with no party affiliation.

If Manchin tries for a return to the governor’s office, he’d face an election rematch with Republican Patrick Morrisey and an awkward campaign showdown with Democrat Steve Williams, the mayor of Huntington and the party’s chosen nominee. In the 2018 U.S. Senate race, Manchin defeated Morrisey by just over 3 percentage points. In late May, Manchin said publicly that he wouldn’t run for governor and would support Williams.

Along with reversing course on that statement, Manchin would again have to grapple with the sustained popularity in West Virginia of Trump, whose name will adorn the top of West Virginia’s ballot. Morrisey, the state’s attorney general, is a staunch supporter of Trump, who became popular in Appalachia for making broad promises to put coal miners back to work amid a grim economic outlook in the industry.

Trump did not bring the industry back. The number of coal jobs in West Virginia fell from 11,561 at the start of his presidency to 11,418 at the end in 2021, slowing coal’s precipitous decline but not stopping it. Still, Manchin and Democrats often found themselves targeted as enemies of coal in a state where it was still widely seen as a cornerstone of the economy.

Despite a long line of legendary politicians in its history, only two West Virginia governors have been elected to three terms: Republican Arch. A. Moore Jr. in 1968, 1972 and 1984, and Republican Arthur Boreman during the state’s infancy in 1863, 1864 and 1866.

Third Time A Senator

Without Manchin in the Senate race, Republicans are oozing with confidence that Justice can pick up his West Virginia seat. If all other races across the country stayed with their current parties, that alone would be enough for them to retake the majority next year. And Democrats are defending 23 seats, including five held by independents, compared to just 10 seats for Republicans.

A decision by Manchin to get back in the race as an independent would be awkward as well because it would set up a matchup against both Justice and Democrat Glenn Elliott, whom Manchin endorsed in the May primary.

Justice and Manchin had a falling-out after Justice switched parties eight months into his first term as governor in 2017. Justice made that announcement on stage with Trump during a rally in Huntington. Justice, a wealthy businessman who owns several coal mines, is a staunch supporter of Trump and won his endorsement.

After Manchin became an independent, Elliott said on X, formerly Twitter, that he had no reason to believe Manchin had any interest in the Senate race.

A Senate race could be Manchin’s toughest in four decades in state politics — and his most expensive. Manchin has raised $11.7 million with $8.5 million cash on hand, compared with $3 million raised with $931,000 cash on hand for Justice, and $125,000 raised with $65,000 cash on hand for Elliott, according to the latest Federal Election Commission records.

Other Options

In April, the leadership of No Labels, a national bipartisan organization, ended its search for a presidential candidate. Manchin had been viewed as one of the top high-profile prospects to seize on widespread dissatisfaction with President Joe Biden and Trump.

If Manchin were to use his independent status to reverse course again and make an independent presidential run, he’d need to hurry. He’s already missed the filing deadline for the general election in seven states, and deadlines are looming in 10 others in June and July, according to the Federal Election Commission.

One other option lurks in the shadows as the senator mulls his future. In Morgantown, West Virginia University President Gordon Gee plans to retire when his contract is up next June. A search for his replacement is in the early stages.

Manchin, a WVU graduate, has not addressed speculation that he might have interest in Gee’s job. A spokeswoman sidestepped questions about it last year. But in the kind of language that Manchin clearly loves to see as others speculate about his path forward, the Dominion Post reported that the university said its search will have “no preconceived outcomes or candidates.”

___

Associated Press reporter Mary Clare Jalonick in Washington contributed to this report.

Feds Host Workshop To Stop Financial Crimes In W.Va.

Federal prosecutors say unsuspecting West Virginians – including the state’s large elderly population – are at risk for a variety of financial schemes such as romance cons as well as money laundering conducted in order to hide drug and human trafficking. 

Federal prosecutors say unsuspecting West Virginians – including the state’s large elderly population – are at risk for a variety of financial schemes such as romance cons as well as money laundering conducted in order to hide drug and human trafficking. 

“West Virginia has one of the nation’s oldest populations per capita and we tend to be trusting and take others at their word. That makes the state a target-rich environment for financial scams,” said U.S. Attorney Will Thompson of the Southern District. 

He and U.S. Attorney William Ihlenfeld of the Northern District are teaming up to host the Mountain State Bank Secrecy Act and AntiMoney Laundering Conference next week. 

It will feature federal prosecutors and agents – those on the front lines of tracking and stopping such crimes. 

Financial professionals who attend from across the state will learn about trends in economic crimes and how to recognize the monetary evidence of drug and human trafficking, scams and elder abuse. 

Ihlenfeld said the conference will provide bank, credit union, money services workers and casino staff with the information they need to identify suspicious activity and respond appropriately. 

The conference takes place June 11 at WesBanco Bank in Wheeling, City National Bank in Charleston, and virtually.

Registration is required and may be completed by emailing jeana.gattesco@usdoj.gov on or before June 7.

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