Appalachian Power customers may be seeing another price hike, caregivers are under stress, particularly during the holidays, and a new mountain roller coaster is a destination for fun seekers in Mercer County.
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What Additional Cuts Would Mean for Higher Ed
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On The Legislature Today, education is once again debated on the Senate floor, but this time the education chair shares concerns over a bill he’s sponsoring.
In the House, delegates progress a Right-to-Work bill one that makes changes to the current law being challenged in the state’s court system.
And advocates are pushing second chance laws that they say will help felons reintegrate into their communities and keep them out of prison in the future.
Those stories and more on The Legislature Today.
Members of the Senate were supposed to take up a bill Thrusday to repeal the Common Core education standards and replace them with Math and English standards written some 20 years ago by California and Massachusetts. The bill, however, was pushed back for the second day in a row, Thursday after the chamber’s Education chair spoke against it.
Senators also debated an election bill on the floor Thursday, one that deals with how the governor is required to fill vacancies in elected offices. The bill is the result of a 2016 resignation in the Senate, one by a former member who changed party affiliation to give Republicans a majority in the chamber.
A bill that sparked some debate in the Senate has made its way to the House of Delegates. It would make changes to the West Virginia Workplace Freedom Act, or the state’s right-to-work law.
Testimonies of drug addiction, recovery, jail sentences and second chances were hand delivered to House Speaker Tim Armstead’s office Thursday by constituents advocating for so called “second chance” legislation.
West Virginia is aging faster than the rest of the nation. More than 1 in 5 residents are over 65, and as young people leave the state, the gap between those who need care and those who can provide it keeps growing. At the same time, elder care has shifted from nursing homes to home-based support — but there aren’t enough workers to keep up. Us & Them explores the looming caregiving crisis and what it means for families, workers and the future of care.
Appalachian Power customers may be seeing another price hike, caregivers are under stress, particularly during the holidays, and a new mountain roller coaster is a destination for fun seekers in Mercer County.
People who buy health care through the federal marketplace are set to see their premiums rise 40 percent or more. It depends on whether Congress extends the 2021 enhanced subsidies that help people pay their premiums. Ruby Rayner is a reporter for the Chattanooga Times Free Press who’s been covering this story in Tennessee. Inside Appalachia’s Mason Adams spoke with Raynor.
We're an aging nation, and the cost of care is lower the longer people stay in their homes. The trend has led to an explosion in home-based support and care services. On the next episode of Us & Them, host Trey Kay focuses on the challenges of care for our growing elderly population.