Inside Appalachia Host Jessica Lilly Previews Podcast, Talks Coal Job Losses on WVNS-TV

This week on Inside Appalachia, we hear from first generation college students, like Savanna Lusk, the daughter of an underground coal miner and Logan Bays the son of a former surface miner. Host Jessica Lilly spoke on WVNS-TV Morning Show, previewing this week’s episode.

Inside Appalachia tells the stories of our people, and how they live today. Host Jessica Lilly leads us on an audio tour of our rich history, our food, our music and our culture.

Subscribe to our Inside Appalachia podcast here or on iTunes here, or on Soundcloud here or on Stitcher here.

This week’s podcast will be available around 3:00 p.m. on Friday, November 13.

Inside Appalachia is a production of West Virginia Public Broadcasting with help from public radio stations in Kentucky, Virginia, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee and West Virginia.

Inside Appalachia airs on West Virginia Public Broadcasting Radio Sundays at 7:00 a.m. and 6:00 p.m.

What's 'West Virginia Speak'? One Project Works to Map the State's Dialect

A professor of linguistics and English at WVU is working to map West Virginia’s dialects and accents.  Kirk Hazen was in Wyoming County earlier this week, collecting interviews from natives.

Jordan Lovejoy, a Pineville native and one of Hazen’s recent research assistants, assisted with the recording sessions.

Lovejoy and her English professor, Kirk Hazen, sit on the other end of the table asking most of the questions. Hazen and his students have collected more than 185 interviews across West Virginia since 1998. He’s the director of the West Virginia Dialect Project.

“I study language variation both dialects today and how language has changed over time,” Hazen said. 

Hazen says he’s hoping to show people how language works. It’s no secret that Appalachians often carry a marked accent. Hazen says another part of this project is to counteract the negative stereotype that often comes with southern or Wyoming County drawl.

Hazen says the project also builds lessons for local schools to teach students that there are a variety of accents and dialects throughout the state.

Hear more from Kirk Hazen and voices across Appalachia on this week’s episode of Inside Appalachia.

Creeks Rising in Southern West Virginia

High waters are creating dangerous conditions in southern West Virginia. Dispatchers say some residents are being evacuated.Emergency dispatchers in…

High waters are creating dangerous conditions in southern West Virginia. Dispatchers say some residents are being evacuated.

Emergency dispatchers in Wyoming County say that the rainfall Wednesday morning caused a mudslide. One resident in Jesse told dispatchers that part of the mountain slid into their residence. Deputies are on scene evaluating the situation.

Several roads in Wyoming County including route 971 in front of Westside High School are closed.  Students were not in class because board members made the proactive decision to cancel school Wednesday, anticipating high waters in the region.

Some roads are also closed in Raleigh County due to high waters including parts of Airport Road between the Mining Academy and the Raleigh County Airport. Traffic is being rerouting because dispatchers say parts of the road have caved in.

Dispatchers also say about 10 homes were evacuated from Violet Lane in Beaver because of rising waters.

Video by Mel Petrey, standing on the bridge by Beaver hardware in Raleigh County.

Some roads in Mercer County are also closed. McDowell County officials are currently out in the region to assess the damage while Summers County is reporting no issues at this time.

Dispatchers throughout the region are bracing for more flood conditions.

What Does it Take to Build New Water Systems in the Coalfields?

This week, we’ve been talking about water in the coalfields. We met folks that deal with frequent water outages and boil water advisories because of crumbling water systems, and heard stories of folks living with no water source at all. We also learned that proper sewage disposal is still a challenge.

 

Progress has been made. Just this past year, the Elkhorn Water Project began. It’s expected to bring clean water to folks living in several coal camp communities along Route 52 in McDowell County. A project in Wyoming County is expected to bring a permanent solution to water issues in Bud and Alpoca.

 

So what does it take to build a new water utility in West Virginia? Well, apparently it’s complicated and depends on the scenario but here’s a breakdown.

Let’s say a community would like to get hooked up to a neighboring water system.

The community would file a formal petition to the closest utility which would fill out an application, which I’m told, isn’t as simple as it sounds.

If they’re requesting funding from the state, the utility has to go through the infrastructure and jobs development council.

Part of the process involves surveys to see if the community wants access to public water. Goode has worked on several water projects in the region during his 30 year tenure as an elected official and explains how surveys can complicate the situation, as they did in Hanover.

Goode says the project hit roadblocks like a lack of funding, which in turn meant they had to resurvey the population, more roadblocks, another survey.

Now the people are at the point where they’re just not willing to fill out any more surveys.  

Once again, it’s a unique situation.

Then there’s Coal Mountain. We heard about this earlier in our series. The community depends on a gas tank on top of a hill that feeds water hoses into another holding tank.

“It’s too far removed to run a water line from another system,” he said. “They do qualify for some Abandoned Mine Lands available but it’s not enough to do what needs to be done.”

That’s usually the biggest challenge; money. It can come from a variety of different sources. Several communities in the coalfields have benefited from Abandoned Mine Land money. It’s federal funds provided by a tax on coal companies.

The money is used to repair damages done by coal companies prior to 1977,  when Congress enacted the Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act. But there’s not enough money to fix even the “high priority health and safety related” sites which are things like unsealed mines or unstable hillsides, let alone several new water systems.

