West Virginia
West Virginia aims to place abused kids with relatives. But for these kinship families, help is limited.
LOST CREEK – After her son was grown, police would wake Judy Utley in the middle of the night and ask her to take in her two grandchildren and their two half-siblings.
After a few months with her, they’d go back to their parents.
“Six months down the road, they were back at my house in the middle of the night, barefoot with no clothes,” Utley said.
Even though the kids were repeatedly dropped off there, she could never be fully ready.
Clothes she had purchased them six months before no longer fit. And Utley, who lives in Harrison County, couldn’t afford to quickly meet all state requirements to keep them more permanently, like constructing an extra bedroom.
In a state with desperate need for foster families, West Virginia officials frequently tout the high numbers of kids placed in kinship families, meaning in the care of grandparents, other relatives or close family friends. But relatives face more mental health strain than other caregivers, and state health officials don’t offer the extra assistance these caregivers need to help themselves and the children in their care heal.
On a moment’s notice, kinship families take in children who’ve been through traumatic events like abuse and neglect. Older caregivers, like grandparents, are also more likely to face existing challenges, like living in poverty with their own health struggles.
And grandparents are also likely to experience guilt and shame over their own children’s parenting failures, according to multiple studies and federal data. Those findings are compiled in a comprehensive report released in 2023 by the nonprofit group Generations United and its Grandfamilies & Kinship Support Network.
At the end of December, the state had more than 3,000 kids in kinship foster care. But many grandparents are raising their grandchildren outside of the state’s system. In 2023, grandparents in 16,000 West Virginia households said they had responsibility for their grandchildren, according to the U.S. Census data.
West Virginia state officials help kinship foster care families prepare to take on childrearing in three main ways: offering a training program that includes techniques for dealing with grief, loss and trauma-related behavior, giving financial assistance, and enrolling kids in Medicaid, which they can use for mental health and other health care treatment.
Prospective foster parents, who open their homes through one of the state’s foster care agencies, have already participated in this intensive training and are eligible for financial assistance as soon as children are placed in their care.
But grandparents or kinship families haven’t had the training for the urgent situations they face. Instead, they receive a waiver for about $350 for immediate needs like clothing or bedding for each child. And they have to figure out how to get the state-required training, with those kids already in their care, before they become eligible for the subsidy foster parents regularly receive.
Utley would have a clean house with food in the refrigerator. But her income was stretched thin while caring for four kids, so she couldn’t afford more costly expenses required by state health officials, like replacing her water heater. But instead of helping her pay for it, child welfare workers would report the broken heater as a deficiency in her caregiving when determining whether to move the children.
Utley also comes from a family with multiple generations raised by grandparents – kids and grandkids who followed in their elders’ mental health and substance use problems footsteps.
“It wasn’t addressed by my grandparents,” she said. “It wasn’t addressed by my parents. It wasn’t addressed by me.”
According to Utley, the child welfare workers who visited her, and who faced overly large caseloads and understaffing, seemed more focused on “checking boxes” than offering help by making referrals to public benefit programs, charities, baby-sitters and mental health professionals.
She said if they focused on grandparents’ potential and their unmet needs, “they might see the actual human, and the actual situation.”
Grandparents go without help
Now in her late 70s, Bonnie Dunn was raised by her grandparents.
She said that from then to present day, the same problems have persisted, including tight budgets, stress and too few mental health providers in situations with grandparents unexpectedly caring for children who feel lost and unwanted.
“The story hasn’t changed,” she said. “Except statistically, it’s worse.”
And now, grandparents face additional stressors like learning about safely using social media and worrying about the threat of the opioid epidemic.

To help grandfamilies address their struggles, Dunn, of Kanawha County, helped launch the state’s Healthy Grandfamilies program through West Virginia State University, in 2016. But even then, she knew the program would only scratch the surface of the need. Dunn retired in 2022.
“I’m sure that West Virginia State University is still doing what they can do, but it’s got to be bigger and more concentrated,” she said. “Because it’s not going away.”
