Generators Awarded to Plants in 9 West Virginia Counties

Gov. Jim Justice says more than $6.6 million in grants will provide backup power generators for water and wastewater treatment plants and systems in nine West Virginia counties.

Justice announced the funds Thursday in response to the 2016 floods that killed 23 people statewide and ravaged homes, businesses, schools and infrastructure.

Justice says the Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Management worked with communities and the Federal Emergency Management Agency on project applications for the Hazard Mitigation Grant Program.

The grants will fund projects in Cabell, Fayette, Greenbrier, Kanawha, McDowell, Mingo, Nicholas, Tyler and Wyoming counties. In addition, $3 million will be used for a statewide risk assessment that can pinpoint locations in flood plains or those exposed to potential flooding, landslides and other hazards.

More Medical Professionals to Serve Rural Areas Thanks to State Grant

Seventeen health science graduate students from across West Virginia are getting money to help pay for their education.

Why? Because the West Virginia Higher Education Policy Commission has awarded some health sciences grad students a chunk of cash to help pay for their college education – so long as they commit to practicing medicine in a rural or underserved community in West Virginia following graduation.

It’s part of an initiative started by the West Virginia Legislature in 1995 called the Health Sciences Service Program.

This year, seventeen students have received a portion of $360,000 — receiving between $15,000 and $30,000 per student.

Recipients are chosen based on academic achievement and demonstration of a strong commitment to health in rural areas.

To be eligible, students must be studying fields like dentistry, nurse practitioner, pharmacy, primary care, or other related fields.

Awards:

Dentistry

  • Shawn Ballard from Boone County, West Virginia, who graduated from West Virginia University
  • Kelly Lyons from Monongalia County, West Virginia, who graduated from West Virginia University
  • Colter Taylor from Roane County, West Virginia, who graduated from West Virginia University

Medicine

  • Jenna Barbour from Wayne County, West Virginia, who graduated from Marshall University
  • Zane Dennison from Braxton County, West Virginia, who graduated from the West Virginia School of Osteopathic Medicine
  • Brandon Merritt from Kanawha County, West Virginia, who graduated from Marshall University
  • Kyle Miller from Roanoke, Virginia, who graduated from West Virginia University

Nurse Practitioner

  • Cara Burker from Sharpsburg, Maryland, who graduated from Shepherd University
  • Daonna Fox from Fayette County, West Virginia, who graduated from West Virginia University
  • Julie Orr from Mercer County, West Virginia, who graduated from Marshall University

Pharmacy

  • Jessica Barnett from Gilmer County, West Virginia, who graduated from West Virginia University
  • James Kincaid from Fayette County, West Virginia, who graduated from Marshall University

Physical Therapy

  • Ashley Gill from Jackson County, West Virginia, who graduated from West Virginia University
  • Devin Heitz from Harrison County, West Virginia, who graduated from West Virginia University
  • Kristina Hickenbottom from Wood County, West Virginia, who graduated from West Virginia University

Social Work

  • Betsy Coulter from Braxton County, West Virginia, who graduated from Concord University
  • Shane Lightle from Cabell County, West Virginia, who graduated from Marshall University

Since 1995, nearly $3 million in state funding has been awarded to 213 West Virginia students.

Big Brothers Big Sisters Will Suspend Services After Losing Funds Due to LGBTQ Training

Updated Tuesday, October 31, 2017 at 12:06 p.m.

A Big Brothers Big Sisters chapter in West Virginia will suspend mentoring services for underprivileged children after donors pulled funding earlier this month in response to an LGBTQ-awareness training program.

Sara McDowell is executive director of Big Brothers Big Sisters of South Central West Virginia. The Charleston Gazette-Mail quotes her as saying the organization won’t recruit or match volunteer Big Sisters and Big Brothers in Raleigh County or fill two vacancies until it has adequate funding.

Organizers said the program lost $80,000 in local grants after donors learned the agency accepted a $20,000 national grant to provide resources and training to promote inclusiveness of LGBTQ volunteers and youth. McDowell says the agency has since raised more than $30,000.

