International Students Can Stay In US After Federal Government Restores Visas

Two international students studying in West Virginia will be permitted to stay in the United States following new visa developments on the federal level.

Two international students attending West Virginia universities will be permitted to stay in the United States following visa concerns, the American Civil Liberties Union of West Virginia (ACLU) announced Friday.

In recent weeks, more than 1,000 international students across the United States had their visas revoked for appearing in criminal record checks, including at least 10 students in West Virginia. But an outpouring of lawsuits has led the federal government to reverse course.

Federal immigration officials announced Friday it will restore the visa status of students flagged in its record check, at least temporarily. ICE plans to revisit its review process and reconsider individual cases after an outpouring of similar lawsuits.

“ICE is developing a policy that will provide a framework for … record terminations,” government lawyers said in statements obtained by the Associated Press. “Until such a policy is issued…. plaintiffs in this case and other similarly situated plaintiffs will remain active, or shall be reactivated if not currently active.”

Two of the lawsuits came from the state’s ACLU chapter. The first was filed April 18 on behalf of a Marshall University graduate student whose visa had been revoked over a 2020 misdemeanor charge for driving under the influence of alcohol. A federal judge issued a temporary restraining order this week allowing the student to remain in the United States.

The second lawsuit was filed Thursday on behalf of Sajawal Ali Sohail, a computer science major at West Virginia University (WVU) from Pakistan.

Filed in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of West Virginia, that lawsuit challenged the grounds for revoking Sohail’s F-1 student visa, because he has never been convicted of a crime.

In 2023, Sohail’s family was scammed into paying a man who offered to front Sohail’s college tuition — unknowingly using stolen credit cards. He was initially charged for the scam, but the charges were later dropped when police determined Sohail to be a victim of the fraud, not its perpetrator, according to the ACLU.

In the lawsuit, the ACLU asks the northern U.S. district court to assume jurisdiction over the case and restore Sohail’s student visa status.

“We’ve heard time and again from the Trump administration that they only want to remove criminals from the country, but we know that simply isn’t the case,” said ACLU Executive Director Eli Baumwell in a Thursday press release. “It’s obvious the administration has embarked on a policy of mass terminations regardless of the facts.”

“This is positive news not just for our two clients in West Virginia, but for international students across the country,” the state’s ACLU chapter said in a subsequent press release Friday. “We are continuing to monitor the situation closely, particularly the announcement that ICE will be developing new policies for revoking legal statuses.”

WVU Students Win National Research Scholarships

Each student will receive $7,500 annually for up to two years of undergraduate study to further their research.

Three West Virginia University students have each won a Goldwater Scholarship, a national award that supports undergraduate students with strong commitments to research careers in mathematics, engineering and natural sciences.

Juniors Henry Coyle, an aerospace engineering major, Corinne Hazel, an environmental microbiology major, and Grady King, a data science major, will each receive $7,500 annually for up to two years of undergraduate study to further their research.

The WVU students are just three of the 441 scholars chosen from a pool of more than 5,000 applicants this year.

Founded in 1984, the Goldwater Foundation is a federally endowed agency that has awarded 7680 Goldwater scholarships since 1989. The award honors the late U.S. Sen. Barry Goldwater of Arizona, and his lifetime interest in technology and the sciences.

This Earth Day, WVU Announces Sustainability Goals

To mark Earth Day, West Virginia University has announced a comprehensive set of 20-plus sustainability goals, to attain significant environmental improvements across the university’s campus by 2035.

Today is Earth Day, and people all over the world are taking time to focus on the environment and particularly our effect on the natural world. To mark the day, West Virginia University has announced a comprehensive set of 20-plus sustainability goals, to attain significant environmental improvements across the university’s campus by 2035.

Traci Knabenshue is the director of sustainability at WVU, and spoke with reporter Chris Schulz about the need to focus and act on sustainability now.

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Schulz: Tell me what it is that your office does?

Knabenshue: The Sustainability Office is part of facilities operations, so we focus on the physical sustainability of campus. So we’re not teaching faculty, we’re not setting curriculum around sustainability. We are solely focused on how we’re operating our buildings and our grounds, and how we’re doing that in a more sustainable way.

Schulz: The big news for your office this week is that you published about 20 sustainability goals. What are those goals? 

Knabenshue: We published a list of 24 goals, and they’re in a plan that will accomplish these goals over a 10 year time period. They focus on three main areas, which are reducing waste, protecting land and water, and lowering emissions. We’re really excited to do that during Earth Week this week, because we have never published formal sustainability goals as an institution. Many other universities have had these for several years now, so it’s an exciting day for us to be able to set forth these priorities and work on accomplishing them over the next 10 years.