State lawmakers have allocated the program $800,000 per budget year for the last several years.
Where local programs are offered, organizers bring in health care providers to talk about stress, trauma and self-care. Grandfamilies are trained on using new technology and financial planning. They’re also offered informal support groups.
But not all areas have it. The program is only provided in about half of the state’s 55 counties.
Melissa Lilly, director of the program, did not respond to interview requests, and Jack Bailey, university spokesperson, said programs with only a few participants don’t receive funding, only limited supplies like journals and teacher guides. He didn’t answer a question about the exact number of programs fully operating.
Before COVID-19, Wood County had an active Healthy Grandfamilies program, according to Denise Hughes, director of programming for the Children’s Home Society.
The Children’s Home Society and local Family Support Center played major roles. They held regular sessions, where grandparents learned about topics like healthy communication.
The grandparents were also able to be part of support groups.
They found that other grandparents, too, were parenting grandchildren as they worried about their own children struggling with substance use disorders and grieved their children lost to overdoses.
“They all kind of commiserated, and they became such a good support for each other,” Hughes said.
But when COVID hit, virtual meetings were too difficult on grandparents, according to Hughes. And even before then, funding was lacking.
Now in Wood County, there are no grandfamilies meetings, but kinship caregivers and others in need can still get help from the Children’s Home Society and Family Support Center.
Without enough Healthy Grandfamilies programs statewide, Department of Human Services spokesperson Angel Hightower said state officials agree that families should reach out to Family Support Centers for help and to forge connections with other caregivers. She also said the agency’s Bureau for Family Assistance helps grandfamilies and other kinship caregivers with services like paying for auto repairs or clothing, as well as connecting families with educational opportunities like GED programs.
But according to Hughes, they can mainly only assist with material needs. With help from donations and grants, they’re able to offer supplies like diapers and clothes and help prevent evictions by paying for back rent or utilities.

In the county seat of Parkersburg, Cindy Cunningham had never heard of any programs aimed at supporting grandfamilies, although she does take her granddaughter, whom she is raising, to mental health treatment.
A multitude of research, referenced in a 2023 report on building resilience in children in grandfamilies, found that children involved in the child welfare system are more likely to act out because they need help after experiencing abuse or neglect and other scary experiences. Their resulting behaviors can result in emotional and physical stress for their grandparents.
Cunningham said her son lives two doors down from her, but she hasn’t talked to him in more than a year. Every once in a while she’ll see him getting in or out of his car.
“They live on the same side of the street, and it’s almost like they live in another town,” she said. “It’s really fragmented my family.”
But instead of seeking her own treatment, she’ll informally ask for a little time to talk to the psychologist first before her granddaughter’s sessions.
She offers suggestions about problems at home that the psychologist and her granddaughter might discuss in their session.
But those talks are still mainly focused on her granddaughter’s needs and safety – not hers.
She worries that if she seeks help, her granddaughter will be taken away.
“I know that kind of sounds silly,” she said. “But there’s always that fear.”
Consistent support makes a difference
Now a volunteer trainer for Harrison County’s Healthy Grandfamilies program, Utley helps families learn to communicate with abused or neglected kids who are always on edge without setting them off, and she gives grandparents an opportunity to share their frustrations.
She’s come a long way. She remembers what it was like living with repeated upheaval when she was a child. Every several months, her father went through another alcohol binge, and she’d be swiftly sent to her grandparents.
So eventually, Utley came to realize that like her, the grandchildren she was raising had learned to be on their guard to run or fight.
She had to gradually help one grandchild learn to sleep without her shoes on, because the child felt like she always had to be ready to leave without notice.
Utley had frequent fights with another grandchild, before a child welfare worker and a neighbor helped them learn to separate until they calmed down. Then when they reconvened, they’d hold up make-shift mini-stop signs, made from popsicle sticks, giving each person time to talk without interruption.

“If we don’t know better, we don’t do better, and we don’t break the generational curse,” Utley said.
