Bluefield Blue Jays, Princeton Rays Part Of New College Wood-Bat Format In 2021

Minor League Baseball detailed plans on Tuesday to reformat its Appalachian League to a summer “wood-bat” program for emerging college freshman and sophomore athletes.

The 10-team “Appy League” encompasses Virginia, North Carolina and both Princeton and Bluefield in Mercer County, where the Rays and the Blue Jays play respectively. Officials for the league, Major League Baseball and USA Baseball said in a statement the teams will drop their names and current logos before the new season begins next summer. “To mark this moment, all of our clubs will go through rebranding, creating names and logos that are unique to their cities,” Appalachian League President Dan Moushon said during a virtual press conference. “So in 2021, every Appalachian team will have its own identity.”

The league said that it’s identifying more than 300 college-level players for the new format. They’ll play a 54-game regular season and an annual all-star game.

“I think we settled on something pretty special here,” said Morgan Sword, executive vice president of finance and operations for Major League Baseball. “Fans are going to get to see top prospects right in their own towns. Communities are going to see an influx of new revenue opportunities. Players are going to receive state-of-the-art training, visibility to our scouts and educational programming that’s designed to prepare them for careers as professional athletes.” There was anxiety earlier this year that the Minor League would end its Appalachian League, which dates back to 1911 and has held more than 30 teams throughout its existence.

Both U.S. Sens. Shelley Moore Capito, a Republican, and Joe Manchin, a Democrat, thanked the baseball leaders during Tuesday’s press conference. “Today’s announcement is great news for Bluefield and Princeton, and frankly for anyone who enjoys watching our nation’s game in a West Virginia summer,” Capito said later in a written statement. “Through this new arrangement, our communities will host the premier baseball players in the country, giving West Virginians a chance to see baseball’s future stars before they reach the big leagues,” Manchin said in another subsequent release.

Emily Allen is a Report for America corps member.

W.Va. PSC Issues Preliminary Order In Frontier Landline Case

State regulators are ordering Frontier Communications to make some changes, more than two years after initiating an investigation into the company’s infrastructure for landline phones in West Virginia.

The West Virginia Public Service Commission issued an order on Wednesday, Sept. 16, requiring that the telecommunications company implement some of the recommended actions from an audit that was finalized in March.

The commission’s demands on Wednesday were preliminary. Frontier has 30 days to provide additional information that the PSC requested on Wednesday, before the commissioners release their final order.

“Frontier customers in this state remain plagued with service problems,” the commissioners wrote in the most recent filing. “[E]ven as the customer base – and the corresponding revenue – declines.” 

Some of the actions the PSC is seeking from Frontier, including a proactive tree-trimming program and initiatives to identify problem areas in Frontier’s antiquated copper network, are already underway, according to responses from the company included in the Wednesday order.

For other initiatives that Frontier previously called unnecessary, including one to make state-level capital budgets for Frontier’s two West Virginia companies more transparent, or another to deploy more fiber optic cable, the commission is asking that Frontier to provide information on what’s holding the company back. 

PSC staff have received 1,342 informal and formal complaints regarding Frontier’s landline phone service in the last year, according to the agency.

Commissioners agreed to initiate a focused management audit into the company in August 2018 after a union representing Frontier employees filed a petition requesting action that March. 

Frontier had agreed to added regulation from the PSC in 2010, when acquiring the former Verizon territory.

An auditing firm that the PSC selected in July 2019 found that the company wasn’t doing enough preventative maintenance work. It also determined that Frontier faced a poor financial outlook due to the decline of landline phone use nationwide, and found that the company was slated to lose more than half of its experienced field employees in the next five years, due to retirement.

Although the PSC selected the auditing firm for Frontier, after earlier proposals from the company didn’t meet the PSC’s standards, Frontier was still financially responsible for the audit.

Frontier filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in April. The PSC is keeping tabs on the company’s plans for new leadership, to make sure their subsidiaries in the Mountain State continue to comply with regulatory rules. The PSC plans to hold a hearing on the matter in Charleston on Oct. 28.

On Broadband

Although the West Virginia Public Service Commission doesn’t have the authority to regulate broadband, commissioners say that Frontier committed to offering internet-related services in 2010 when it acquired 600,000 access lines from Verizon. 

Auditors included information on broadband in the report – all of which Frontier was allowed to redact along with phone-related information Frontier classified as “trade secrets.” The PSC later disagreed with this categorization.

