W.Va. Reaches Tragic Milestone In COVID Related Deaths

More than 7,000 West Virginians have died because of COVID-19. It’s a significant milestone and state officials say we should be paying attention.

More than 7,000 West Virginians have died because of COVID-19. It’s a significant milestone and state officials say we should be paying attention.

West Virginia currently ranks fourth in the nation for the rate of COVID related deaths behind Mississippi, Arizona and Alabama. While the state’s COVID czar, Dr. Clay Marsh, says using data to calculate rankings is a moving target and hard to track, West Virginia’s rate is still well above the national average. He suspects the state ranks so high because of the number of elderly residents, number of residents who haven’t been boosted and the state’s general health.

“We have the third oldest population,” Marsh said. “We have the first or second heaviest, most overweight obese population. We have the highest smoking population, highest heart disease population. Having people that are overweight puts people also at significant risk for COVID 19. And that may be another reason why we’re seeing such a problem from COVID.”

W.Va. ranks second in heart disease, still some of the highest in the country.

West Virginia’s COVID related death rate 389 per 100,000 residents. The national average is 302 per 100,000, according to the Centers for Disease Control. Marsh points out that the age of people dying is in line with national statistics.

“This is really a tragedy, not only because we’ve lost so many great West Virginians,” Marsh said, “but we’ve lost so much of our experienced part of our population, given it’s a disease that’s really impacted negatively our oldest and most vulnerable part of our population.”

In 2020, even before the pandemic, the census revealed that West Virginia’s population declined at the highest rate in the nation over the last 10 years, losing a congressional seat. It’s not the start of the state losing population. It’s trended downward since the 1960 Census. In a small state, 7,000 deaths hit hard.

“It’s a tragedy of huge proportions,” Marsh said. “We’ve become sort of numb to these numbers. But these are real people, real families, real lives, real hopes, real dreams.”

Marsh says in order to change this ranking, West Virginia should look to improve overall health. Perhaps, the milestone will be a wakeup call.

“We know that by working on the general health of our population, that will also help reduce the deaths from COVID-19,” Marsh said. We hope that we can utilize this tragedy, and it is a tragedy of really almost unparalleled proportions for our state, but use this as a way that we can prevent this from happening for future generations.”

Marsh continues to encourage West Virginians to get vaccinated and keep up to date with their boosters. Timelines and more information is at vaccinate.wv.gov.

W.Va. Water Trails: Women Led River Clean Up Crew Inspires New Generation To ‘Trash Your Kayak’ 

Michelle Martin is leading a charge to clean up the Little Coal River and turning the trash into treasures.

Tons of trash and thousands of tires have been removed from West Virginia’s rivers. The work is often spearheaded by West Virginians who just want to enjoy a peaceful float trip in their state. Michelle Martin is leading one charge to clean up the Little Coal River and turning the trash into treasures.

This story is the fifth of a series called West Virginia Water Trails. Hear stories from people coming together across southern West Virginia, to create new economies and communities- with waterways. It’s made possible in part by the National Coal Heritage Area Authority. 

Martin still gets excited about cleaning up the rivers in southern West Virginia. She’s an accountant by day and a self-dubbed river tire rescuer on the weekend. It started back in 2016 during a trip with her sister on the Little Coal River in Boone County.

“We were just in awe of the beauty of the clear water, the landscape,” Martin said. “But then it kept being scarred by tires and trash. So one day she said, ‘Let’s get this tire’ and I said okay let’s get it. To our surprise we were able to wrangle it up on one of our kayaks and we floated it several miles downstream.”

Michelle Martin during a trip on the river while collecting trash.

Martin always carries plastic bags with her to collect trash while she floats. Eventually, it adds up and the kayak starts to look, well … trashy. So, she embraced the idea and started a Facebook group called Trash Your Kayak Clean Up Crew WV.

“We want to inspire other people who are out kayaking because thousands in the summer time are out kayaking the rivers every weekend. So while you’re out there, take five or ten minutes of your time, take a little bag of trash … take away more than what you brought in.”

And it’s working. She’s proud to say there are more than 800 members in the group. The cover photo shows Martin with several other people, flexing behind a large tire.

Trash Your Kayak Clean Up Crew after getting a large tire out of the river and on a jon boat.

“That picture is us getting out ‘Beast 2’ because it’s so big we had to make a plan,” Martin said. “It takes a lot of effort when you’re dealing with a couple hundred pound tire like that. We finally got it up on the jon boat so that was us kind of celebrating like, ‘yeah we did it.’”

