$3.2 Million Slated For Water Upgrades in Marion, Jackson Counties

The Environmental Protection Agency allocated $3.2 million to water infrastructure improvement projects in Marion and Jackson counties on Monday.

Millions of dollars in newly secured federal funding aim to bolster rural water infrastructure for two West Virginia communities.

On Monday, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced its allocation of $3,229,000 in federal funding toward water improvement projects in Marion and Jackson counties.

Specifically, the funding aims to improve wastewater treatment plants and water meters in the cities of Mannington and Ripley.

Across the state, aging water infrastructure and budgetary issues related to population decline have jeopardized local drinking water and wastewater services. But, in recent years, hundreds of millions of dollars in federal funding have been allocated toward water projects in West Virginia.

Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., who oversees federal spending as a member of the U.S. Senate Appropriations Committee, said the investment would “support vital water infrastructure upgrades in both cities.”

Through these upgrades, state officials hope to further bolster water access for two of the state’s rural communities. “I look forward to seeing the positive impacts of the investments,” Manchin added.

Flood-Hit Communities Rally Around Each Other in Wake of Storm

Flash flooding in northern and north-central West Virginia communities has left millions of dollars in damage to homes, businesses and infrastructure. The rain that began Friday, July 28, resulted in high, rushing waters that days later, families are still trying to recover from. Eight counties are under a state of emergency and members of the National Guard have been mobilized to deal with the damage.

Much of that damage is concentrated in Marion and Wetzel counties.

While official totals haven’t been released, the state Division of Highways estimates each county experienced more than $1 million in damage to roadways. The towns of Mannington and Hundred were hit particularly hard. But people in these close-knit communities rallied around each other from moment disaster struck.

The Foreman

Credit Jesse Wright / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Lora Michael in her Mannington, W.Va., hair salon — Lora’s Shear Delight — on Tuesday, Aug. 1, 2017.

In her small hair salon on the edge of Mannington in Marion County, Lora Michael was blow-drying a customer’s hair with a phone wedged between her cheek and shoulder. She was giving advice on how best to help one of the town’s flood victims.

“I’ve been in business 36 years and I’ve lived in Mannington 51 years — all my life,” Lora said later.

Most people in Mannington have started calling Lora “The Foreman.” That’s because she’s been helping people since early Saturday morning, when Buffalo Creek broke its banks and started flooding houses and businesses in the small Marion County town early Saturday morning.

Lora and her husband, Bill, got an automated call alerting them to flash flooding in the county, but they ignored it at first because there have been false alarms in the past and they live on a hill.  They received a phone call a few hours later from her friend, Kim Harris. She wanted to move her vehicles to Lora’s house because of the rising water.

Lora and Bill began walking to Kim’s house. That’s when they realized how quickly the water was rising.

“We’ve never had that much water in that community ever. And not only was it just water, it was rushing water. I mean water that was just … it had some power behind it,” she said.

Kim Harris

Credit Shayla Klein / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
All of the Harris’s salvageable belongings that were in the basement when it flooded are strung out on her lawn.

Kim had watched the water creep up the street in front of her house Saturday morning and then come rushing into her basement.

“It was like a river,” she said. “It busted my basement door open, that’s how fast it came in.”

Credit Shayla Klein / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Grass marks the high-water line in Kim Harris’s basement Tueaday, Aug. 1, 2017 in Mannington, W.Va. The Harris’s shut off their electric before water hit the breaker box.

Kim ended up with about 8 feet of water in her basement, soaking many of her belongings. Kim said she was amazed by how quickly her friends and neighbors swung into action to help her and the rest of the flooded town.

“[I’m] very blessed to have that type of community to come in that fast and start helping,” she said.

Kim said her family and friends, including Lora and her husband, had her basement cleaned out, power restored, hot water heater working and soggy drywall removed in a couple days.

“Everybody was involved. And then word got out, you had people from Tyler County, all the other counties that come in and just, they just started working together,” she said. “And the people that have asked if we need anything is overwhelming.”

Along with the National Guard and volunteers from Fairmont State University, cheerleaders and football and basketball players from nearby North Marion High School quickly fanned out across Mannington to help residents clean out flooded basements hours after the water receded.

Hundred

Credit Shayla Klein / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Flood debris piled up in downtown Hundred.

That same spirit of cooperation was evident 14 miles away, in the Wetzel County town of Hundred, where water rose about 4 or 5 feet into homes and businesses downtown.

National guardsmen and volunteers were still dumping piles of trash and debris into trucks on Tuesday.

Credit Shayla Klein / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Blue Ridge Mountain Fire Company was one of the many departments that responded to Hundred’s call for help after flash floods hit the Wetzel County town July 29, 2017.

