West Virginia Official Says Drug Abuse on Rise Among Miners

The director of West Virginia's mine safety office says there is a growing substance abuse problem among miners.Director Eugene White of the Office of…

The director of West Virginia’s mine safety office says there is a growing substance abuse problem among miners.

Director Eugene White of the Office of Mine Health, Safety and Training told legislators on Monday that more than 800 miners have failed drug tests over the last three years, according to The Register-Herald.

This year, White said 214 mining certificates have been suspended because of drug abuse. He said prescription drugs are the most commonly detected substance, while marijuana is second.

While White said the number of substance abusers is a small percentage of all miners in the state, the statistics are still alarming.

Besides current miners, White said 165 people failed pre-employment drug and alcohol screening.

CSX West Virginia Train Derailment Lawsuit Moved to US Court

 A lawsuit filed stemming from a fiery February derailment of a CSX oil train in Mount Carbon has been moved to federal court.

The Register-Herald reports that the lawsuit by more than 200 residents was moved to U.S. District Court in Huntington at the request of the rail company. The lawsuit was initially filed in state court.

The lawsuit alleges economic and property losses and also seeks punitive damages.

The civil action contends that CSX failed to properly inspect the track, train cars and cargo and failed to have to have proper procedures in place for the train’s safe operation.

Federal investigators concluded that a cracked rail that was missed in two inspections led to a broken rail and the derailment.

Greyhound Owners, Racers Want to Keep Sport Alive

Owners and breeders of greyhounds want to keep dog racing alive in West Virginia.

They appealed to legislators to that end Monday in Charleston, hoping to counter a state-funded study that concluded the sport is in sharp decline, according to media reports. The study concluded greyhound racing survives in West Virginia because purse funds are heavily subsidized from casino profits.

Steve Sarras is a Wheeling greyhound kennel owner and president of the state Kennel Owners Association. He said the sport employs many. He urged them not to turn their backs on the industry.

Adam Steinberg of Spectrum Gaming Group updated a legislative study released in January. It showed that attendance and wagering on greyhound racing at the state’s two racetrack casinos has plummeted over the past two decades.

Could Drug Testing Save W.Va. Dollars?

The debate over drug testing public assistance recipients was revisited in an interim session Monday. One of the issues on the table is how to make a pilot program work without costing the state additional dollars that are hard to come by.

The Legislative Oversight Commission on Health and Human Resources Accountability met at the Capitol Monday to continue their discussion on a possible pilot program that would drug test public assistance recipients.

“A lot of people are interested in us having the testing program as one tool to decrease drug abuse in the state,” said Delegate Joe Ellington, a Republican from Mercer County and the chairman of the committee, “I, as a practicing obstetrician, see a lot of babies being born to drugs.”

Ellington says this is where many substance abuse problems start. The babies are born addicted to drugs and could either develop behavioral issues, or become more prone to addictive behaviors in the future.

“The current structure we have to help prevention and training and teaching and rehabilitation does not seem to be solving the problem. We’re not opposed to any of those parts. We want to try to enhance those efforts to decrease drug use, but we’re looking at other ways of identifying who is using drugs, so we can get them into programs.”

At the forefront of the discussion Monday were two bills introduced during the 2015 legislative session.

Senate Bill 348 would’ve created a pilot program for drug screening of cash assistance recipients. House Bill 2021 would’ve implemented drug testing for recipients of federal-state and other state assistance dollars.

While both bills had minor differences, what they did have in common was a requirement to drug test based on reasonable suspicion.

At the end of the 2015 session however, both bills were left on the table.

Now lawmakers are reconsidering the issue for the 2016 session.

The committee posed a few questions to the Department of Health and Human Resources and the Bureau for Public Health. They discussed the anticipated cost of target type enforcements on specific populations, the impact on pregnant women who abuse illicit drugs, and what happens to someone after they’ve tested positive for an illegal substance.

Lawmakers were trying to get a sense of how to potentially re-draft legislation that died last year.