Schulz: Why was it important to do this now? Why has this not been done before?

Knabenshue: We’ve had a sustainability office working on this for several years, but it’s really important for us to publish a formal list of goals because it gives us a direction for everyone to rally around. All of our faculty staff and students can know at any given time what direction we’re headed in, which sustainability activities are our priorities. 

It also is something that can make sustainability a little more tangible. People can see recycling bins in a hallway and understand that easily, but there are other things like the energy that we’re consuming, or how many fleet vehicles we have that do cause emissions that are a little harder to see. It gives everybody a better sense of those areas, and then it also gives us some specific targets so we can measure how we’re doing in moving down the line over these 10 years, and see that progress through numbers every year.

Schulz: Why is sustainability so important to a university?

Knabenshue: Why it’s important for us to do this is: WVU is a large institution, so we have a large impact on the environment. We’re almost like a community unto ourselves. We’re doing a lot of research. We consume a lot of power. We provide transportation. There’s a lot of activities that we’re doing that have an impact, so it’s important for us to be good stewards of those resources and of the environment that we’re responsible for. 

We’re also educating the generation of students who will have to deal with sustainability in their jobs, no matter what career they’re choosing, sustainability is going to be an issue in their future professions. We also want to make sure that our campus is a safe, clean and pleasant place to learn and focusing on those three R’s (reduce, reuse, recycle) and reducing waste and protecting our land and water all play into what our campus environment is like. Sustainability, also in different areas, can positively impact our bottom line. So if we’re talking about reducing an amount of energy that we’re using, or reducing our fleet vehicles, that’s going to lower our emissions, but it’s also going to save the university money. 

Schulz: Why is there such a specific focus on the reduction aspect of sustainability in these new goals?

Knabenshue: The reducing portion also, I think, goes into us being a large institution. We consume a lot of resources, whether that’s paper we’re using for printing, or talking about composting food waste from our dining halls. Even down to our diversion rate. A diversion rate is everything that we throw away at the end of its useful life. How much is that diverted away from landfills? So the goals that are in that reduced waste category all play into that diversion rate. And it’s not only about what we do with something at the end of its usable life, whether that’s equipment or furniture or PCs that our employees use, but how do we use less of it to begin with.

Schulz: Is there any particular goal that jumps out at you or that you’re perhaps most excited about?

Knabenshue: I’m really excited about the goal to establish a composting program at the university, because it’s something that we hear a lot about from our students. We also see that any university that has a composting program has a higher diversion rate, so is able to divert more waste away from landfill. Another one that’s in that same category of reducing waste is to reduce the amount of single use plastics that we are using, particularly in dining. We hear from students about that one a lot.

Schulz: Is there any type of healthy inter-collegiate competition between the universities in the state or in the region around this issue?

Knabenshue: Actually, around sustainability among universities in the state, we try to share best practices and help each other out. I talk to the Marshall sustainability director occasionally to kind of compare notes on where we’re having successes and challenges. And it’s really about collaboration as far as sustainability goals, because we are in the same region, we do have a lot of the same challenges, so it’s really about helping each other establish new programs or processes that we can all get on board with.

Schulz: This release was planned to coincide with Earth Day, one single day where people tend to focus on the Earth. With that idea that this is a 365 day a year objective, something that you’re always working towards, what would you say is the importance of Earth Day.

Knabenshue: I think the importance of Earth Day is not anything that’s new. I think it’s about using our resources wisely, not using more than we need. Those concepts are not new. Those are things that we can all understand and we can all practice, whether we’re on campus, at WVU, or in our homes, or just out in our own towns and communities. Really basic things like don’t litter. Recycle your waste that’s able to be recycled. Don’t buy more than you need. Turn off the lights when you leave a room. Some really basic things, but basic things that, if everybody does them, do have a magnified impact.

Schulz: Is there anything else about your new goals, about Earth Day, whatever may come to mind that I haven’t given you a chance to discuss with me?

Knabenshue: I just also want to mention that obviously Earth Day is tomorrow (Tuesday, April 22), the 55th Earth Day since it began being celebrated in 1970, and we have a whole slate of activities here on campus that you can see on the sustainability website. We also have, coming up, the annual Blue and Gold Mine sale, which is our student move out sale, where we have students and community members donate usable items, like clothing, sporting goods, small appliances. We take it all over to the football stadium and set up a giant yard sale like event, and all of the proceeds from that go to the United Way. Annually, we divert about 25 tons of goods from landfills through that sale, and we’ve raised over $200,000 since we’ve been doing the sale for our local United Way chapter. So it’s a great diversion event for us and a fun event to go to, and that is on May 17.

