Potomac River Access Site Open During Water Plant Project

A popular access site on the Potomac River in West Virginia will remain open while a water plant improvement project is completed, the Division of Natural Resources said.

A popular access site on the Potomac River in West Virginia will remain open while a water plant improvement project is completed, the Division of Natural Resources said.

Parking near the boat ramp will be limited while the work is done, the agency said.

It’s expected the work associated with the water plant project will take about 15 months. Much of the parking area at the access site in Shepherdstown will likely be occupied by construction work.

The Division of Natural Resources is working with the city to improve the access site after construction is finished. Improvements may include increased parking for fishing and boating visitors who use the site, the agency said.

W.Va. Professional Theater Festival Founder To Retire At The End Of The Year

The founder of one of the country’s top theater festivals for new plays is retiring.

Ed Herendeen has been the producing director for the Contemporary American Theater Festival (CATF) in Shepherdstown, West Virginia for the past 30 years.

He will step down in December.

According to a news release, Herendeen founded the festival in 1991 and was key to guiding the organization to its well-respected status as a professional theater organization.

“At the time, there were so few places that fully produced new work,” Herendeen said. “There was a critical need for the nurturing of, and the development and production of new plays.”

A major part of CATF’s founding was thanks to then-Shepherd College president Michael Riccards. Today, Shepherd University remains the festival’s home.

With Herendeen retiring, Associate Producing Director Peggy McKowen has been appointed as the festival’s Acting Producing Director.

There will be a nationwide search for CATF’s next leader.

Since 1991, the festival has produced more than 130 new plays, including 56 world premieres.

“It’s always been about the work on stage, about the voice of the playwrights. The plays deal with timely issues. They ask questions. They inspire conversation and even controversy. That’s why the festival has grown,” Herendeen said.

Many of CATF’s plays have gone on to Broadway and Off-Broadway.

“Shepherd University has enjoyed a very special partnership with Ed and the Contemporary American Theater Festival for over 30 years,” said Shepherd University President Mary Hendrix. “Ed’s creative vision and unparalleled commitment to authenticity and excellence will long be remembered. His passion for performance and evoking emotional responses to real life issues underscore his remarkable legacy. Ed is an icon of our times.”

New Health Care Facility Opening In September In Shepherdstown

Residents and university students in Shepherdstown will have access to a new health care facility starting next month.

WVU Medicine East announced this week that its new medical office building is expected to open mid-September.

The facility will provide new health care opportunities for people living in Shepherdstown and students at Shepherd University. It will offer primary and specialty care and have x-ray and laboratory services.

“We are excited to provide high-quality healthcare services in the Shepherdstown area,” said Aaron Henry, vice president of ambulatory operations for WVU Medicine East. “We have plans to add more primary care providers as the practice grows and will offer a number of our specialty services such as behavioral health and cardiology on a rotating basis.”

Up until now, people in the Shepherdstown area, with the exception of one primary care office, have had to drive anywhere from 15 to 25 minutes to receive medical care.

“The fact that Shepherdstown only has one primary care physician is why opening a medical facility there is so important,” said Teresa McCabe, vice president of Marketing and Development at WVU Medicine East. “[We are] pleased to be able to offer Shepherdstown residents improved access to primary and specialty health care services.”

The new WVU Medicine East location will staff two family medicine physicians and a pediatrician, according to a press release, and offer “walk-in” hours once it opens.

Additionally, the building will include a space for the WVU School of Medicine Eastern Campus to establish a teaching kitchen that will offer healthy cooking classes for patients as well as medical students in the MedChefs program, according to McCabe.

WVU Medicine operates more than 100 University Healthcare clinics, including physician offices, in the Eastern Panhandle region.

They also operate two hospitals in the area – Berkeley Medical Center and Jefferson Medical Center. These are the only hospitals available to residents in Jefferson and Berkeley counties other than the Martinsburg VA Medical Center.

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting, with support from Marshall Health and Charleston Area Medical Center.

Shepherdstown Town Council Urges Governor To Require Face Masks In W.Va.

A month after passing a resolution strongly encouraging Shepherdstown businesses to require face masks inside their establishments, the Shepherdstown Town Council is formally calling on Gov. Jim Justice to mandate face masks in public spaces across West Virginia.

The Shepherdstown Town Council on Tuesday passed the resolution requesting Justice make wearing masks a requirement.

