West Virginia Apartments to House Women in Drug Treatment

Renovations have started on a building that will become apartments for women undergoing treatment for substance abuse in West Virginia.

Marshall University said in a news release Monday its health provider group, Marshall Health, and the Huntington City Mission have begun construction on the 15,000-square-foot building next to the mission.

Each of the 18 apartments will consist of up to three bedrooms, a bathroom, a living room and kitchenette. They will enable women suffering from substance abuse to live with their children.

A grant from the West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources is funding the program, called Project Hope for Women and Children. Marshall School of Medicine spokeswoman Sheanna Spence said the $2.8 million grant covers renovations and program expenses.

The statement says some services, including family therapy, will be provided on site while many others such as medication-assisted treatment will be in outpatient locations. The renovations are expected to be completed by October.

The project “will help residents put life skills into practice, give their children a sense of stability and teach them to raise their children in a way that promotes healthy habits early on,” said Dr. Stephen M. Petrany, chairman of the Marshall School of Medicine’s department of family and community health.

In a state of 1.8 million residents, more than 30,000 people are in drug treatment in West Virginia, which has the nation’s highest drug overdose death rate.

A Conversation on Alcohol Abuse: How to Identify Warning Signs as Craft Beer Industry Grows

Not everyone looks at the increased availability of alcoholic beverages quite the same way. Some people struggle with it. Alcohol is, after all, a socially acceptable, legal drug.

Not everyone looks at the increased availability of alcoholic beverages quite the same way. Some people struggle with it. Alcohol is, after all, a socially acceptable, legal drug.

Inside Appalchia guest host Liz McCormick sat down with two professionals from West Virginia University who run a program that helps students cope with alcohol. Cathy Yura is the Director of the West Virginia University Collegiate Recovery Program and Andrew Caryl, her co-worker, who is himself in recovery.

If you or someone you know is struggling with substance use disorder, including alcoholism, or if you have a question about recovery, here are some resources:

  • The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration: 1-800-662-HELP
  • National Drug Rehab Hotline: (24/7 crisis intervention) 1-888-459-5511
  • HELP4WV – http://www.help4WV.com (844) 435-7498)

This story is part of an Inside Appalachia episode exploring the alcohol culture and industry in Appalachia.

Two Substance Use Recovery Programs Getting a Financial Boost

The West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources announced state funding is available for two substance abuse recovery programs.

 

Both the Collegiate Recovery (CRPs) and Law Enforcement Assisted Diversion (LEAD) programs focus on helping adults who suffer from substance use disorders get their lives back on track.

 

 

 

$100,000 is available for CRPs. The program is expected to help expand access to recovery from addiction on state college or university campuses.

 

The other program, LEAD, focuses on guiding adults with substance use disorders away from the criminal justice system to community-based services instead.

 

LEAD allows public safety officials to work with behavioral health providers by diverting low-level drug offenders to treatment and support services, rather than jail and prosecution.

 

$600,000 is available for LEAD Programs in West Virginia.

 

Proposals for Law Enforcement Assisted Diversion (LEAD) Programs are due by June 5, 2018.

 

Proposals for Collegiate Recovery Programs (CRPs) are due by June 8, 2018.

 

DHHR states funding will be awarded based on accepted proposals that meet all required criteria. Proposal details and requirements are available online: dhhr.wv.gov/bhhf/afa.

Who Overdoses and Why?

Most people who overdose on opioids have seen a health care provider in the last year, and many had recently been released from jail, according to a new study from West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources.

This suggests that overdoses can be prevented with the right intervention.

Here are some of the findings, according to the Charleston Gazette-Mail:

  • Eighty-one percent of people who died of overdose interacted with at least one type of health care provider in the 12 months prior to their death.
  • Ninety-one percent of all those who died had a documented history within the West Virginia Board of Pharmacy’s Controlled Substances Monitoring Program. In the 30 days prior to death, nearly half (49 percent) of females who died filled a controlled-substance prescription in the 30 days prior to death, as compared to 36 percent of males.
  • Those who died of overdose were three times more likely to have three or more prescribers, compared to the overall CSMP population. Those who died were more than 70 times likely to have prescriptions at four or more pharmacies, compared to the overall CSMP population.
  • Seventy-one of those who died of overdose used emergency medical services within the 12 months prior to their death. Only 31 percent of those who died had naloxone administration documented in their EMS record.
  • More than half (56 percent) of all those who died of overdose had been incarcerated. They were at an increased risk of death in the 30 days after their date of release, especially in those with only some high school education.
  • Males working in blue-collar industries with a higher risk of injury might be at an increased risk for overdose death.

On this week’s Front Porch podcast, we discuss how we can intervene to prevent overdoses.
In addition, we talk about a proposal to log in W.Va. State Parks, and another to eliminate multi-member Delegate districts in West Virginia.

One Year Later, Harpers Ferry Residents Remember Fire

Saturday marks one-year since a fire devastated four buildings in the commercial district of historic Harpers Ferry – two of those buildings were built before the Civil War. Eight shops and two apartments were lost, and by the time the fire was put out nearly eight hours after it began, it left behind almost $2 million in damages.

A year later, the town is on its way to recovery, but one couple still vividly remembers the scene that unfolded before them that morning.

