Lawsuit Claims Morgantown Panhandling Ordinance Unconstitutional

A lawsuit filed in federal court Monday argues Morgantown’s ordinance against panhandling is unconstitutional. 

A lawsuit filed in federal court Monday argues Morgantown’s ordinance against panhandling is unconstitutional. 

Legal nonprofit Mountain State Justice filed the suit in the Northern District of West Virginia on behalf of Anthony Rowand, who has been cited by police at least seven times in the past year for violating a city ordinance against soliciting donations from people traveling in vehicles.

Lesley Nash, staff attorney for Mountain State Justice, said they are arguing the city’s ordinance violates Rowand’s First Amendment rights. 

“There have been numerous cases from just about every Circuit Court of Appeals in the country, as well as the Supreme Court, that have held that it is unconstitutional to put content-based restrictions on speech,” she said. “Because this ordinance in Morgantown specifically targets speech that solicits charity, that is a content-based restriction on speech, and we believe it is facially unconstitutional.”

Nash said the ordinance was first passed in 2005, but was sparsely enforced prior to an increase of citations starting in the summer of 2023. In a press release, Mountain State Justice said a “homelessness crisis” has led to “government efforts to shame, drive out, and ticket, fine and arrest our neighbors for experiencing poverty and illness in public.”

“At its heart, this case is not about being unhoused or people who are affected by homelessness, it is about the First Amendment right to free speech,” Nash said. “Soliciting charity is an act of free speech.” 

Nash said the goal of the suit is to see the ordinance not be enforced and preferably removed from the books entirely. She said the court process could take several months, but the next step is for Morgantown to be formally notified of the suit and submit a response.

Silkroad Ensemble Brings Eclectic Stylings To W.Va.

WVPB’s Matt Jackfert speaks with harper, composer and producer Maeve Gilchrist. They discuss her compositions, the Silkroad Ensemble and the group’s upcoming performance.

The eclectic Silkroad Ensemble is bringing their talents to the stage in Morgantown, West Virginia this week. Founded by Yo-Yo Ma in 1998, the ensemble brings together music from many cultures to spark cultural collaboration for a more hopeful and inclusive world.

The Silkroad Ensemble will be bringing this creative energy and spirit with them in their upcoming performance called “Uplifted Voices” to Morgantown at 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday, April 24 at the Lyell B. Clay Theatre at the Canady Creative Arts Center.

As Maeve Gilchrist, Celtic Harpist and composer, says, the Silkroad Ensemble “is an incredible collection of musicians from all over the world.” Gilchrist brings a Celtic influence to the ensemble as Celtic harpists run deep in her family.

Her piece, “Far Down Far,” she says, is a deconstruction and reconstruction of a Scotts-Irish reel, inspired by what you would find in Irish communities in America at the turn of the century. In her piece, she claims she writes out much of the notation but also allows for improvisation and input from the performers, giving way for more personal nuanced inflections during performance.

Find out more about Gilchrist, her compositions, the Silkroad Ensemble and their upcoming performance in this interview with WVPB’s Matt Jackfert.

Music clips featured in the interview:

  • “Far Down Far” by Maeve Gilchrist  
  • “Tamping Song” by Haruka Fujii

 Click here to purchase tickets.

The Grammy Award-winning Silkroad Ensemble will visit Morgantown for a one-night performance on April 24, 2024.

Photo Credit: West Virginia University College of Creative Arts

A Tale Of Treenware And A NASCAR Legend, Inside Appalachia

This week on Inside Appalachia, a pair of former miners found love shoveling coal and shaped a life making wooden spoons. We learn about treenware. Also, NASCAR Hall of Famer Leonard Wood shares stories, and a bit of advice. And, group bike rides are a way to socialize and get outside. But here in Appalachia, newcomers are met with steep hills.

This week, a pair of former miners found love shoveling coal and shaped a life making wooden spoons. We learn about treenware.

Also, NASCAR Hall of Famer Leonard Wood shares stories, and a bit of advice.

And, group bike rides are a way to socialize and get outside. But here in Appalachia, newcomers are met with steep hills.

In This Episode:


Two For Treenware

Stan and Sue Jennings turned a conversation about a passion into a business.

Photo Credit: Zack Gray/Allegheny Treenware

For 30 years, Sue and Stan Jennings have run Allegheny Treenware, a West Virginia company that makes wooden kitchen utensils. But they started off as a couple of coal miners. And when they weren’t underground, they talked about what else they could be doing.

Folkways Reporter Capri Cafaro visited the Jennings. 

Hanging Out With NASCAR Legend Leonard Wood

Straight from the source at The Wood Brothers Racing Museum.

Photo Credit: Mason Adams/West Virginia Public Broadcasting

Stock car racing’s roots run deep in Appalachia. Some of NASCAR’s early stars came straight from the lawless moonshine runners of the 1920s and 1930s, but NASCAR’s oldest continuous racing team had nothing to do with moonshine. 