Shane Whitehair with the Regional Planning and Development Council says that another popular souce comes from Small Cities Block Grants. He says that fund usually has about $13 million for new projects. He says the requested funds for water and sewer alone is usually between $60 to $80 million.

So, getting water to rural places through these conventional means is just expensive and sometimes the the Public Service Commission says the residents can’t afford to pay the inevitable utility bill.

It’s often a challenge to find a way to bring water into rural homes, but Goode points out, it’s not impossible. The most important part, is community interest.

Goode is retiring after this term. After more than 30 years of walking miles of red tape, and navigating bureaucratic mazes he says water is fundamental. Working to provide his community with cleaner, reliable water has been the most rewarding aspect of his work.

Still, he’d like to see the process simplified and perhaps a central entity that handles critical water infrastructure.

Water Outages and Advisories Continue in W.Va. Coalfields

While the chemical spill in Charleston left more than 300,000 without usable water, it’s a problem that folks in the coalfields deal with on a regular basis.

Mountainous regions like southern West Virginia have an abundance of water, but the terrain along with aging infrastructure create challenges, just as it has for decades.

Many of the current water systems in place today in the coalfields were installed in the early 1900’s by coal companies. The coal operators, jobs, and most people left the area, leaving remnants behind of a once bustling economy. Remnants like some beautiful buildings, coal tipples …and water systems. 

For some communities a boil water advisory is a way of life … like in Keystone in McDowell County where residents have been on advisory since 2010. Neighboring sister city of Northfork has been on a boil water advisory since 2013. The water systems are currently maintained and operated by individual towns, but the McDowell County Public Service District is planning projects to take on those responsibilities.

Elkhorn Water Project

Just this past year, a project with several phases started that is expected to bring relief to the region.  

Phase I of the “Elkhorn Water Project” will bring a new water system to Elkhorn, Maybeurry and Switchback. Phase II will replace systems in Elkhorn, Keystone and Northfork and Phase III will upgrade systems in Landgraff, Tidewater, Divian, Kimball.

Credit Daniel Walker
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Elkhorn Water Project broke ground summer 2014.

Phase I broke ground this year and is expected to be complete in June. Executive Director of the McDowell County PSD Mavis Brewster says she’s happy with the progress. She says the second phase has not yet been funded. That’s where Betty Younger lives.

Betty Younger: Times have Changed

A coal miner’s daughter, Betty Younger grew up in McDowell County and remembers a very different community during the 1950’s. Younger sits on her front porch which sits close to route 5–a road busy with coal trucks. She reminisces about her days in the Kyle coal camp.

Like so many coal-dependent communities, McDowell has suffered the boom and bust of the industry, and the sharp population decline that comes with it. In the 1950’s there were more than 100-thousand people. Today less 20-thousand remain in the county.

“This part of McDowell County is… I mean there’s nothing here,” Younger said.

Younger has lived in her Elkhorn homes for about six years. There have been so many water issues…  she just assumes not to drink it, rarely uses it for cooking, and doesn’t even count on regular access. 

“You never know when you’re going to have water,” Younger said.

Phase II will also replace systems in Northfork and Keystone. Folks in Keystone have been on a boil water advisory since 2010, while Northfork has been under an advisory since 2013. 

Credit Daniel Walker
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Elkhorn water tower believed to be at least 60 years old.

When all three phases are complete, the project will replace the system that Younger and other residents currently rely on. Phase I will replace a leaky, rusty, tank that is believed to date back to the 1940’s when it was set up by coal companies.

Credit Jessica Lilly
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A water project in Wyoming County began last year when residents in Bud and Alpoca (including an elementary school) were caught in the middle of a tangled and complicated water system deal. After months under a boil water advisory, a project to bring residents dependable, clean water is now underway.

Black Diamond Power Wants Overcharges to be “Customer Contribution"?

According to request filed by attorneys at law Hannah and Hanna PLLC back in August, Black Diamond Power admits to overcharging customers $1,686,338…

According to request filed by attorneys at law Hannah and Hanna PLLC back in August, Black Diamond Power admits to overcharging customers $1,686,338 admits to collecting over a five year period.

The document indicates that the company serves about 4,300 so that’s about $385 per customer.

The company proposes to refund $488, 307 to customers over a five year period which would come through a rate reduction.  But Black Diamond Power wants to treat the remaining money, treat the remaining $1.198 million as a “customer contribution.”

It appears that the Staff of the Public Service Commission filed recommendations on October 1. In that document, the staff of PSC recommends about $900,000 be recorded as a customer contribution and a reduction of rate base.

Black Diamond Power purchases all of its power from American Electric Power. The business serves at the electric company in parts of Clay, Kanawha, Raleigh and Wyoming Counties with business offices in Sophia, Clay and Mullens.

While the Register Herald is reporting that Black Diamond Power Customers will see a reduction of 1.21 cents per kilowatt hour, Susan Small with the Public Service Commission says transcripts from a hearing on this case held on October 22 were not available. Small also told us that no other details were available since it was an open case.

President of Black Diamond Power, David Musser, was not available for comment but told the Register Herald the rate reduction was made possible by way of American Electric Power reducing its charges to Black Diamond, which was in turn able to give customers a lower rate. 

Attorney’s representing the company Hannah and Hannal LLC did not immediately return our request for comment.

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