But the question still stands – is drug screening of people in state assistance programs constitutional? And would it actually save the state money by implementing these kinds of tests?

Delegate Ellington thinks there’s a good chance.

“Data I received from DHHR previously, a couple years ago, said the average cost for detox was $230,000 a kid,” he said, “That’s a lot of money that could go back to our schools, to teacher pay, to education, to other services, to rehab, and then you look at the lost productivity and the livelihood of those kids and the future to grow up into, and that’s what we’re looking at – the future of our kids in West Virginia altogether.”

However, Sean O’Leary, a policy analyst at the West Virginia Center on Budget and Policy, says the facts show otherwise – many states that have implemented screening programs in the hopes of saving money, haven’t seen the results.

“Policies like this has really two goals, one to curb substance abuse and two to save state money by not paying people who are using drugs, but when you look at what other states have gone through it’s failed to achieve either one of those goals,” O’Leary said.

Thirteen states have passed legislation to drug test or screen public assistance applicants or recipients, and as of July 2015, at least 18 states have proposed legislation requiring some form of drug testing or screening.

West Virginia is one of those eighteen states.

“Under 1 percent of applicants are testing positive when they do, do these tests, so they’re not saving significant amounts of money,” O’Leary explained, “In some cases, they’re actually spending more money administering and collecting these results or these tests, then they are actually saving money from stopping people from using drugs and collecting assistance.”

O’Leary says there’s a misconception that drug abuse is more prevalent among low income people, when actually substance abuse can affect all walks of life.

Delegate Ellington says he knows finding the right legislation won’t be easy.

“The Senate one was looking at three counties as a smaller group to cut down the expense. The other, the House bill, looks at people that have a higher suspicion of drug use, whether they’ve had a previous conviction, or the children were born addicted to drugs, we know that those are positives, so that’s where the higher suspicion is. We want to just target that part. Will you miss some others, yes, but we’re looking at the numbers, we’re trying to decrease the number of testing that has to be done, and look at the number of individuals we can get back off. So there’s no great way to do it, but we’re trying to make an effort to.”

Next month, the committee on Health and Human Resources Accountability will likely begin to draft legislation that could become the new drug testing bill of 2016.

Marshall Selects Next President, Continues with Hiring Process

Marshall University’s Board of Governors has selected the university’s next president.

The board approved the new president after meeting in executive session Monday. Three finalists visited the Huntington campus last week.

Marshall Board of Governors Chairman Michael G. Sellards said the name won’t be revealed till the candidate is approved and officially hired. 

“Of course it has to be approved by the higher education policy commission,” Sellards said. “We will notify the successful candidate and then there are contractual issues that have to be discussed. One those issues are settled and the HEPC issue is resolved we would have a full public announcement and introduce the candidate to the public.”

 The candidates were Mississippi State University provost and executive vice president Jerome Gilbert; Oregon Institute of Technology President Christopher Maples; and University of Southern Mississippi marine science professor Denis Wiesenburg.

Gary White has served as Marshall’s interim president since last December following the death of President Stephen Kopp. The board hopes to announce the name within the next week.

W.Va. Supreme Court Dismisses Delegate's Common Core Lawsuit

The West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals has dismissed a lawsuit filed against state education officials by Del. Michael Folk. The suit claimed the implementation of Common Core standards violated both the state and federal Constitutions.

Folk originally filed the lawsuit in Berkeley County Circuit Court where the complaint was dismissed. Folk again filed with the Supreme Court in July, naming the West Virginia Board of Education and state Superintendent Dr. Michael Martirano.

The two page order issued by the Supreme Court entered last Wednesday granted the state Board’s motion to dismiss, saying Folk’s claim “should not be awarded.”

Folk declined to comment on the order at this time.

The West Virginia Department of Education is currently conducting a comprehensive review of the education standards adopted in 2010.

The West Virginia Legislature attempted to repeal the standards during the 2015 Legislative session, but the bill died in committee. Lawmakers have already received a draft bill during interim sessions that again call for a repeal. 

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