Harrison County’s grandfamilies program is well-attended. Tammy Romano, the program’s social worker, said some people from other counties have turned to them for help.
That program is successful in part because it heavily relies on donations and partnerships, and also because like Utley, program workers recognize change takes time.
Twice a year, the local program in Harrison County provides 11 weeks of once-a-week training. They also offer informal support groups once a month.
Harrison County receives about $10,000 per fiscal year from the state fund, so it’s also dependent on close partnerships with the United Way and the school system. School guidance counselors regularly refer families to Romano.
Without that community assistance, they wouldn’t have been able to serve the hundreds of grandfamilies who’ve sought help over the years.
Participants in the program have asked, “What made my child think that it was okay to get in all this trouble, do these drugs and bring their kids to me and take off? He wasn’t raised like that. What did I do wrong?”
While Romano is present during groups, she mostly just listens. The families decide among themselves what to talk about and encourage each other, in part by sharing that they’re experiencing the same emotions.
The Generations United report shows that when grandparents receive the emotional support and financial assistance they need to be a caregiver for kids who’ve been hurt, the children in their custody are more likely to grow into healthier adults with stable lives.
Romano noted that she has to build relationships with grandparents, though, before they trust her enough to share those painful feelings.
Like child welfare workers, Romano does home visits.
She sees that mental health help is much-needed, so she makes referrals to local treatment providers.
“I haven’t seen anyone who says no.”
Mountain State Spotlight is part of the Mental Health Parity Collaborative, a group of newsrooms that are covering stories on mental health care access and inequities in the U.S. The partners on the collaborative include The Carter Center and newsrooms in select states across the country.
West Virginia
Monongalia County Commission may intervene in MARL transmission case – WV MetroNews
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. — The heavily-publicized NextEra Energy MidAtlantic Resiliency Link (MARL) project being considered by the state Public Service Commission may have the Monongalia County Commission as an intervenor.
The county commission unanimously agreed earlier this week to consider the move.
The commission heard more more information at this week’s meeting from groups opposing the project that will encompass parts of three states and cut through nearly half a dozen counties in West Virginia.
Commissioner Tom Bloom read from a letter.
“On behalf of all the residents in the four affected counties, (the commission is asked) to please help us fight the proposed transmission line and consider Mon County becoming an intervener,” said Bloom. “So I did want to put that on the record.”
The approximately 107-mile-long MARL project would be powered in Greene County, Pennsylvania. The 500-kilovolt line would support data center development in Virginia and would also include crossings in parts of Maryland, with the state portion expected to cost approximately $482 million.
According to Monongalia County resident Juliet Marleer, one of many who have vocally opposed the project moving forward, aspects related to costs have continued to change in the negative as well as additional parameters that would make areas affected by the planned power line much worse. Aspects of the project that have been pointed out by organizations like West Virginia Against Transmission Injustice in recent weeks.
“It has gone up from the original $440 million to $1.16 billion (price tag),” said Marleer. “So right now, my question is, how do we find out exactly what’s going on here?”
Bloom said he’s concerned about recent adjustments about the width of property needed for the line.
“That’s the one that bothers me the most, the siding corridor width is 200 to 500 feet, however, with aerial easement blowouts, the maximum width could be 715 feet,” said Bloom.
The county commission plans to make a decision on intervenor status in the near future. The state PSC is expected to schedule public hearings on the MARL application as early as May or June.
“I think that the commission can play a part in helping with that lift in regard to making sure that we have competent legal counsel representing us and our citizens,” said Commissioner Sean Sikora. “It’s been on our list of things to do and something we’ll certainly have a conversation about.”
An informational meeting for those in opposition of the MARL project will be hosted at the Cheat Lake Volunteer Fire Department sometime later this month. A specific date has not been announced.
West Virginia
West Virginia Lottery results: See winning numbers for Mega Millions, Daily 3 on March 6, 2026
The results are in for the West Virginia Lottery’s draw games on Friday, March 6, 2026.
