Fayette County Students Take Lead To Address Mental Health In Schools 

Students from Oak Hill High School’s (OHHS) Oakheal Outreach Team hosted a Student Mental Health Conference Wednesday to help other schools and counties establish student-led mental health supports.

Students from Oak Hill High School’s (OHHS) Oakheal Outreach Team hosted a Student Mental Health Conference Wednesday to help other schools and counties establish student-led mental health supports.

Cassie Ganeau, a social worker at Oak Hill, said her role started in the transitional period coming out of the COVID-19 pandemic. With mental health declining, she and her colleagues determined more needed to be done.

“We did what’s called a needs assessment in social work,” Ganeau said. “We just kind of developed our team and added students, and we found it was super important to include their perspective as well.”

Lily Zukowski is an Oak Hill senior and the president of the Oakheal Outreach Team. Students like her act as a bridge between school social workers and mental health resources, and also put on events focused on mental health. 

Zukowski said she noticed a positive change in the student body since the outreach team’s creation two years ago.

“We’ve had a lot more engagement within the student body and people talking to each other,” she said. “We’ve had a lot more different events and just fun things to do to get out of the house and do other things. I’ve seen the uplifting environment that it’s created in our school.” 

Students, counselors, educators and administrators from 17 counties attended the conference at the Fayette County school. Organizers say they hope the attendees will establish their own teams back home.

“It’s definitely something that a lot more schools are wanting to implement,” Ganeau said. “We have elementary schools here, we have K through 12, high schools as well. It’s really interesting to see that in those schools as well, they need a team of their own.”

Rare Cancers In PA Community And Health Fair Tests For Black Lung On This West Virginia Morning

On this West Virginia Morning, a free health fair Tuesday offered the community of Oak Hill the opportunity to be tested for respiratory problems and black lung disease.

On this West Virginia Morning, a free health fair Tuesday offered the community of Oak Hill the opportunity to be tested for respiratory problems and black lung disease. Emily Rice has more.

Also, in this show, at a recent public meeting in Washington County, Pennsylvania, scientists from Pitt announced they had found a link between fracking and some serious health effects. But some in the crowd wanted the study to tell them more about why children in their community have gotten rare cancers. The Allegheny Front’s Reid Frazier reports.

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 Concord University and Shepherd University.

Eric Douglas is our news director and produced this episode.

Teresa Wills is our host.

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

Childhood Love Turns Into Adult Lifestyle For W.Va. Artist

It probably started with her first set of crayons.

“Anytime she got a coloring book she would color the blank inside pages before she ever colored a picture,” Cande Ratliff said of her daughter Carli.

Cande remembers teachers reveling in her daughter’s artwork as far back as kindergarten.

“Hers (art) was just different,” she said. “Her people had eyelashes and plaid shirts. Her animals had whiskers. You had to ask other students what they drew but you could always tell what her picture was without asking.”

The 35-year-old Oak Hill native laughs as her mother recalls those early years, but says she remembers them well.

She also remembers how her love for animals — and creating them on a blank canvas — was born.

“I grew up with a lot of different animals,” she said. “I had a pony, raccoon, chicken, guineas (pigs), turkey, rabbits, cats and dogs.”

And when her grandfather, who owned his own art gallery in Michigan, began sending her home from visits with catalogs featuring the work of well-known wildlife painters Carl Brenders and Robert Bateman, Carli decided to give it a go herself.

“I would look at those catalogs and I would practice drawing,” she said, explaining she spent hours trying to sketch her own versions of the animals she saw on the pages. “I decided I wanted to be like one of those famous artists.”

Carli’s love for art grew through the years, but by the time the 2004 Oak Hill High School graduate entered Concord University, her career path changed.

“I planned to teach,” she said, explaining her goals for her music and studio art majors.

It was the advice of Professor Fernando Porras coupled with the recurrence of epilepsy, a condition she lived with throughout her childhood but hadn’t dealt with for six and a half years, that prompted her to forgo that plan.

“My art teacher told me if I was a teacher I wouldn’t have time for my own art,” she said. “(He said) I would never get any better.

“He definitely encouraged me to pursue my own career.”

At Concord, encouraged by Porras, Carli made the shift from pencil sketches to paint.

“When I was younger I was afraid to make mistakes, but he (Porras) made me less afraid, which helped me get better,” she said.

Carli’s process involves more than just deciding to paint a bird or a dog.

Instead, it begins with a hike in the woods or a road trip throughout West Virginia.

“I take a whole lot of photos,” she said. “I go to places like Three Rivers Avian Center, the West Virginia Wildlife Center and photography centers,” she said. “I take hundreds and hundreds of photos and then I make a sketch and paint.”

The Oak Hill home Carli shares with her mother is full of her wildlife creations.

Though she said she enjoys everything she paints, she said her favorite subjects right now are owls.

“Their eyes are just so big,” she said.

She said she often works on as many as three paintings at a time, but a painting of two barred owls — one perched in a tree, staring over his shoulder as the other approaches in the distance — is her current focus.

The painting, when complete, is one Carli plans to submit to the West Virginia Division of Natural Resources for consideration for its 2023 wildlife calendar.

Carli was first selected for the calendar in 2013 for her winter scene titled “Bunny Love,” and then again in 2014, 2015, 2017, 2019 and 2021.

Those who purchased this year’s calendar will again find her work with December’s “Snow Bunnies.”