In April, a reporter for Ars Technica found that Frontier hadn’t completely redacted the report. By copying and pasting blacked out text in a clean word document, the redactions disappeared, showing that auditors had found more than 900,000 susceptible points in Frontier’s copper network. 

The Public Service Commission later agreed more than four months later that Frontier had no legal authority to redact roughly half of the landline-related information that the company tried to hide. A new, less redacted version of the report was uploaded to the PSC website in August.

In the same month, the West Virginia Broadband Enhancement Council requested to intervene in the case. 

“[I]nternet access in West Virginia through Frontier is inextricably intertwined with Frontier’s copper network,” the council wrote in a filing to the PSC in late August, earlier acknowledging that the company offers both internet and phone service through the same infrastructure. “Investments in broadband will help Frontier retain customers with bundled service, resulting in improvements in Frontier’s telephone network, which is a major focus of the audit.”

The PSC decided on Wednesday that it would reject the council’s request, due to the fact that commissioners don’t have the authority to regulate broadband.

Emily Allen is a Report for America corps member.

Additional Deaths At Mount Olive Likely Both Linked To COVID

West Virginia corrections officials say they’re now linking a prisoner death in July to COVID-19, referring to newer medical records that they received Tuesday.

This marks the second known COVID-related death of a prisoner within the state Division of Corrections and Rehabilitation, after the agency reported its first inmate death in Charleston on Aug. 28. The DCR also said Wednesday that COVID-19 was possibly the cause of a third prisoner’s death from Sunday, Sept. 13.

When the DCR first reported the death of a 73-year-old man at the Mount Olive Correctional Complex in July, they said medical providers found COVID-19 was not a contributing factor in the prisoner’s death.

The division released this information roughly a week and a half after the prisoner’s reported July 17 death. The agency said he had been receiving hospice care from the prison infirmary for stage 4 metastatic cancer, and a coronavirus test administered shortly before the prisoner’s death came back positive after he died. 

A new report finalized nearly two months later from the West Virginia Office of the Chief Medical Examiner disproves that initial assessment and lists COVID-19 as a complicating factor, according to a press release from the DCR on Wednesday.

The DCR declined to share a copy of the medical examiner’s report with West Virginia Public Broadcasting.

A second prisoner from Mount Olive reportedly died on Sunday, Sept. 13, at an outside hospital. The 54-year-old man also had an underlying medical condition and was hospitalized after testing positive for the coronavirus in late August, according to the DCR.

Prison officials are still waiting on results from the Chief Medical Examiner, but the DCR said in its Wednesday statement that a preliminary assessment from the hospital linked the prisoner’s death to COVID-19. 

The DCR reported there were still 28 active cases of the coronavirus among Mount Olive prisoners on Wednesday. More than 160 prisoners there have recovered from COVID-19 after testing positive for the virus during a late August facility-wide testing effort. 

On Aug. 28, the U.S. Marshals Service confirmed a prisoner being held on federal charges at the DCR-run South Central Regional Jail had died from the coronavirus

The 40-year-old prisoner was indicted on child pornography-related charges in January and had a trial scheduled for September, according to court records. He was the state’s first COVID-related inmate death. 

More than 60 others at South Central have recovered from the coronavirus, according to data from the DCR Wednesday.

Although numbers from the DCR show that no state prisons are over capacity, records showed on Wednesday that all 10 of the state’s regional jails were over capacity.

Emily Allen is a Report for America corps member.

Governor Changes COVID-19 Map To Reopen Schools In Five Counties

West Virginia officials are once more changing a color-coded map of coronavirus cases that determines whether it’s safe for local school boards to offer in-person learning and extracurricular activities.

On Tuesday, Gov. Jim Justice announced the introduction of a new color – gold – for counties that report either 10 to 14.9 daily coronavirus cases per 100,000 people, or a daily positivity rate of less than 5 percent.

Both metrics are reported on a seven-day average.

Justice and State Superintendent Clayton Burch said during a virtual briefing Tuesday that they hope this will put more West Virginia students back in the classroom.

“The No. 1 thing for me is that this puts more children [where they can have] access to their teachers,” Burch said, adding that there were more than 67,000 kids who couldn’t report to the classroom on Monday due to the map’s previous rules.