Shepherdstown Mayor Jim Auxer said during the meeting, held via the video conferencing app Zoom, that masks help limit the spread of the coronavirus, according to health officials. And he pointed to the governor’s frequent call for citizens to wear masks when out in public.

“It is divisive but maybe if [Justice] hears from constituents, about how we feel about that, maybe it’ll help him make a decision,” Auxer said. “If he really feels it’s important, then we’re helping him do that.”

Of the council members present on the Zoom call, only one member, Mark Everhart, spoke against the resolution, saying requiring masks goes too far.

While Justice has urged West Virginians to wear masks in public, he has not made it mandatory, and insists if he did so, it would cause division and tread on people’s freedoms.

In late May, the Shepherdstown Town Council passed a resolution that “strongly encourages” businesses in town to require face masks of their customers. The resolution was also accompanied by a letter from the Shepherdstown Police Department saying businesses have the option to get police involved if someone refuses to wear a mask and enters a business anyway. The person could be subject to a trespassing charge.

Some states in the country have mandated wearing masks in public places, such as Maryland, California, and some cities in Arizona, but largely, it is only a recommendation in the United States.

The Eastern Panhandle has consistently seen high numbers of positive coronavirus cases. Berkeley County has held the highest number of cases in the state for several weeks.

To-date, the West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources has confirmed 440 positive cases of coronavirus in Berkeley County and 224 positive cases in Jefferson County.

As of Tuesday evening, DHHR has confirmed 2,905 total positive cases statewide and 93 deaths.

'No Shirt, No Shoes, No Mask, No Service' – Shepherdstown Takes Strides To Encourage Face Masks

Updated on July 2, 2020 at 5:30 p.m. 

Scientific evidence is mounting that wearing a mask is an effective way to help prevent the spread of the coronavirus. But in many states, including West Virginia, officials have been reluctant to mandate mask wearing in public.

In the Eastern Panhandle, one town has passed a resolution that “strongly encourages” mask wearing and gives businesses the option to get local police involved if customers refuse to wear one inside their establishments.

At many businesses in Shepherdstown, there are bright orange posters in windows that read “PROTECT: Masks Required Here,” including a popular shop called the German Street Coffee and Candlery.

“We were issued masks by the town, which I thought was awesome, so when people come without their masks, we can offer them one,” said German Street Coffee and Candlery employee Alexandra Casserley.

Casserley and her co-workers say they were glad to hear about the resolution passed by the Shepherdstown Town Council in late May that strongly encourages mask wearing. She said while they haven’t had any issues with customers refusing to wear a mask, she feels safer knowing they can require customers to wear them and that if it was necessary, the police could get involved.

“It just gives us a bit of backup if an individual is difficult,” she said. “I wouldn’t necessarily want to cause a huge amount of trouble, but I would like them to be escorted from the premises if they will not cooperate and are aggressively coming in to make a point.”

Shepherdstown Mayor Jim Auxer said the council can’t require anyone to wear a mask, unless the governor makes wearing one indoors mandatory. But he maintains that under state statute, what they’re doing is perfectly legal to protect Shepherdstown residents, visitors and to empower the town’s businesses.

He said the decision to pass the resolution was based on guidelines set by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Jefferson County Health Department.

Auxer also points to the region’s increase in coronavirus cases and the fact that Shepherdstown is a tourist town that’s close to the Washington, D.C., metro region.

Jefferson County has seen more than 200 positive cases of coronavirus. Its neighbor, Berkeley County, has held the highest number of positive coronavirus cases in the state for weeks with more than 400 positive cases.

These cases, according to officials, are mostly attributed to community spread and the region’s close proximity to Washington, D.C., Baltimore, MD and Virginia. Recently, several West Virginians have traveled to Myrtle Beach in South Carolina, and Gov. Jim Justice has cautioned vacationers to practice social distancing, good hand hygiene and wear masks if they feel they must travel.

Both Jefferson and Berkeley Counties remain on high alert for the virus.

“Jefferson and Berkeley initially were considered hotspots,” Auxer said. “And the Jefferson County Health Department is adamant in their suggestion that masks are important.”

According to the town resolution, a business owner is “strongly encouraged” to require or at least encourage the wearing of masks within their establishments. As private entities, they have the right to set their own policies, so requiring a patron to wear a mask to enter is a choice a business can already make.

