Randolph County Registered Voter Count Sways From Blue To Red

Randolph County has more registered Republican voters than Democrats, at least for Wednesday.

Randolph County has more registered Republican voters than Democrats, at least as of Wednesday. 

It’s been a Democratic stronghold since the Great Depression. But officials at the Randolph County Clerk’s office said the registered voter count on Wednesday was 6,242 Republicans, 6,238 Democrats, a difference of four. On Monday, the count was a difference of seven, again favoring the GOP. 

One clerk’s office employee there said in her 17 years working at the Randolph County Courthouse, she’s never seen more Republicans registered than Democrats. She also said those numbers can fluctuate daily, depending on DMV registrations and other factors. 

A local Inter-Mountain newspaper headline said “Randolph officially now a ‘red county’. In the article, Carolyn Jackson of the Randolph County Republican Executive Committee called this “truly an historic moment. It shows that people are coming around to the Republican way of looking at things.”  

Randolph County Democratic Party Chair Cindy Stemple said the shifting numbers don’t tell who will actually go and vote.

“We aren’t really focused so much on those numbers,” Stemple said. “We’re focused on the good work that we’re doing, with the understanding that those numbers change on a daily basis. We’ve been trying to keep track of the people who vote or who have registered as Independents. I think that we need to factor in that as well.”

Stemple said the Randolph County Democratic Party is working to run a candidate in every race. She said she knows things will not change overnight and Democrats have challenges ahead.

“It’s a challenge to get people to run,” Stemple said. “I’m not minimizing that. But we have to start somewhere. I think things have changed over the past 30 years. We have to adapt to those changes. That doesn’t mean we’re going to change our inclusivity or our policies, but we need to find people who are brave enough to run, and we will give them all the support that we possibly can.”

Stemple says instead of red or blue, maybe Randolph is a “purple” county. 

WVPB reached out to Randolph County Republican Party members for comment. We had not received a response by the time of publication.

Christmas Tree From Mon National Forest Arrives At U.S. Capitol

The U.S. Capitol Christmas tree, which is the first from West Virginia in more than 40 years, will be lighted after Thanksgiving on the West Lawn, with retiring U.S. Sen. Joe Manchin as the host.

A 63-foot-tall Norway spruce from the Monongahela National Forest arrived at the U.S. Capitol Friday, capping a two-week journey that brought the big tree all over West Virginia.

The U.S. Capitol Christmas tree, which is the first from West Virginia in more than 40 years, will be lighted after Thanksgiving at 5 p.m. on Nov. 28 on the West Lawn, with retiring U.S. Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., as the host.

The 8,000-pound spruce was harvested in Randolph County on Nov. 1.

A second, 40-foot Norway spruce from the Monongahela National Forest will serve as the National Christmas Tree at the Ellipse at the White House. That tree came from Tucker County and is the first from West Virginia since 1963.

West Virginia Tree, 63 Feet And 8,000 Pounds, Headed To U.S. Capitol

For the first time in more than 40 years, the U.S. Capitol Christmas tree is from West Virginia. It was harvested in the Monongahela National Forest in Randolph County on Nov. 1.

Thousands gathered at the state Capitol Tuesday to see the tree that’s going to the U.S. Capitol for Christmas.

For the first time in more than 40 years, the U.S. Capitol Christmas tree is from West Virginia. It was harvested in the Monongahela National Forest in Randolph County on Nov. 1.

“It’s a Norway Spruce. It came from Laurel Fork Campground in Randolph County,” said Meadow Arbogast, a conservation educator with the U.S. Forest Service. “It’s 63 feet tall and weighs about 8,000 pounds.”

She said the tree comes from a different region every year.

Meadow Arbogast is a conservation educator with the U.S. Forest Service.

“Every year, a different national forest is selected to provide the tree for the U.S. Capitol Christmas tree. It usually goes by region, so there are 10 regions of national forests in the United States, and Region 9 was selected'” she said. “There are a few states in Region 9, but finally, it came back to West Virginia. We’ve done this project two other times, in 1970 and 1976.”

It was 67 degrees in Charleston on Tuesday evening, and Arbogast said it was nothing like that the day the tree was cut down.

“Our harvest day was 19 degrees, and it was snowing,” she said. “So, this is incredibly different than cutting it down!”

Charleston won’t be the last place West Virginians can see the tree, though it is bundled up and loaded on a 100-foot flatbed truck.

“We have quite the journey still,” Arbogast said. “It will be delivered on Nov. 17, and we have more stops to come. I think this is stop No. 5 of our 19-stop tour.”