The gold category is now the third-worst color out of five. Counties in the gold level, previously a part of the orange level, will still hold in-person classes, but they’re barred from large gatherings and opportunities for student mingling, according to new metrics from the West Virginia Department of Education.

Counties in the orange and red levels – with 15 or more daily cases per 100,000 people on a seven-day average – are still barred from in-person instruction and most out-of-school activities.

Five Counties Now In The Gold

On Tuesday, five counties – Putnam, Mingo, Logan Boone and Fayette – were reclassified from orange to gold. 

Superintendents of schools in those five counties are deciding Tuesday whether they’ll reopen their classroom to in-person instruction this week, after they were told to close Monday.

In Fayette County, superintendent Gary Hough said he decided his schools will offer a blended learning approach Thursday and Friday, allowing half of the schools’ students to return to the classroom each day.

Student athletes will be allowed to play against other schools in the county this week.

“It has nothing to do with games,” Hough said of his decision. “My reason is really, our parents that signed up for remote have really struggled because we did not have time to teach the students the learning platform. … It has not been as successful as we would’ve liked it to be. And there are parents struggling that didn’t sign up for remote.”

Counties with less than 10 daily cases on a seven-day average will stay in the green and yellow zones, allowing them to hold in-person classes.

In addition to changing the map, Burch announced that the state will impose new rules on students and school personnel to further mitigate coronavirus spread. Starting Tuesday, all students in grades 3 through 12 in gold, orange and red counties are required to wear face masks.

Outside of schools, Coronavirus Czar Clay Marsh said the Justice administration is calling on “much stronger” enforcement from county health departments, when it comes to the governor’s executive orders for face coverings. 

“We know from all of the information that we have available that mask- wearing does reduce the risk of spreading COVID-19,” Marsh said. “The combination of mask-wearing and physical distancing is really so important.”

Local Control

Roughly two hours before Justice spoke with members of the press, his opponent in the 2020 election – Democrat and Kanawha County commissioner Ben Salango – held his own virtual briefing, during which he said Justice’s map and its new changes go against local control.

“Jim Justice has changed the map so many times that our parents are confused,” Salango said. “Our kids, our teachers, our student athletes want to be in school. They want to be on the field. We can only fix this by returning control to local decision-makers. We’ve got to make sure that it’s the county boards of education, that it’s our superintendents making the decisions about whether or not kids in their county go to school, whether or not kids in their county are playing sports.”

After adopting a color-coded system for tracking coronavirus cases from the Harvard Global Institute in August, the Justice administration tweaked the map at least twice, reducing some of the earlier maps’ stringency.

The West Virginia Education Association – a union for school personnel – released a statement Tuesday afternoon, calling the change “unwise and unnecessary.”

“I certainly understand the need to have our students in school but if doing so risks the health of our school employees, students or their families, it is not worth the risk,” WVEA President Dale Lee wrote.

The West Virginia chapter for the American Federation of Teachers agreed, writing in another statement that they question the mid-week timing of the governor’s changes. 

Burch said during Justice’s press briefing Tuesday that he believes creating a new category will actually facilitate more local control than the state offered last week.

“We want this to be a local decision,” Burch said. “We want them to be able to do what they need to do for their community. And I think this absolutely allows him to do that.”

Emily Allen is a Report for America corps member.

 

Federal Judge Denies Latest Attempt To Put Kanye On W.Va. Ballots

A federal judge on Monday denied the latest attempt from rapper Kanye West to make the Mountain State’s ballot this November.

West, who announced his run for U.S. president via Twitter in July, sued Secretary of State Mac Warner in August after election officials rejected his post-primary effort to join the ballot. 

West and others running for office, following the June 9 primary, are required by state law to gather signatures from at least 1 percent of the number of people who cast ballots for their desired seat in the last general election. For the governor’s race this year that’s 7,144 names.

Warner’s office reported that it found more than half of the 15,000 signatures West submitted were not valid, either because they weren’t linked to registered voters or they were illegible.

In West’s complaint from Aug. 28, he asked that U.S. District Judge Irene Berger require that his name be placed on the ballot with his running mate Michelle Tidball, who Forbes reported is a biblical life coach from Cody, Wyoming where West is registered.

U.S. District Judge Irene Berger noted that West “submitted all of his signatures on the absolute deadline for filing,” leaving him “without adequate time to remedy invalidation and submit additional signatures to cure the deficit.”