But along with that resolution, the Shepherdstown Police Department also provided a letter to Shepherdstown businesses that says police can get involved if someone refuses to wear a mask and enters a business anyway. The person could be subject to a trespassing charge if they insist on coming inside after being asked to wear a mask and still refuse to do so.

“It’s no different than no shirt, no shoes, no service; no shirt, no shoes, no mask, no service,” Auxer said.

Other establishments in Shepherdstown are also glad to have the resolution, though it’s not as easy to enforce everywhere, including places like a restaurant, where patrons must remove their mask to eat and drink.

Tabitha Dolan, general manager of the Blue Moon Café, said she encourages customers to wear masks up until their food arrives, and when asked to wear one, most people comply. She doesn’t anticipate needing to reach out to the police to enforce mask-wearing inside of her restaurant. 

“I really don’t think it’s going to come to that here,” Dolan said. “Most of the customers are longtime customers, and we don’t really usually have any ruckus here. I mean, that’s the bottom line. So, I don’t think that we’ll have to worry about it. And I hope that we don’t.”

Dolan admits she doesn’t always wear a mask in public herself, because she has a lung disorder and said she has difficulty breathing with one on. But she requires her staff to wear a mask while working. They also have a sign in their window asking visitors to wear one.

“I have my opinions about it both ways, but I also want my staff to feel comfortable,” she said. “So, I am kind of glad that they did pass [the resolution]. But on the other side of that, you know, I have to think about people like me as well.”

In some communities in the United States, where masks have been mandated in public spaces, there has been some pushback. But according to Shepherdstown Mayor Auxer, that hasn’t been the case locally.

Community reaction on one Facebook post about Shepherdstown’s resolution has about 90 comments – mostly negative – saying the move will hurt the town’s businesses and local economy.

But responses on the Shepherdstown Visitors Center’s Facebook page were mostly supportive with many people showing support with “Like” and “Love” reaction emojis.

At the state level, Justice continues to urge West Virginians to wear masks when in public spaces, but has so far, decided against issuing a statewide requirement that people wear masks indoors, which other states have done.

“First of all, it’s almost impossible to enforce,” Justice https://youtu.be/CW5D0-7PD_8?t=3734″>said in a June 24 virtual press briefing. “And the second part of it is just this: it will divide us. They’ll be people that think now we’ve gone too far and we’re really treading on their freedoms … If we can do it on a voluntary basis where we’re all pulling the rope together, we’ll be a lot better off.”

Casserley at the German Street Coffee and Candlery said she thinks the state should consider passing a statewide mandate to require the wearing of masks in public.

“I know there’s this argument, ‘but my freedom, my freedom,’ but I think with freedom comes responsibility. And we are all responsible for other people’s health,” she said. “So, I think by wearing a mask, you are showing respect for others, not necessarily thinking just of yourself.”

West Virginia Public Broadcasting reached out to the Charleston, Morgantown, Huntington and Wheeling city clerk’s to see if some of the state’s larger cities had done anything like Shepherdstown, but at this time, they have not made similar moves.

Last week, however, the Harpers Ferry Town Council passed a resolution almost identical to Shepherdstown’s. Harpers Ferry’s resolution is also accompained by a letter from the Harpers Ferry Police Department telling businesses they have the option to call local police if patrons refuse to wear a mask and refuse to leave the establishment.

To-date, West Virginia has seen more than 3,000 positive cases of the virus with more than 90 deaths, according to the West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources.

May 8, 1892: U.S. and Confederate Congressman Alexander Boteler Dies

U.S. and Confederate Congressman Alexander Boteler died on May 8, 1892, shortly before his 77th birthday. Before launching his political career, Boteler was a farmer and the owner of a hydraulic cement plant on the Potomac River at Shepherdstown. He entered the U.S. House of Representatives as a Whig in 1859. That same year, he interviewed John Brown extensively after Brown’s raid on Harpers Ferry. A skilled artist, Boteler also made a sketch of the imprisoned abolitionist.

Boteler was a slave owner who hoped to preserve the institution of slavery while still keeping Virginia in the Union. However, after Virginia seceded from the United States at the start of the Civil War, he backed his home state and served in the Confederate Congress. Boteler designed the official seal of the Confederate States of America, featuring a likeness of George Washington. He also served as a volunteer aide to “Stonewall” Jackson. In retaliation for his service to the South, Union General David Hunter burned down Boteler’s home in Shepherdstown in 1864.

After the war, Alexander Boteler helped found Shepherd College and lost two races for the U.S. Congress. 

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