Mason Adams visited with Leonard Wood at The Wood Brothers Racing Museum in Virginia for stories and wisdom.

Exploring Morgantown On The Back Of A Bicycle

The ad-hoc Morgantown Social Rides aim to get cyclists onto the streets to explore the city in a new way.

Photo Credit: Chris Schulz/West Virginia Public Broadcasting

With spring, lots of folks are heading out to the woods or the rivers, but one group in Morgantown, West Virginia is taking to the streets – on their bicycles.

WVPB’s Chris Schulz grabbed his helmet and tagged along to explore his city in a new way.

Sovereignty At The Museum Of The Cherokee People

BPR’s Lilly Knoepp (left) spoke with Museum of the Cherokee People Director of Education Dakota Brown and Director of Collections Evan Mathis at the Appalachian Studies Conference on Friday March 8, 2024 at Western Carolina University.

Photo Credit: BPR

In western North Carolina, a new exhibit called “Sovereignty” recently opened at the Museum of the Cherokee People. The exhibit focuses on the autonomy of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians. Director of Education Dakota Brown is co-curator of the exhibit.

BPR Senior Regional Reporter Lilly Knoepp spoke with Brown as part of a panel at the Appalachian Studies Association conference in March and sent us an excerpt.

——

Our theme music is by Matt Jackfert. Other music this week was provided by The Dirty River Boys, Charlie McCoy, John Blissard, Sierra Ferrell, and John Inghram.

Bill Lynch is our producer. Zander Aloi is our associate producer. Our executive producer is Eric Douglas. Kelley Libby is our editor. Our audio mixer is Patrick Stephens. We had help this week from folkways editors Nicole Musgrave and Mallory Noe Payne.

You can send us an email: InsideAppalachia@wvpublic.org.

You can find us on Instagram, Threads and Twitter @InAppalachia. Or here on Facebook.

Sign-up for the Inside Appalachia Newsletter!

Inside Appalachia is a production of West Virginia Public Broadcasting.

Breaking The Ramadan Fast In Morgantown

Like millions across the world, Muslims in West Virginia fasted from sunup to sundown each day of the holy month of Ramadan. Their fast is traditionally broken with a meal called iftar.

Tuesday marked the end of the holy month of Ramadan in the Islamic faith. Like millions across the world, Muslims in West Virginia fasted from sunup to sundown each day of the month. Their fast is traditionally broken with a meal called iftar. 

Just after sunset on a recent Sunday evening, the small lot in front of the Islamic Center of Morgantown was double parked with cars. Inside, men sat on the floor eating and drinking, and the sound that dominated the room were the yells of children.

Omar Yacoub said that’s because the men have not eaten or had water since before sunrise, more than 12 hours ago, and are focused on getting something into their system before the evening prayer. The kids, who are not required to fast, have plenty of energy.

“Today’s just a typical day, people get together here before the evening prayer, which is the prayer, whenever we hear the call for it, we break our fast,” Yacoub said. “We just eat a date and probably a cup of water, and then pray and then go back to eat something that’s a little bit heavier.”

Yacoub is a volunteer at the Islamic Center. Muslims pray five times a day, and having memorized the Quran, he sometimes leads the prayer on nights like tonight when the mosque’s imam is not present. Yacoub said fasting and the month of Ramadan serve many purposes. For example he is taking the opportunity to review some of his Quranic verses.

“It can be self discipline and self control, teaching yourself that there are a lot of other things that you might think you cannot do but you can actually do, like fasting,” Yacoub said.

Prayer and fasting are two of the five pillars of Islam, which include the Hajj, a pilgrimage to the holy city of Mecca, and declaring one’s faith. Yacoub said fasting can help motivate the fifth pillar, giving to charity.

“It also helps you get the feeling of those families in need, those families who can stay for hours and hours without the ability to drink or eat anything,” he said. “That gives you a little bit of motivation, a little bit of a push forward to giving charity, to donate money to these families in need.”

Fruit and water are the common foods that break the Ramadan fast before the evening prayer and a more substantial meal.
Credit: Chris Schulz/West Virginia Public Broadcasting

Ultimately the focus of Ramadan is personal, but breaking fast is often a communal experience. And after the evening prayer, the congregants return to the common room to eat a proper meal.

At the Islamic Center, each night is sponsored by a different family or families. The people that make up the mosque’s community are incredibly diverse, representing dozens of countries from Libya to Bangladesh and, of course, the United States, which means each iftar can vary, but is always delicious. 

“We all share the same thing,” said Mohamed Hefeida, one of the sponsors of tonight’s iftar. “We fast the same, we made the same food. Again, alhamdulillah, it’s five different families making them. Everybody did the chicken in a different way.”

