W.Va. Senator Kicks Off Virtual Listening Series In Effort To Address Systemic Racism

U.S. Senator Joe Manchin hosted a virtual listening session Friday evening with Reverend Ronald English and other black faith leaders from across West Virginia. It was the first of a planned series of discussions called From Hurt to Healing.

In the wake of national protests prompted by the killing of George Floyd, Manchin’s office announced the series in a news release hoping to “amplify African American voices and encourage every West Virginian and American to think about how we can move forward toward an equal and more just society.”

Sen. Manchin began the online forum quoting Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. who said riots are “the language of the unheard.” Manchin called for unity and compassion to address systemic racism throughout the state and nation. 

“You don’t care about the color of a person’s skin when you’re 1,000 feet underground in the coal mine. You care about who they are at their core, because that person will help you come home alive to your family.”

Pastor of the First Baptist Church in Charleston from 1972 to 1993, the Rev. Ronald English offered thoughts throughout the virtual listening session. English, who was mentored by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., said moving toward a more equitable future would require learning to acknowledge racism where it exists both consciously and subconsciously. He also noted that he was encouraged by youth leadership on display at protest events throughout the country.

“We did not know that kind of leadership and compassion was among us until it showed up in this way,” he said, “and I think that we have found a fertile ground for further leadership advancement and leadership recruitment in the midst of those who have come forward.”

English also pointed to the coronavirus as a component of the civil unrest throughout the nation.

“I think it is by providential design that all of these events came together at the same time, to alert our attention and to stir us from heart, not just from head, in terms of how we move forward.”

English and other faith leaders took questions, discussed issues, such as how to overcome racism when faced with racist leadership, and underscored the need for transparency and accountability.

Virginia Emerges As South's Progressive Leader Under Dems

In a state once synonymous with the Old South, Democrats are using their newfound legislative control to refashion Virginia as the region’s progressive leader on racial, social and economic issues. Lawmakers are on the verge of passing the South’s strictest gun laws, broadest LGBTQ protections, highest minimum wage and some of its loosest abortion restrictions, churning through landmark legislation on a near-daily basis.

The leap to the left has sparked fierce pushback from rural Virginians, social conservatives and others who are chafing under the political shift in the state, where a holiday honors Confederate generals Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson and monuments to those men dot the landscape.

“It’s like a jewelry store smash and grab,” Republican Sen. Bill Stanley said of Democrats’ strategy. “They’re going to grab everything they possibly can while they can get it before the lights go on and the siren goes off.”

It’s a breathtaking change after years of legislative inertia. Virginia has been a political outlier among southern states for a while, routinely electing Democrats to statewide office. But Republicans held a firm grip on the legislature until President Donald Trump’s election in 2016, which mobilized disaffected suburban voters and boosted Democrats in two successive legislative elections. They have full control of the General Assembly this year for the first time in two decades.

“It’s nice to finally be able to do what I think the majority of Virginians have wanted for a long time,” Democratic Del. Mark Levine said.

Lawmakers in the House and Senate have voted to end a state holiday honoring Lee and Jackson and instead are making Election Day an official holiday. They spent Tuesday — the deadline for each chamber to pass its own version of legislation — passing dozens of other bills, including a measure to incrementally raise the minimum wage to $15 an hour and legislation to allow local governments to remove Confederate statues. That bill comes in the wake of a 2017 white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, sparked in part by the city’s attempt to remove a Lee statue, that turned violent.

Lawmakers also have advanced this year:

— a renewable energy measure that will likely raise electric rates but, environmentalists say, make the state among the greenest in the country

— comprehensive anti-discrimination legislation

— bills that abortion-rights advocates say will make Virginia a “safe haven” for women in neighboring conservative states

— resolutions to make Virginia the critical 38th state to ratify the Equal Rights Amendment, a major victory for women’s-rights advocates

— a repeal of a provision requiring voters to show ID before casting a ballot.

The legislature, led by the first female House speaker and with the highest number of African-Americans in leadership positions in the state’s 400-year history, is set to give final passage to most pieces of landmark legislation ahead of the March 7 adjournment.

