Group Receives ARC Grant To Strengthen Community Health

A new grant will help train and place community health workers to strengthen behavioral health systems in 20 W.Va. counties.

Last week, the Community Education Group (CEG) was awarded $7.7 million from the Appalachian Regional Commission (ARC) for their new project, Help Our People Expand the Ecosystem (HOPEE).

This multistate initiative comes from the ARC’s Appalachian Regional Initiative for Stronger Economies (ARISE), which drives economic transformation through collaboration.

For their project, CEG will be working with the Kentucky Rural Health Association (KRHA), Shaping Our Appalachian Region (SOAR) Kentucky, the West Virginia-based SUD Collaborative (SUDC), and the Virginia Rural Health Association. 

Together, CEG and their HOPEE project partners will work to train and place new community health workers to strengthen behavioral healthcare systems in a 56-county region. Twenty West Virginia counties will be included.

According to Executive Director of CEG, A. Toni Young, this project will expand on CEG’s community health worker training program, CHAMPS, which trains individuals with lived experience in substance use disorder recovery to become community health workers.

“So what we wanted to do is to take individuals from towns, hollers, communities networks, and say, if we trained you to do the HIV screening, trained you to do the hepatitis C screening, trained you to do motivational interviewing or networking, could we train people that folks knew and were comfortable with and could listen to,” Young said. “And those folks may be more willing to come back into the community or come back for treatment for HIV or screening for HIV, or for some sort of a medically assisted treatment and management before or some other behavioral health services.”

According to CEG, its overarching goal is to improve socioeconomic disparities in Appalachia while addressing pressing and overlapping syndemics eroding the region’s broader economy, workforce and health outcomes.

A syndemic is two or more illness states interacting poorly with each other and negatively influencing the mutual course of each disease trajectory.

“Many things coming into effect one person, or one community, or one town or one state, that we’re taking a syndemic approach,” Young said. “So rather than saying, we only want to talk to the individuals about substance use disorder, right, we only want to get them to that MAT (Medically Assisted Treatment) provider to deal with substance use, we don’t want to just do that. We want to get them to there to talk about HIV, and when get them there to talk about hepatitis C, and we want to get them there to talk about PrEP.”

CEG said it will work with its partners and health care and behavioral care providers, including Medication Assisted Treatment (MAT) providers, will train, hire, and support community health workers. The project will build capacity in communities to address the substance use, HIV, and viral hepatitis syndemic and increase support and infrastructure for health care providers–all while providing coinciding workforce development and job training support.

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting with support from Marshall Health.

Federal Grant Funds To Help Address ‘Forever Chemicals’ In State Waterways

The money comes as part of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act through the EPA’s Emerging Contaminants in Small or Disadvantaged Communities grant program.

Federal money from the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is being sent to West Virginia to address drinking water contaminants in state waterways.

The money comes as part of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act through the EPA’s Emerging Contaminants in Small or Disadvantaged Communities grant program. Nearly $19 million is going to state agencies to address PFAS, known widely as harmful “forever chemicals” that have been found in 130 raw water supplies statewide.

These water supplies have been identified throughout the state, with localized “hot spots” identified by the West Virginia Rivers Coalition in the Eastern Panhandle and Ohio River Valley.

“We cannot wait any longer to address water quality and the health impacts of PFAS in our neighborhoods,” Adam Ortiz, EPA Mid-Atlantic Regional Administrator said in a statement announcing the grant. “This federal funding will help West Virginia communities impacted by PFAS to get access to clean, safe drinking water.”

State and local agencies are expected to submit their proposals for grant money this month, according to the EPA’s website. The grant is expected to create programs for local household water testing and local contractor training, among other programs that would address PFAS in disadvantaged communities. 

Two bills were introduced in the West Virginia House and Senate this legislative session to regulate PFAS: House Bill 3189 and Senate Bill 489. Both bills are in committee, though the House bill has been recommended to move to floor discussion.

ARC Announces COVID-19 Grants For Lenders Helping Small Businesses

The Appalachian Regional Commission has announced $3.75 million for banks and other lenders who have lost money during this global coronavirus pandemic. 

Specifically, the grants are for lenders who work with small or local businesses and nonprofits in the ARC’s 13-state coverage area. 

In a press release on Monday, the commission stated the grant will help approved lenders cover their own operational costs, as they continue to lose income from their local business borrowers, who due to the COVID-19 crisis need to reduce or suspend the regular loan payments.

The ARC anticipates the grant will serve 400 businesses and nonprofits in Appalachia, it said, and it could help retain 200 regional jobs.

Interested lenders have to be a member of Appalachian Community Capital to apply, or they have to have previously been funded by the ARC. The commission said the money will be awarded later this month. 

Emily Allen is a Report for America corps member. 

People Recovering from Substance Abuse to be Offered Rides

People recovering from substance abuse disorder can get rides to appointments under a project set to begin in West Virginia.

The Herald-Dispatch reports the Appalachian Regional Commission has provided more than $215,000 for the one-year pilot program. ARC federal co-chair Tim Thomas says it will start in October in the Huntington region.

Thomas says those recovering from substance abuse disorder often do not have an active driver’s license or own a vehicle. Rides will be given for recovery and treatment appointments, probation meetings, mandatory court appearances, job interviews or to a new job.

Other program sponsors include the Appalachian Transportation Institute, the state Department of Health and Human Resources, the Office of Drug Control Policy and the West Virginia Governor’s Council on Substance Abuse and Prevention.

Grant to Help Strengthen Local Journalism in W.Va. Awarded to WVU College of Media

The Claude Worthington Benedum Foundation awarded West Virginia University Reed College of Media a grant of $125,000 to help recruit, develop and train a new generation of independent community newspaper owners.

The money will support a partnership between the College of Media and the West Virginia Press Association. These organizations anticipate a wave of small market newspaper owner retirements across West Virginia.

Together they are responding by developing a special three-year program designed to develop community newspaper owners to take over, according to a news release.

Participants will receive training in journalism and business practices with an emphasis on digital know-how and media funding models.

A goal of the program is to cultivate strong local news operations throughout West Virginia, and to help existing news organizations adapt and modernize operations.

The application process and curriculum are still being developed, but the program is expected to launch in fall 2019.

In full disclosure, West Virginia Public Broadcasting is a member of the state Press Association and holds a partnership with the WVU Reed College of Media.

Federal Government Awards $1.7 Million for West Virginia Health

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services has awarded more than $1.7 million for health care programs in West Virginia.

Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin and Republican Sen. Shelley Moore Capito said in a news release the funding is to combat mental health disorders and provide primary care services for mothers and children.

Of the total, $1.5 million will go to maternal and child health services, $102,000 is for suicide prevention and education at Marshall University and $95,000 is for the Statewide Family Network Program.

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