Hefeida said he got up at 1 a.m. to start cooking, but the effort is worthwhile because breaking fast and praying together as a community reminds him of the reason for Ramadan and fasting: to reset his perspective on what matters.

“To me, it means that I belong to a larger, multicultural, very diverse group of people,” Hefeida said. “We share very common, root human aspects like hunger and thirst. And that’s kind of going back to the basics. When I say I’m hungry, I’m really hungry, when I say I’m thirsty it becomes real thirst. It just makes you appreciate everything that you have so much more, because you kind of reset your reference points for everything.” 

Hefeida said this year the community is making a conscious decision to keep their iftars simple. Tonight’s meal consists of staples like chicken, rice, and salad. With the war in Gaza stretching through the month of Ramadan and creating famine conditions for Muslims in the region, he said anything else felt inappropriate.

“I think it’s just the minimum we can do is kind of remember our brothers and sisters so that we could act differently because I don’t think it’s right, when people are dying from hunger for us to bring the fancy dinners on,” Hefeida said. “That’s the bittersweet. We’re still able to enjoy our meal but we’re trying to keep it simple so that we could relate to them as much as we can.”

Men serve themselves their iftar meal at the Islamic Center of Morgantown, March 24, 2024. One of the sponsors of the night’s iftar, Mohamed Hefeida, can be seen wearing a mask.
Credit: Chris Schulz/West Virginia Public Broadcasting

Omar Ibraheem is the president of the Muslim Student Association at West Virginia University. He said the organization petitioned the mosque to hold community events like tonight’s iftar because of their importance to students that are away from home for the holy month.

“It’s such an important thing that mainly college students depend on when you don’t have your family here to iftar with, you also need that sense of community,” Ibraheem said. “We have families that come in and just you create this very important sense of community that we really prioritize in Ramadan.”

Nada Mikky is the secretary of WVU’s Muslim Student Association. She said she was raised to view Ramadan as a time for community and charity. 

“We spend maybe enough time with our family throughout the year, where Ramadan is more focused on community and unity and the broader image,” Mikky said. “Back home, for example, it’s the time where people go to even people that they don’t know, to take care of them and check on the poor, if they need anything, send them food, something, send them money.”

Mikky views fasting from sunrise to sunset as a meditation in patience and the transient nature of life, a reminder that all things in life – good or bad – come to pass in their time. She tries to apply this to difficult situations, like the ongoing conflict in Gaza.

Foster Care Communication And An Iftar In Morgantown On This West Virginia Morning

On this West Virginia Morning, Tuesday marked the end of the holy month of Ramadan in the Islamic faith. Like millions across the world, Muslims in West Virginia fasted from sunup to sundown each day of the month. Their fast is traditionally broken with a meal called iftar. Chris Schulz takes us to an iftar in Morgantown.

On this West Virginia Morning, Tuesday marked the end of the holy month of Ramadan in the Islamic faith. Like millions across the world, Muslims in West Virginia fasted from sunup to sundown each day of the month. Their fast is traditionally broken with a meal called iftar. Chris Schulz takes us to an iftar in Morgantown.

Also, in this show, during the recent regular state legislative session, lawmakers passed a bill aimed at improving foster care communication and accountability. Emily Rice has more.

West Virginia Morning is a production of West Virginia Public Broadcasting which is solely responsible for its content.

Support for our news bureaus comes from Shepherd University.

Chris Schulz produced this episode.

Listen to West Virginia Morning weekdays at 7:43 a.m. on WVPB Radio or subscribe to the podcast and never miss an episode. #WVMorning

WVU Students Gather For Solar Eclipse And Grandson Of Woody Williams Weighs In On Failed Legislation, This West Virginia Morning

On this West Virginia Morning, across the country Monday, people took a moment out of their day to watch the solar eclipse. West Virginia was no exception, and at West Virginia University’s (WVU) Morgantown campus, a large crowd gathered to experience the celestial event. Chris Schulz has the story.

On this West Virginia Morning, across the country Monday, people took a moment out of their day to watch the solar eclipse. West Virginia was no exception, and at West Virginia University’s (WVU) Morgantown campus, a large crowd gathered to experience the celestial event. Chris Schulz has the story.

Also, in this show, the state Senate unanimously approved a resolution in February to place a statue of Hershel “Woody” Williams in the U.S. Capitol. Williams, who died in 2022 at age 98, was the last surviving Medal of Honor recipient from World War II. The measure, though, did not get a vote in the House of Delegates before the regular session ended. Curtis Tate spoke with Chad Graham, Williams’ grandson, about what happens next.

West Virginia Morning is a production of West Virginia Public Broadcasting which is solely responsible for its content.

Support for our news bureaus comes from Shepherd University.

Chris Schulz produced this episode.

Listen to West Virginia Morning weekdays at 7:43 a.m. on WVPB Radio or subscribe to the podcast and never miss an episode. #WVMorning

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