Harpers Ferry is well-known for its significance during the American Civil War, and it’s one of West Virginia’s most popular tourist destinations. But on the morning of the July 23, 2015 fire, many residents worried that would all be lost…including Ron and Laura Clark.

The Clarks sell sporting goods at their shop in Harpers Ferry called The Outfitter. They also live in town – just up the street from where the fire began. This week, we sat on their porch, as they told me what happened on that early morning of July 23, 2015.

“It was a beautiful night,” Laura remembered, “I had the fan on and the door open, and it was trash night, and I heard this rustling noise, and since it was trash night, I thought it was the bear that was getting into the trash.”

But it wasn’t a bear, and the rustling didn’t go away.

“And I walked a half a block down, and I turned my head around the corner,” she said, “and there’s this staircase in the middle of the block, and in the center of the staircase, the blaze was going.”

Laura was the first person to make a 911 call that morning. After she woke up her husband Ron, she ran back down to the burning buildings to try and wake up residents who were asleep inside.

“I was calling 911 simultaneously as I was banging on the door,” she explained, “and it was horrifying. I mean, I could not get them awake; they were on the third level, the doorbell was broken, and it seemed like forever I was banging.”

Laura was finally able to get the attention of the two people inside the apartment. In the end, that building suffered serious damages.

Laura’s husband Ron was also up making calls by then and taking video of the fire on his phone.

“The fire started moving faster and jumped to another building, so I put my cell phone camera down and just started going down the street and banging on doors,” he said.

After about 20 or 30 minutes, fire and rescue crews showed up and contained the blaze. By late morning, the fire was finally put out.

It took Ron and Laura about two weeks to get over the trauma and even sleep well again.

But, in a matter of months, the town began to bounce back. Two shops displaced from the fire reopened in Harpers Ferry, while a few others reopened in nearby cities. Groups from both in and out of West Virginia, including West Virginia University, sent aid to help in the recovery efforts.

One year later, the reconstruction of the four buildings damaged in the fire is coming along smoothly. Harper’s Ferry Mayor Gregory Vaughn estimates the rehabilitation of most of the buildings will be complete by early winter.

Vaughn says the devastation hit shop owners’ the hardest, but he says since day one, they’ve been resilient.

“I think that even though it was a very difficult day for them, I think today they are so positive,” he noted, “I know one of the shop owners who was displaced, had their best year, probably, in decades with business.”

On Sunday, July 24, a special church service and luncheon will be held at Camp Hill-Wesley United Methodist Church in Harpers Ferry honoring the fire and rescue teams and other personnel who fought the July 2015 fire. The service will begin at 11:00 a.m.

One year later, the cause of the fire still hasn’t been determined.

Clendenin Just Beginning to Recover from Historic Flood

By his estimate, Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin said thousands of homes have either been destroyed or damaged beyond repair after severe storms rolled through much…

By his estimate, Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin said thousands of homes have either been destroyed or damaged beyond repair after severe storms rolled through much of southeastern West Virginia Thursday, leaving in its wake some of the worst flooding the state has seen in years.

“No one’s seen anything like this before,” House Speaker Tim Armstead said Monday as he waited outside Clendenin Advent Christian Church for Tomblin.

After a press conference, Tomblin toured the church as Pastor Mike Todorovich pointed out the devastation.

Credit Ashton Marra / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
The decades old baby grand piano that sits in the worship hall is one of the only items to survive the flood that filled Clendenin Advent Christian Church with water.

“We slept up on the balcony water got up as far as the stoop over there,” Todorvich told the governor as they stood in the worship hall that took on several inches, if not feet of water.

“When the water crested in the church, it went up about an inch on the window sill at that point before it started going back down.”

Todorvich showed Tomblin the mud, debris and three to four inches of water left behind in the churches basement. When he pointed to the decades old piano in the worship hall, the only thing that survived, he broke down.

“You know, when you see devastation like you have here in Clendenin, it’s going to take some time for people to get their homes, their lives back in order,” Tomlin said during his press conference. Earlier in the day, he had visited the town of Rainelle in Greenbrier County, one of the hardest hit by the storm.

FEMA- the Federal Emergency Management Agency- sent crews to the state Saturday to begin assessing the overall damage from the high water. Monday, more FEMA personnel began documenting and assessing the damage to personal property in the three counties named federal disaster areas.

Credit Ashton Marra / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin during a press conference in front of Clendenin Advent Christian Church

FEMA coordinating officer Albie Lewis says people should begin to clean up, but while they’re doing it, should take pictures and carefully document the damage to everything from dry wall to personal belongings. And they should register with FEMA so an assessor can help them get federal aid. 

Todorovich has started the cleanup process in his church’s community hall next door where volunteers from Circleville, Ohio, are tearing down damaged dry wall so it can be replaced.

Armstead said, in Clendenin, it will likely take months to clean up and rebuild- every business in town is closed due to storm damage and the infamous old school Dairy Queen collapsed when moving water swept through the town, but he believes the town will come back.

“This is a wonderful little town and I think most of the people here want to stay and they’ve lived here, I mean, most of us who live in the Elk River area have lived here, generations of our family have lived here and people don’t want to leave. So, we’re hoping that we can put it back together and work hard to keep everybody here.”

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