The program currently serves 34 children from ages 6 to 11.

Original Post:

Big Brothers Big Sisters of South Central West Virginia is facing backlash after it accepted a training grant to better serve gay and transgender children.

Big Brothers Big Sisters of South Central West Virginia received a $20,000 grant in September to increase staff knowledge of gay and transgender issues and develop local partnerships to help LGBTQ children.

After receiving that grant, a representative from three foundations – not disclosed – discontinued funding, and, as a result, Big Brothers Big Sisters of South Central West Virginia is facing the loss of several programs.

Executive Director Sara McDowell says the funding was pulled as a direct result of accepting the grant. She says the result could be devastating.

“That’s a lot of kids whose only consistent thing in their lives is inconsistency,” McDowell said, “and they have a lot of people come and go in their lives, and so this would be one more kind of let down that they face every day.”

McDowell says if she can’t replace the funding by the end of the month, she will have to suspend services in Raleigh County, where the Beckley office is located.

Big Brothers Big Sisters of South Central West Virginia began 25 years ago.

It serves Jackson, Kanawha, Putnam, Boone, Logan, Mingo, McDowell, Wyoming, Fayette, Mercer, Clay, Summers, Raleigh, and Nicholas Counties.

*Editor’s Note: This story originally stated Big Brothers Big Sisters of South Central West Virginia would lose funding in eleven of the 14 counties it serves, however, it was later clarified by Executive Director Sara McDowell the group only receives funding in 3 counties, but does serve 14.

W.Va. Will Not See Latest Federal Grant to Combat Opioid Crisis

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services announced Friday it will award $144 million in grants across the country to prevent and treat opioid addiction. But West Virginia won’t see any of it.

In an emailed statement from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, which is administering the grant, West Virginia won’t receive any of the $144 million award.

 

The funding will be distributed to 58 recipients, including other states, cities, healthcare providers, and community organizations. It will be awarded over a period of three to five years.

 

This grant follows another national grant of $485 million dollars announced in April also aimed at combating the opioid crisis. West Virginia did see $5,881,983 from this award for year one.

 

National health surveys indicate last year 12 million people nationwide misused opioids like prescription pain pills and heroin. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention suggests 60,000 of those people did not survive.

Federal Dollars to Aid Coal-Impacted Economy

 

Several organizations throughout Appalachia will see federal grant money. Funds are designed to help strengthen coal-impacted economies.

 

The Appalachian Regional Commission announced nearly $2 million additional dollars this week for regions in Appalachia that have been affected by job losses related to the declining coal industry.

 

 

The funding is aimed to help retrain individuals in new careers, such as agriculture, technology, construction, or strategic planning for social growth in Central Appalachia.

 

$1.2 million of the award will go to the Natural Capital Investment Fund based in Shepherdstown. Nearly $600,000 will go to the Southeast Kentucky Community and Technical College in Cumberland, Kentucky. And just over $100,000 will be given to the Southern Appalachian Labor School in Kincaid.

 

The grant comes from the Appalachian Regional Commission’s POWER Initiative. That $2 million is in addition to $94 million that was already awarded throughout 11 Appalachian states in the past year.

W.Va. Airports Receive Federal Grant

Federal funding has been awarded to two airport authorities in West Virginia. U.S. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito and Joe Manchin made the announcement Friday.

Over $730,000 will be awarded to the Mingo County Airport Authority in Williamson and to the Central West Virginia Regional Airport Authority in Charleston.

About half of that grant will be used to reimburse an energy efficiency study conducted by the airport authority in Charleston, and the rest will be used to support the construction of two taxi lanes providing access to aircraft T-hangers in Williamson.

Both Sen. Capito and Manchin site the grant as necessary for improvements in safety. They also say investing in West Virginia’s airports is critical in the bolstering of the state’s economy.

The federal grant comes from the U.S. Department of Transportation through the Federal Aviation Administration.

Exit mobile version