There were also several out-of-town fire engines parked outside the volunteer fire department.

The building had only been occupied for about two weeks when it flooded.

VFD president Johanna Lemasters said it took about two-and-a-half years to raise the money to build the new facility.

“It’s heartbreaking to think that we’d finally reached that goal and then it’s just wiped out in a few minutes,” she said. “And five of our firemen lost their own personal vehicles.”

The water rose into the parking lot, where the firefighters who responded to the flood thought their vehicles were safe.

But as soon as word of the flood spread, Johanna said, VFD companies from as far as Morgantown and Wheeling sent help.

“The one’s that are more heart-wrenching to me, that gets to me, are the ones that suffered the flood loss last year. Like the people from Greenbrier County bringing up supplies,” she said.

Credit Jesse Wright / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Hundred VFD President Johanna Lemasters and volunteer Jason Miller talk outside the VFD’s new, but recently flooded, building in Hundred, W.Va.

Jason Miller, of Wadestown in Monongalia County, ended his family vacation early to come to Hundred. He’s helping coordinate the volunteer response, which he says has been overwhelming.  

“Prime example: Harper’s Ferry, West Virginia, drove through the night to be here last night by 9 p.m. because our water service was on the verge of collapsing itself,” Jason said, referring to the four town wells that were damaged in the flooding. The town’s water system is limping along under a boil-water advisory.

“They’re not even asking for a dollar or dime. Nothing.”

Officials Visit Hundred

Credit Jesse Wright / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
An ice cooler sits wedeged into a bridge along Fish Creek in Hundred, Wetzel County, W.Va., after flash floods hit the area early on July 29, 2017.

State officials have made their way to the flood-hit communities during the past several days too, including Gov. Jim Justice and U.S. Sen. Joe Manchin.

Congressman David McKinley was at the VFD in Hundred on Tuesday. He said his main takeaway from seeing the flood damage is that the Federal Emergency Management Agency has to do more for individuals.

“There’s a culture within FEMA too often, maybe the bar is set too high to help individuals out. FEMA’s got to pay more attention to individuals,” he said. “Yes, keep doing their job for municipalities, but look at individuals. Individual families are struggling with this.”

What People Need Now

Back at Lora’s Shear Delight hair salon in Mannington, Lora Michael is thinking about what people in her community need the most now that the immediate cleanup is done.

“The problem is the bugs, the smell. The drying-out process — fans, dehumidifiers, lime, bug spray, fresh towels and linens, because people used what they had I’m sure, to gather up, wipe off. If you didn’t have rags, you used your bath towels,” she said.

She said that with so many flooded vehicles there’s also a real need for something people in less-isolated areas may take for granted — transportation.

“We have no taxi services, we have no bus service here at all.”

Donated items are being accepted at North Marion and Hundred high schools, and at several churches in the area.

Justice Visits Flood-damaged Areas of West Virginia

Residents in northern West Virginia pulled together Sunday to begin cleaning up from flooding as Gov. Jim Justice visited areas to see the damage from recent storms.

Media reported Justice visited Mannington to survey flood damage from Friday and Saturday as well as other areas that were flooded from storms on July 23.

Justice arrived at the Mannington Fire Department in the afternoon and then drove by homes with Mayor Jim Taylor and Marion County Sheriff Jim Riffle to survey the damage.

Taylor says flooding from heavy rains devastated the area. It caused lots of property damage, but there were no reports of deaths or severe injuries.

Meanwhile, during a stop at the McMechen Volunteer Fire Department in Wheeling, Justice told those working on recovery efforts the July 23 flooding not to do it all alone, but to “lean on use to help you, too.”

March 29, 1989: Musician Russ Fluharty Dies

Musician and folk personality Russ Fluharty died on March 29, 1989, at age 82. A lifelong resident of the Mannington area in Marion County, Fluharty learned to sing and play several instruments from his large extended family. 

In 1928, an uncle gave him an antique hammered dulcimer—an ancient instrument with many strings stretched across a box and played with small mallets. Locally, the instrument was nearly unknown, so Fluharty developed a unique playing style and taught himself to play his favorite hymns, patriotic tunes, and familiar old songs.

He was a naturally charming man, and audiences responded to his sincere, quaint manner. As interest in authentic folk music grew during the 1960s and ’70s, Fluharty—known as the “dulcimer man”—was much in demand at schools, churches, and public events.

He appeared at several national events, and the state Commerce Department sent him to other states as an “ambassador of goodwill.” He also founded the Mountaineer Dulcimer Club, which remains active.

Russ Fluharty energetically promoted West Virginia music and culture and was a key figure in the state’s folk arts revival.

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