The work has inspired young people in the region. One of the Facebook group members is 19 year-old Lilly Bias. She hesitantly joined Martin and her clean up crew on a Saturday morning about two years ago.

“Through that event we learned how great cleaning up the river was and how fun it was,” Bias said, “which was surprising to us.”

Lilly Bias on a river collecting trash after being inspired by Michelle Martin and the Trash Your Kayak Clean Up Crew.

Bias had such a good time, that she ventured back out on the river a few weekends later for a clean up with her mother. Then, Bias organized her own clean up last year with 100 volunteers.

“Once you’re part of Trash Your Kayak, you can not get out,” Bias said. “When you’re experienced, you want to keep coming back and want to keep hanging out with these great people who are trying to better the community.”

Each cleanup is a chance to take part in a little friendly competition in the Facebook group to see who can collect the most tires. It’s also an opportunity to find treasures.

The Facebook page is a place to share ‘treasure’ finds during clean ups.

A few scrolls down from the cover photo on the Facebook page pulls up images of people and items they’ve collected on the rivers. Martin shared a photo of Daniel, who found a glass piggy bank on the Little Coal River, or as Martin likes to call it, “Coal– Mart”, a play on the names of big retailers.

“We’ll post on Facebook, ‘attention Coal-Mart shoppers, clearance on coolers this weekend’ because we find a lot of coolers on the river,” Martin said.

Martin quickly found that volunteering to clean up the river can get expensive.

“We’ve learned that solid steel shovels which are $30 – $40 work better on prying out tires. I’ve used my own funds but I thought ya know what if we kind of use the boards and things from the river and call it River to Home,” Martin said. “I’m getting things from the river to make art for your home.”

She sells the items at festivals to help offset some of the expenses. She also creates items for gifts and others for her own home. One piece she’s decorated her home with is made of three items she found on the river. One natural item resembles a fish.

Michelle Martin created this piece of art from things she found along rivers in W.Va. She calls it“hooking a river cryptid.” The body was made from driftwood from Kanawha Falls and the wood base and brass stem came out of the Coal River.

The Trash Your Kayak Cleanup Crew plans to join Boone County Career and Technical Center students on the river on April 29th. Volunteers are welcome to join the clean up on the Little Coal River and a provided lunch. You can find more information on the Trash Your Kayak Cleanup Crew Facebook page.

$21 Million to Fund Residential Addiction Treatment Programs in W.Va.

Nearly $21 million in state funding has been awarded to expand residential treatment services for substance abuse across West Virginia. The state Department of Health and Human Resources announced the funding Monday. Two of the programs are in Morgantown and two are in Parkersburg, with one apiece in Beckley, Culloden, Huntington, Martinsburg and Wheeling.

Jessica Lilly and Roxy Todd – Featured Speakers at WV Wesleyan Conference

Jessica Lilly and Roxy Todd, two of West Virginia Public Broadcasting’s award-winning reporters, will be keynote speakers at The ENGAGE Conference of Leadership for Change.   The conference will be held on Saturday, March 25, at West Virginia Wesleyan College in Buckhannon, WV.

Jessica and Roxy have won numerous awards for their journalism and storytelling.  In particular, one 2015 episode called “Inside Appalachia: When Strangers Take Our Picture”, won the best Documentary from the Regional Associated Press, and a Murrow award for best documentary.

Roxy Todd is a producer for Inside Appalachia.

The conference is geared toward high school and college students who are passionate about developing their leadership skills to affect positive social change in their communities.  

Roxy Todd is a producer for Inside Appalachia. She’s originally from Tennessee and moved to West Virginia in 2010 to work as an AmeriCorps VISTA volunteer, collecting oral histories for a project called Traveling 219. She has worked for West Virginia Public Broadcasting since 2014. She lives in Charleston, West Virginia.  

Jessica Lilly covers southern West Virginia for West Virginia Public Radio and is the host and producer of Inside Appalachia. A lifelong southern West Virginian, she graduated from Concord University, where she now teaches part time.  Jessica is also the faculty advisor to Concord University’s radio station, WVCU LPFM, a station she was instrumental in launching.  She lives in Athens, West Virginia

For more information and to register, click here.

Watch "West Virginia: A Film History" on WVPB

Watch in four parts, Monday-Thursday, Sept. 7-10 at 8 p.m. on WVPB.

This documentary follows a timeline of historical events, from the state’s first inhabitants to the present day, and follows the contributions of the men and women who shaped the state’s cultural, economic, and political landscapes.

Using paintings, still photographs and motion picture clips, the series helps students explore what it means to be a West Virginian. Narrated by Richard Thomas. 

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