W.Va., Ky., Tenn. Counties Removed from Drug Areas List

  Five counties in West Virginia, Kentucky and Tennessee have been removed from a federal list of high-traffic drug areas.

A Federal Register notice filed Monday says a threat assessment indicated the counties no longer met criteria for high-trafficking drug areas.

The notice says Mason County in West Virginia, Cumberland and Clinton counties in Kentucky, and Clay and White counties in Tennessee have been removed from the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas program list.

The program makes federal resources available to local and state police that face growing illicit drug markets. It was established through the Office of National Drug Control Policy in 1988.

An Appalachia list was established in 1998 to combat trafficking in 68 Kentucky, Tennessee, and West Virginia counties.

Musicians Explore Connections Between Romanian and Appalachian Folk Music

On Thursday at the Clay Center in Charleston, four Romanian high school musicians and three of their teachers met with musicians from Wahama high school in Mason County. The students are participating in a year-long project exploring the connections between Appalachian and Romanian folk music.

Teacher Emanuela Tulpam says there are geographical similarities between Romania and West Virginia too. “We come from Targu Jiu, which is in the Gorj district, southwest Romania, by the mountains. We have a gorge valley, as I hear you have here.”The Romanian students will spend the next 13 days meeting folk musicians in Beckley, Huntington, Charleston and Elkins. The Romanian group will experience a full day of performances and master classes at Davis and Elkins College.

Credit Clay Center
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Visiting students Alina Marina Gorun, Elena Cristina Lăcătusu, Ion Cristian Munteanu and Teodor Marian Foanţă will spend significant time with 25 music students at Wahama. Both the students and teachers will interview the participating musicians to help begin working on the next stage of the project – producing digital stories about the two cultures.

The general public will also be able to hear and see these master musicians who are working with the students – two from Romania and local guitarists Robin and Dan Kessinger – as part of the Charleston Area Alliance’s Brown Bag Concert series on Friday, Oct. 10 from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. at Davis Park in downtown Charleston. In case of inclement weather, the performance will be moved to the Center Court area of the Charleston Town Center Mall.

In the spring, four Wahama High School students, Cadence Weaver, Aubrey Lewis, Jacob Petry and Garrett Greene, along with their teachers and Clay Center representatives, will travel to Romania. The students will study the culture and heritage of their counterparts and share West Virginia traditions with other students in the program.

Credit Clay Center
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Credit Clay Center
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Mason County Manufacturer Close to Resuming Production

Felman Production CEO Mordechai Korf says the idled Mason County manufacturer is one step closer to resuming operations.
Members of United Steelworkers Local 5171 approved modifications to their contract with the company last week.

 
Korf says the modifications strengthen the New Haven plant’s long-term viability.
 
Details of the changes weren’t released.
 
The plant produces silicomanganese. It ceased operations in July 2013 and laid off more than 140 workers.
 
Earlier this month, the West Virginia Public Service Commission authorized a special electricity rate plan for the company. The plan enables Felman to buy electricity from Appalachian Power at as much as $9 million a year off its full rate.
 
Opponents of the special rate have asked the PSC to reconsider its decision.

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