The tree came to Huntington on Wednesday. Wheeling is next, followed by Morgantown, Davis, Romney and Harpers Ferry. The tree will be lighted on the West Lawn of the U.S. Capitol after Thanksgiving. 

West Virginia Tour Schedule

  • Thursday, Nov. 9 (Wheeling) 11 a.m. – 1 p.m. White Palace at Wheeling Park
  • Friday, Nov. 10 (Morgantown) 3 p.m. – 5 p.m. 84 Lumber
  • Saturday, Nov. 11 (Morgantown) 11 a.m. – 1 p.m. Operation Welcome Home at Mylan Park and 2:30 p.m. – 4:30 p.m. WVU, 243 High St.
  • Sunday, Nov. 12 (Upper Tract) 2 p.m. – 4 p.m. Swilled Dog/Raymond’s Gymnastic Center
  • Monday, Nov. 13 (Davis) 3:30 p.m. – 5:30 p.m. 533 Building
  • Tuesday, Nov. 14 (Romney) 10:30 a.m. – 12:30 p.m. WV Schools for the Deaf and the Blind.
  • Wednesday, Nov. 15 (Harpers Ferry) 12 p.m. – 2 p.m. Harpers Ferry Job Corps Center
  • Thursday, Nov. 16 (Prince George’s County) 4:30 p.m. – 6:30 p.m. Joint Base Andrews (Base only)
  • Friday, Nov. 17 Delivery to West Lawn of the U.S. Capitol Building

W.Va. First Foundation Elects Board Members

The foundation will handle 72.5 percent of the state’s settlement funds, while 24.5 percent will go to local governments. The remaining three percent will be held by the state in escrow to cover any outstanding attorney’s fees.

Through settlements from various lawsuits with opioid manufacturers and distributors, West Virginia stands to gain about $1 billion over the next 10 to 15 years. 

The money should be used for recovery and prevention programs. To make sure it is spent correctly, the West Virginia Legislature created the West Virginia First Foundation to distribute those settlement funds in the 2023 regular session. Senate Bill 674 legally recognizes the creation of the foundation. It was signed into law on March 11.

The board includes 11 members, six selected by the counties and five appointed by the governor. All six regions elected their representatives this week via a quorum of elected officials from the towns, cities and counties of each region. 

The foundation will handle 72.5 percent of the state’s settlement funds, while 24.5 percent will go to local governments. The remaining three percent will be held by the state in escrow to cover any outstanding attorney’s fees.

West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey addressed the vital need for fiscal responsibility in distributing these funds, noting the time it could take to receive all abatement funding.

“Some of our settlements, we negotiated upfront one-year flat fee, but many others were two years, five years, 10, 15 years, and it goes out over a period of time,” Morrisey said. “That’s why it’s really important that financial management is part of this process as well, so that the money doesn’t get squandered, and that there’s a lot of planning for the future.”

The board members will make decisions about how the funds will be distributed. An “expert panel” will be formed after the board is seated to advise in these funding decisions.

Dr. Michael “Tony” Kelly of Raleigh County was the first board member selected on July 5 to represent Region 6. Kelly was joined July 12 by Berkeley County Community Corrections Director Timothy Czaja and Parkersburg Mayor Tom Joyce, selected to represent Region 2 and Region 3 respectively.

Per the memorandum of understanding that frames the settlement distribution, board members will serve staggered terms of three years. An Executive Director will be appointed by the Attorney General and approved by the board.

At the Region 5 West Virginia First Foundation Regional Selection Meeting, Dr. Matthew Christiansen was elected to represent Cabell, Clay, Boone, Kanawha, Lincoln, Logan, Putnam, Mason, Mingo and Wayne Counties. 

Christiansen is also West Virginia’s State Medical Director and the Commissioner of the Department of Health and Human Resources Bureau of Public Health.

“These dollars in the foundation are state dollars, but my appointment on this board is through Region Five. If there is a potential conflict of interest there, I could recuse myself from those votes,” Christiansen said. “But I think the importance here is transparency and accountability around where the money is going so that everyone can see that that there are no nefarious issues that are happening that that would account for that. But as it currently stands, I don’t see any necessary areas of overlap where that might be an issue.”

At the meeting members of the Kanawha County Commission also voted to require board meetings of the foundation be conducted in compliance with the West Virginia Open Meetings Act.

While Morrisey highlighted the need for transparency, he also said many questions won’t be answered until the board is seated.

“I think that as time goes forward, once that board gets constituted, I think they will be setting up a lot of the rules of the road in terms of how there’ll be interactions and I encourage, strongly encourage public processes where people get to participate,” Morrisey said. “So, I think that’s important. I think the goal of this was to have an open, transparent process, but also be able to bring experts together and to allow for some expertise and deliberation as well.”