New Sustainability Goals At WVU And A Plant-Based Appalachian Table, This West Virginia Morning

On this West Virginia Morning, in honor of Earth Day West Virginia University has announced a comprehensive set of more than 20 sustainability goals. And from Inside Appalachia, perfecting recipes that take a plant-based approach to the Appalachian table.

On this West Virginia Morning, today is Earth Day, and people all over the world are taking time to focus on the environment and our effect on the natural world.

To mark the day, West Virginia University has announced a comprehensive set of more than 20 sustainability goals, to attain significant environmental improvements across the university’s campus by 2035. Traci Knabenshue, director of sustainability at WVU, spoke with reporter Chris Schulz about the need to focus and act on sustainability now.

And from Inside Appalachia, Jan Brandenburg is a pharmacist, writer and vegan in Eastern Kentucky. Over the last 30 years, she’s collected and perfected recipes that take a plant-based approach to the Appalachian table. She spoke with Bill Lynch about her new book The Modern Mountain Cookbook.

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 Shepherd University and Marshall University School of Journalism and Mass Communications.

Eric Douglas produced this episode.

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

New ‘Western’ Civics Center At WVU Passes Legislature

State lawmakers have paved the way for a new center at West Virginia University for civics education, which would focus on “classical western history and culture.”

Find more legislative updates on our 2025 Final Hours Live Blog.

State lawmakers have paved the way for a new center at West Virginia University for civics education, which would focus on “classical western history and culture.”

On Saturday, members of the West Virginia House of Delegates convened for the final day of this year’s legislative session. They voted to approve changes set forth by the West Virginia Senate to House Bill 3297, which would require the state’s flagship university to open the Washington Center for Civics, Culture and Statesmanship.

Their proposal just needs the governor’s approval to take effect. The idea for the center is modeled after similar state-established civics centers at universities in Ohio, Florida, North Carolina and more, according to Del. Pat McGeehan, R-Hancock, lead sponsor and House majority leader.

The bill passed the House on March 21. During floor arguments, proponents said the center would expand educational opportunities on campus, plus attract new faculty and students.

Opponents worried that requiring WVU to open a new center bypassed the university’s authority, and argued subject matter covered by the center already exists within other university departments.

At the time, Del. John Williams, D-Monongalia, said he was also worried the bill did not allocate funding to the center, especially in light of the $45 million budget shortfall the university faced in 2023.

The version of the bill that has now passed the West Virginia Legislature still does not specify where funding for the center will come from.

During its review in the Senate, the bill underwent modifications affirming that the university will have oversight over the Washington Center, removing text that described the center as “independent.”

The center would be run by a director who is an “expert on the western tradition, the American founding and American constitutional thought,” according to the bill’s text.

The Senate adopted an amendment from Sen. Mike Stuart, R-Kanawha, that would clarify that members of the state legislature cannot work at the center or serve as its director for up to two years after the end of their term at the State Capitol.

Gov. Patrick Morrisey now has 15 days to veto or sign off on House Bill 3297. If he does not act on the bill, it will become law by default.

Morgantown Federal Energy Lab Could Host Data Center For AI

The National Energy Technology Laboratory campus is one of 16 sites nationwide identified by the U.S. Department of Energy to develop data centers.

A federal energy lab in Morgantown could become the site of a data center to support artificial intelligence.

The National Energy Technology Laboratory campus is one of 16 sites nationwide identified by the U.S. Department of Energy to develop data centers.

The Morgantown site consists of about 50 acres and has access to a power transmission line and a substation.

Two other sites near Pittsburgh that are part of the same laboratory are also under consideration.

One advantage of the Morgantown site is its proximity to West Virginia University and its research programs. The Morgantown lab already conducts research on AI and advanced computing.

The Department of Energy envisions scaling up the sites quickly to make them operational by 2027. Energy Secretary Chris Wright calls the effort the Manhattan Project of global AI dominance.

“With today’s action, the Department of Energy is taking important steps to leverage our domestic resources to power the AI revolution, while continuing to deliver affordable, reliable and secure energy to the American people,” Wright said in a statement.

Other sites on the list include the Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee, the Paducah Gaseous Diffusion Plant in Kentucky and the Portsmouth Gaseous Diffusion Plant in Ohio.

Criteria include ample land and water, access to the power grid or the ability to generate power on the site.

The West Virginia Legislature is considering House Bill 2014, to expand the number of microgrids in the state to support data centers.

On Wednesday, Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro announced that what was the state’s largest coal-burning power plant would become the site of a 4.5 gigawatt natural gas plant to power a data center. The Homer City Generating Station closed in 2023 and was demolished last month.

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