In addition to the DNR calendar contest, which attracted more than 300 entries from across the country, Carli has won several other competitions.

In 2011, her “Squirrel in Paulownia Tree” won first place in the Division of Culture and History’s “West Virginia Wildlife” juried exhibition. Then, in 2016, her “Climbing to the Top,” featuring a raccoon in a tree, won the Diversifying Perspectives Art Contest and Exhibition.

That contest, she said, was special to her as it was used to promote National Disability and Awareness Month.

As part of the recognition, both a portrait of Carli and the painting were featured on a poster designed to help raise awareness about disabilities.

“I was proud of that because I felt like it was very important,” she said.

***

Though she earned her driver’s license in high school, Carli has been unable to drive since her seizures returned in college.

On Cande’s days off work, she and Carli often drive to places where they can view wildlife for future inspiration. And, in the coming year, they said they hope to explore galleries where Carli might show, and potentially sell, her work.

“My epilepsy makes it hard to get around,” she said. “But my mom is a big source of encouragement, for sure.”

With galleries — as well as future contests — in mind, Carli, who teaches piano lessons from home and also paints commissioned pet portraits, continues to create.

“… I call my paintings my mom’s grandpaintings,” she said with a laugh. “They’re my babies.”

Former West Virginia Lawmaker And Broadcaster Shirley Love Passes Away

Shirley Love, a state lawmaker and legendary West Virginia broadcaster who reported for five decades in television and radio, died Friday at 87.

Love was born in Oak Hill, West Virginia. In a 2018 biographical statement in  The Herald-Dispatch in Huntington, Love listed his education as “Public High School, University of Hard Knocks.” In reality, Love graduated from Collins High School in Oak Hill. 

Love initially studied to become a machinist and welder, according to a 1994 article in the Charleston Gazette. But he also had a great voice and often sang in church, so he began working as a broadcaster with WOAY radio. 

As a journalist with WOAY, Love covered issues that ranged from mining disasters to high school football games. He was also an announcer for the program “Saturday Nite Wrestlin,” a famed show that West Virginia Public Broadcasting profiled in a 2018 episode of Inside Appalachia

Following his career in broadcasting, Love went on to a long stint in politics, serving as a Democrat in the state Senate from 1994 until 2008, and in the state House of Delegates from 2016-2018. 

Bill Sohonage, chairman of the Fayette County Democratic Executive Committee, said Love was “a legend, a lion and a life force.”

Gov. Jim Justice ordered that U.S. and state flags be flown at half-staff on Monday in honor of Love. “I grew up watching him on TV and listening to his voice,” Justice said in a press release on Friday. “I knew him very well. Cathy and I just want to pass on our thoughts and prayers to a great family and a great West Virginian that we’ve lost.” 

U.S. Sen Joe Manchin also recalled Love’s time as a broadcaster, as well as a lawmaker. “After his broadcasting days were over, Shirley then served the great people of Fayette County in the state legislature for over two decades, fighting tirelessly for his constituents in Charleston,” Manchin said. 

Editor’s note: A previous version of this story said Shirley Love began working with WOAY in the 1980s. He began working with WOAY in the 1950s. 

 

December 31, 1952: Hank Williams' Final Concert

On New Year’s Eve 1952, country music legend Hank Williams was scheduled to perform at Charleston’s Municipal Auditorium as part of his comeback tour.

His life had been descending into turmoil for a long time. Various issues were to blame, including marriage troubles, back problems, prescription drug abuse, and alcoholism. In August 1952, he had been fired from the Grand Ole Opry because his notorious unreliability had finally overshadowed his incomparable talent.

But, by the end of 1952, he was trying to get his life and career back on track. He’d even released a new single entitled “I’ll Never Get Out of This World Alive.” The Charleston show was expected to be an important part of his comeback. Unfortunately, an ice storm grounded his plane, and the show was canceled. He asked a family friend, Charles Carr, to drive him to his next performance in Canton, Ohio. On New Year’s Day, Carr stopped at a gas station in Oak Hill and discovered the singer dead in the back seat. Williams was only 29. Today, a plaque in Oak Hill commemorates Hank Williams’s “last stop on his last tour.”

Child's Halloween Treat was Marijuana Derivative, Not Heroin

Updated on Friday, November 3 at 2:39 p.m.

West Virginia police say lab results on a substance found in a child’s trick-or-treat bag came back as a derivative of marijuana, not heroin as originally thought.

WSAZ-TV reports the substance was field-tested on Tuesday night in Oak Hill and had tested as heroin. No one was injured, including the 3-year-old girl whose bag it was found in.

The substance was then tested by the West Virginia State Police lab.

Oak Hill Police Chief Mike Whisman says the discovery doesn’t change the severity of the offense.

Whisman says the girl’s mother had called police after finding a dark substance wrapped in a glove.

No arrests have been made in the case.

Original Post:

Police say heroin was found in a child’s trick-or-treat bag in West Virginia.

Oak Hill Police Chief Mike Whisman told news outlets that the 3-year-old girl’s mother found a dark substance wrapped in a glove, and called police. Preliminary results from a field test revealed it was heroin.

No one was hurt. The mother, Stacey Norris, told WOAY-TV she initially thought the glove was the result of someone playing a joke.

Police say they will send the substance to the State Police Crime Lab in Charleston for official confirmation. There are no suspects at this time.

The chief said the substance likely came from Hidden Valley, an area where hundreds of children go trick-or-treating each Halloween.

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