Region 4 elected Marion County businessman Jonathan Board to represent them on the board Thursday. The region covers 13 counties including Monongalia, Marion, Preston, Taylor, Doddridge, Harrison, Barbour, Tucker, Gilmer, Lewis, Braxton, Upshur and Randolph.

Board says West Virginia has a unique opportunity to address the issues opioids have caused and stop the destruction.

“The question is what happens to the next generation, we are teetering on complete catastrophe,” Board said. “That’s why this is a beautiful thing where we can step in and say, we’re going to stem the tide. We’re going to fill the gap. And we’re going to find solutions. But we have to do it now.”

He acknowledged that although every community represented by the board is facing the same issue, each community will require a different approach to a solution.

“I think that’s what’s so special about this opportunity,” Board said. “Our needs in Elkins and in Fairmont, and in Morgantown and in Harrison County, they’re all different. We’re dealing with the same challenge. But it needs different solutions. And that’s why this is really valuable.”

Board also said there will need to be a robust vetting process to ensure the money is spent correctly and with communities’ best interests in mind.

This is not the first time the state has received a large amount of money to address chronic issues. At Thursday’s meeting David Street, a member of the Barbour County Commission and director of an hospital emergency department, brought up the issue of trying to administer federal broadband money appropriately. 

“I live in this world every day, and every night at the commission meetings,” Street said. “My observation is this: in both worlds, I’m seeing 501(C)3s and groups pop up like a plague. It disgusts me.”

Monongalia County Commissioner Tom Bloom, who led the Region 4 meeting, thanked Street for his comment.

“First it was broadband, now its opioid funding,” Bloom said. “All county commissions are dealing with that. I think that’s a concern that you brought up and I’m sure, you can look at several of the other commissioners shaking their heads. ”

After the meeting, Bloom echoed Morrisey and said electing the board is only the first step.

“There’s an expertise committee, and another regional committee, which we have no idea how to set that up yet or what we’re doing,” Bloom said. “I am just glad that this is over.”

On the agenda for Thursday’s meeting was also a discussion regarding best practices for the board. As in Region Five the previous day, the elected officials voted unanimously to require that the by-laws of the West Virginia First Foundation require all board meetings be conducted in compliance with the Open Meetings Act.

“We made it very clear that Region Five, Region Four are adamant, unanimously that these meetings need to be open, so everyone understands how the process is, where the money’s going, and how it’s going to be spent,” Bloom said. “We’re very worried. We don’t want to see a continuance of what happened with the tobacco, we don’t want to continue to what’s going on with broadband.”

Bloom says the region will submit the names of the other candidates to Gov. Jim Justice to be considered for his five appointments to the board.

No selections have been made by the executive office, according to the latest report from Justice’s office. It is not clear what will happen if Justice’s selections are not made clear by the Monday, July 17 deadline. The governor’s selections are subject to confirmation by the Senate.

According to Morrisey’s Press Secretary, John Mangalonzo, the regional selections still have to be certified.

“Keep in mind that an accounting firm has seven days from the date of the election to certify the votes and submit the certified results to the AG’s and governor’s offices,” Mangalonzo said in an email.

  • Region 1: Steven Corder
  • Region 2: Tim Czaja
  • Region 3: Parkersburg Mayor Tom Joyce
  • Region 4: Jonathan Board
  • Region 5: Dr. Matthew Christiansen
  • Region 6: Dr. Tony Kelly 

Justice’s office did not respond to a request for comment at the time of publishing.

Randolph County Joins Regional Effort To Curb Drug Trafficking, Overdose

Randolph is the 24th West Virginia county to be designated as a High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area.

Randolph County has been added to a regional effort to fight drug trafficking.

Randolph is the 24th West Virginia county to be designated as a High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area.

The designation brings the county into a partnership of federal, state and local officials to curb drug trafficking, drug overdoses and drug use.

U.S. Sen. Joe Manchin, federal drug czar Dr. Rahul Gupta and U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of West Virginia William Ihlenfeld announced the designation in Elkins on Wednesday.

Ihlenfeld is chairman of the board of the Baltimore-Washington High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area and was previously chairman of the Appalachian High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area.

Gupta was West Virginia’s Chief Health Officer before joining the White House as the first doctor to lead the Office of National Drug Control Policy.

State’s Pre-K Program Ranks Among Top In Country

West Virginia has not fared well in recent national rankings of educational success. However, a recent report on the country’s pre-kindergarten programs ranked the state among the best in the nation. 

West Virginia has not fared well in recent national rankings of educational success. However, a recent report on the country’s pre-kindergarten programs ranked the state among the best in the nation. 