The highest-profile fight has been on Democrats’ push for stricter gun laws, including universal background checks and a ban on selling assault weapons, after last year’s fatal shooting at a government complex in Virginia Beach. Many Democrats campaigned on the issue in 2019, and gun-control groups heavily funded candidates.

Democratic Gov. Ralph Northam’s gun-control measures passed the House, but the more-conservative Senate has blocked some of the measures, including the assault-weapons ban.

Despite a largely conservative history, Democrats have had a large footprint in Virginia for years. It was the only state in the South to pick Hillary Clinton in 2016, and Democrats have made sizable gains in other legislative elections. The most recent blue shift has been fueled in large part by the state’s growing suburbs, particularly in Northern Virginia, where voters are more likely to be immigrants, college-educated, and liberal.

“The Northeast megalopolis has sort of migrated down to Virginia,” said William Frey, a demographer at the Brookings Institution.

He said Virginia is at the “vanguard” of demographic trends playing out in other Southern states such as North Carolina and Georgia, which almost elected the country’s first black female governor in 2018.

But Republican leaders say Democrats are stretching beyond what mainstream Virginia voters support.

“The policies being enacted right now are going to be a rude awakening to the majority of Virginians, even people who voted for Democrats last year, as they continue to have to dip into their pockets more and more to pay for this agenda,” House Republican Leader Todd Gilbert said.

Conservative opposition to many of the changes in Virginia, particularly on gun measures, has reached past the state’s borders. Thousands of guns-rights activists from around the country flooded the Capitol and surrounding area in protest last month, some donning tactical gear and military rifles. In West Virginia, Gov. Jim Justice and Liberty University President Jerry Falwell Jr. have encouraged Virginia counties unhappy with the state’s new direction, particularly on gun laws, to leave the state.

Business groups also added their voice to the opposition, with alarm over labor-friendly measures Democrats passed. Only a handful of liberal states, including California, New York and Maryland, have passed laws that will eventually set a $15-an-hour minimum wage.

“It’s not good company to be in, at all,” said Brett Vassey, president of the Virginia Manufacturers Association.

Yet progressive Democrats say the chamber hasn’t done enough on several issues. Lawmakers have rejected a bid to repeal the state’s right-to-work law that bars mandatory union membership as well as a number of criminal justice reform bills, including measures to end solitary confinement, reinstate parole, and make it easier to expunge criminal records for misdemeanor and nonviolent felony convictions.

“Some people are going to go home and and brag about how much was accomplished, and some people are going to go home and say, look what was left on the table and we have to fight for more,” said Del. Lee Carter, a democratic socialist. “I’m in the latter camp.”

VA Clinic to Close Because of Air Quality Issues

A clinic that serves veterans in West Virginia and Virginia has closed again because of air quality issues.

The Beckley VA Medical Center announced the indefinite closure of the Greenbrier County Community Based Outpatient Clinic on Monday. Veterans served by the clinic in Maxwelton will have to travel to the hospital for care.

Hospital director Karin McGraw says air quality tests found formaldehyde levels above the recommended exposure limit in several parts of the clinic.

She also says several employees have continued to report air quality issues.

The clinic has been closed three times since June 2014 because of air quality.

The clinic serves about 2,400 veterans in Greenbrier, Monroe, Pocahontas and Summers counties in West Virginia, and in Alleghany County, Virginia.

W.Va. Ethics Commission to Work on Trinkets Law

 The state Ethics Commission has agreed to craft rules to a new law that prevents state employees and elected officials from using public funds to place their name or likeness on certain items.

Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin signed the “trinkets” bill last month.

It becomes law on May 28 and would prohibit self-promotion on items such as publicly owned vehicles in advertising or on small items such as magnets and cups.

The commission agreed Thursday to come up with the rules, although media outlets report Commissioner Jack Buckalew questioned why the Legislature didn’t do that.

Commissioner Betty Ireland says the rules would help clarify ambiguities that currently exist in the bill. It defines trinkets as “items of tangible personal property that are not vital or necessary” to office duties.

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