West has sued and lost similar bids in Wisconsin and Ohio.

In late August, outgoing state Del. Marshall Wilson, an independent from Berkeley County, also sued Warner’s office after falling short of the necessary signature count.

U.S. District Court Judge Thomas Johnston rejected Wilson’s request that the secretary of state’s office extend the post-primary filing deadline, according to the Charleston Gazette-Mail.

Wilson is encouraging his supporters to vote for him as a write-in candidate.

West’s lead attorney in Charleston, J. Mark Adkins with Bowles Rice, did not respond to a request for comment.

Communications director Mike Queen said that Warner’s office had nothing to add on Monday, outside of the judge’s most recent order.

Emily Allen is a Report for America corps member.

W.Va. Governor, Health Leaders Urge Caution As COVID-19 Statistics Take A Turn For The Worse

West Virginia’s governor and health officials warned in a news conference Wednesday afternoon that the state’s reproductive and daily positive rates for COVID-19 were noticeably high.

In fact, West Virginia’s reproductive rate – 1.35 as of Wednesday, per the governor – has been the highest in the country for the last four days, according to coronavirus czar Clay Marsh.

The Mountain State had a daily positivity rate for the coronavirus of 7.78 percent Wednesday, the highest since reaching roughly 12 percent in mid-April, according to data posted on the state’s COVID-19 response website.

“West Virginia, we are absolutely getting worse by the day,” Gov. Jim Justice said Wednesday, shortly after listing off four new coronavirus deaths to reporters at a virtual press briefing. More than 250 West Virginians have died of COVID-19 since March. 

“You need to all know that everyone is trying their hardest to do the very best that they possibly, possibly can for you,” Justice said. “But West Virginians, you’re going to have to buckle down.”

The state’s dreary outlook hit less than a month after the governor was touting the state’s lower coronavirus-related statistics – throughout the first four weeks of August, the DHHR reported that West Virginia had daily positive rates of less than 4 percent. 

“It’s really, really important that everybody be particularly committed to protecting yourselves and protecting each other,” Marsh said.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends avoiding close contact with individuals outside of one’s household and wearing face coverings in public settings. 

Forty-six out of 55 county school districts opened for in-person classes on Tuesday. Nine counties with high daily averages of coronavirus cases, according to a color-coded county alert system from the state, were not allowed to hold in-person classes this week.

On Wednesday, Justice announced Pocahontas County toward the southeast end of the state was the latest to go orange, referring to the second worst color on the map.

“We’re reviewing to make absolutely certain that Pocahontas County is absolutely, legitimately orange, but for what we know at this moment, it is,” Justice said.

West Virginia Public Health Officer Ayne Amjad later clarified that the county went from yellow to orange this week after 10 new people tested positive for the coronavirus in the 8,400-person county on Tuesday.

“We are going to review some information for that county over the next day or so,” Amjad said.

Outbreaks And Testing

The governor reported on Wednesday there were 32 outbreaks in long-term care facilities throughout the state and four church-related outbreaks.

According to data from the Division of Corrections and Rehabilitation posted Wednesday, there were more than 30 active cases of COVID-19 among prisoners at the Mount Olive Correctional Complex in Fayette County. The DCR reported that more than 130 prisoners at Mount Olive have recovered from the coronavirus, and roughly 60 test results for that facility are still pending.

The governor said Wednesday more than 20 employees for Mount Olive have active COVID-19 cases.

Two more prisoners in the regional jails also have active coronavirus cases, one in Charleston and another in Cabell County.

Statewide, West Virginia health officials report there have been more than 463,000 coronavirus tests since March.

West Virginia has had 11,800 confirmed and probable cases of the coronavirus, nearly 2,800 of which were active Wednesday.

The DHHR reported more than 8,700 West Virginians have recovered from the virus since March. However, experts nationwide are still learning how COVID-19 continues to impact patients following recovery from the disease.

“Most people need to follow up with their health care providers for those questions,” Amjad said Wednesday. “Of course, we know of the case of the child that was here in West Virginia [who was diagnosed with Multi-Inflammatory Syndrome in Children], and it’s very important for children who have COVID-19 to follow up with their health care providers. As far as adults go, we do think it’s important as well, and we do see a lot of aftereffects. We’ve seen things with the heart, definitely, and even vascular issues.”

Emily Allen is a Report for America corps member. 
 

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