Lawmakers Tour North Central West Virginia During Interim Meetings

  State lawmakers wrapped up their August interim meetings Wednesday, but legislators decided to take the show on the road this month, meeting in Bridgeport and touring parts of North Central West Virginia.

While some of their interim meetings were held in conference rooms around long tables just like in Charleston, many had delegates and senators out exploring the area.

Legislators took a tour of the I-79 Technology Park in Fairmont, visited Clarksburg’s United Technical Center, and met with West Virginia University President Gordon Gee in Morgantown—just to name a few examples of their outings.

At the Clarksburg Veteran’s Nursing Home, Clarksburg native and House Committee on Veterans Affairs Chairman Richard Iaquinta urged his fellow lawmakers to consider building a second home for veterans in southern West Virginia.

Credit Ashton Marra / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Dr. Kevin Crickard, the nursing home’s administrator, led the tour Wednesday.

  If the state took on the endeavor the federal government would pay two thirds of the construction costs and a portion of health benefits for some veterans, but Senate Finance Chairman Roman Prezioso said it is still a reoccurring cost for the state that lawmakers would have to prioritize.

“You have to maintain the facility after it’s built,” he said during a tour Wednesday, “obviously the salaries, the utilities, the maintenance, the upkeep, all of that has to be taken into consideration.”

September interims return to Charleston where lawmakers may be called into a special session focused on unintended consequences stemming from this year’s above ground storage tank bill.

W.Va. Legislature to Take to the Road in August

  The West Virginia Legislature is taking a road trip this summer.

House Speaker Tim Miley announced Tuesday lawmakers will convene a three-day interim session at the Bridgeport Conference Center and other area locations in August. He said legislators will also make a number of stops along Interstate 79 and throughout Harrison, Marion and Monongalia counties.

Miley says the interim sessions in north-central West Virginia will provide an opportunity for legislators from around the state to get a better understanding of the region, especially the oil and gas boom.

Miley is a Democrat from Harrison.

The legislature is scheduled to arrive in the region on Aug. 24. 

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