In May, the National Institute for Early Education Research at Rutgers University released its State of Pre-K report. The institute, known as NIEER, has been advocating for universal pre-K and grading each state’s existing program for 20 years. 

States are rated on factors such as curriculum supports, staff to child ratio and teacher specialized training. This year, West Virginia scored a 9 out of 10, placing it behind just two states in the quality of its pre-K program. 

One of the key factors in assessing a universal pre-K system is access. With 63 percent of the state’s four-year-olds enrolled in pre-K, West Virginia has the sixth best access in the country.

Kaylee Rosencrance, a preschool special needs teacher in Randolph County, was recently surprised to learn that not all states in the country offer the same level of access to their youngest learners.

“After looking into different states, I was actually so surprised that there were not public preschool programs,” she said.

Rosencrance said she uses a learning system called High Scope in her classroom, which helps her students integrate events from their life into their play, which is the main learning mode. 

“We just incorporate learning into their everyday routine. So within those small groups, and during that work time, the teacher and the assistant are actively engaged in asking questions, trying to further their thinking as to what they’re doing,” she said. “And although they are playing, they are still learning.”

For Rosencrance, one of the biggest pieces to her success is the support she receives. She works closely with Head Start, the federal program that provides comprehensive early childhood education, health, nutrition, and parent involvement services to low-income children and families. Rosencrance also has regular opportunities to work with colleagues and support staff at both the local and state level.

“The support that we have as preschool teachers here in Randolph County is huge. Our state department supports our county and then our county supports preschool staff,” she said. “It’s really like a ripple effect of when you have support from the top. It really helps us here in the classroom.” 

Pre-K Coordinator for the West Virginia Department of Education Janet Bock-Hager’s office provides state-level support to classrooms like Rosencrance’s. Bock-Hager credits the county teams, which include teachers, a pre-K coordinator and a Head Start representative for driving and innovating the state’s pre-K curriculum.

“They take state pre-K policy and state pre-K standards, and implement those and the state team provides individualized support to those counties upon request,” she said. “We also go out and visit each program a minimum of once every three years with our pre-K program reviews.”

Bock-Hager said the state’s current success is the culmination of 20 years of work, starting with the passage of Senate Bill 247 by the West Virginia Legislature in 2002.

“No matter where you live, you are offered universal pre-K in the state of West Virginia. It’s been in full implementation since the 2012-2013 school year,” she said. “It’s based on legislation that was passed in 2002 and counties had 10 years to build their pre-K systems. But in West Virginia, we have a mandate to collaborate with existing programs.”

The requirements of that law including curriculum, a universal enrollment process and transition plans to support families and children as they move into and out of pre-K have fostered strong collaboration across all programs and levels in the state.

Melissa Sherfinski, an associate professor of early childhood and elementary education at West Virginia University, studies pre-K programs in several states, and she said one of West Virginia’s strengths is the integration of Head Start.

“What that does is it helps to bring kids of all different income levels together, mixed in the same classrooms,” she said.

Sherfinski said the state’s integration of Head Start into all pre-K classrooms has created a collaborative way of doing universal pre-K that opens up opportunities for all students. She also said the use of play-based learning is crucial.

“They can use their communication skills with others, they can gain that confidence by taking up that new persona, and they can imagine what or who they might be in very creative ways,” Sherfinski said. “They kind of metaphorically stand on the shoulders of their peers. Socio-dramatic play is a wonderful way for children to be able to learn from one another, and to begin to cooperate, and to come up with ideas together.” 

While other educators are focused on expanding the pre-K program’s successes into other grade levels, Sherfinski’s biggest concern is influence in the other direction, what’s called “curriculum pushdown.”

“People are beginning to question whether pre-K is not the new first grade with all of the heightened expectations, and especially post-pandemic, all of the concerns about learning loss for children,” she said. “I think it is so important not to forget that young children are young children. We want to do everything we can to support who they’re becoming, but at the same time they’re being, and they need to be in joyful environments.”

For now, Sherfinski has not seen evidence that curriculum pushdown is manifesting in West Virginia’s schools, but work to improve the state’s program is continuous. That includes efforts to expand universal education to three-year-olds. The NIERR report did identify one category in which it would like to see West Virginia improve: Staff professional development. Sherfinski agrees.

“I think some districts can do that really well, and I think that some struggle more. I would guess that funding is a large part of that,” she said. “That’s a really good opportunity for folks to work towards and expand, and I think they are working to do that.”

Despite its 20 years of buildup, it will be several more years before studies can be done on the long-range impacts of universal pre-K. The first students to go through the universal program are only now starting high school, but Rosencrance said she hears every year from Kindergarten teachers about the difference a good pre-K experience can make for students.

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