Here’s a look at winning numbers for each game on March 6.
Winning Mega Millions numbers from March 6 drawing
08-19-26-38-42, Mega Ball: 24
Check Mega Millions payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Daily 3 numbers from March 6 drawing
9-9-6
Check Daily 3 payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Daily 4 numbers from March 6 drawing
6-9-5-6
Check Daily 4 payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Cash 25 numbers from March 6 drawing
05-13-16-19-23-25
Check Cash 25 payouts and previous drawings here.
Feeling lucky? Explore the latest lottery news & results
When are the West Virginia Lottery drawings held?
- Powerball: 11 p.m. ET on Monday, Wednesday and Saturday.
- Mega Millions: 10:59 p.m. ET Tuesday and Friday.
- Lotto America: 10:15 p.m. ET on Monday, Wednesday and Saturday.
- Daily 3, 4: 6:59 p.m. ET Monday through Saturday.
- Cash 25: 6:59 p.m. ET Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, and Friday.
This results page was generated automatically using information from TinBu and a template written and reviewed by a USA Today editor. You can send feedback using this form.
West Virginia
DNR Releases total deer whitetail numbers for 2025, down significantly from 2024 – WV MetroNews
DNR PRESS RELEASE
CHARLESTON, W.Va. — The West Virginia Division of Natural Resources (WVDNR) today announced that hunters harvested 92,553 white-tailed deer during the 2025-2026 seasons, which is a 17 percent decrease from the 2024 deer harvest of 111,646 and 14 percent below the 5-year average of 107,434.
This year’s decreased harvest was caused by an increase in hard mast production, which often results in decreased harvests due to the difficulty of tracking and targeting game species spread out over a landscape. Several counties also experienced an outbreak of hemorrhagic disease, which likely impacted hunter success, especially in the western part of the state.
According to preliminary numbers collected through the WVDNR’s electronic game checking system, hunters harvested 33,823 bucks during the traditional buck firearm season, 25,453 antlerless deer during all antlerless firearm hunting opportunities, 29,654 deer during the urban and regular archery/crossbow seasons, 3,102 deer during the muzzleloader season and 501 deer during the Mountaineer Heritage season.
Click here to download county-by-county 2025-2026 deer harvest numbers.
Antlerless Deer Season
Hunters harvested 25,453 deer during the 2025 antlerless deer season, which includes the youth, class Q and Class XS deer season. The harvest was a 23 percent decrease compared to the 2024 harvest of 33,057 and 13 percent below the 5-year average of 29,303. The top ten counties for antlerless deer harvests were Preston (1,442), Upshur (907), Greenbrier (877), Monroe (876), Mason (841), Lewis (836), Hardy (775), Randolph (774), Barbour (695) and Braxton (680).
Archery and Crossbow Deer Seasons
Hunters harvested 29,654 deer during the 2025 archery and crossbow season. The 2025 harvest was an 8 percent decrease over the 2024 harvest of 32,240 and 5 percent below the 5-year average of 31,139. The proportion of the archery harvest taken using a crossbow has stabilized and was greater than deer reportedly taken by a bow.
The archery and crossbow harvest does not include the 29 deer taken with recurve or longbows during the Mountaineer Heritage season. The top ten counties for archery and crossbow deer harvests were Preston (1,573), Raleigh (1,378), Wyoming (1,224), Kanawha (1,045), Fayette (1,032), Mercer (892), Nicholas (889), McDowell (876), Randolph (860) and Monongalia (842).
Muzzleloader Deer Season
Hunters harvested 3,102 deer during the 2025 muzzleloader season, which was 26 percent less than the 2024 harvest of 4,173 and 22 percent below the 5-year average of 3,979. The muzzleloader deer season harvest does not include the 472 deer taken with side lock and flintlock muzzleloaders during the Mountaineer Heritage season. The top ten counties for muzzleloader deer harvests were Nicholas (186), Preston (179), Randolph (158), Greenbrier (131), Upshur (115), Fayette (111), Raleigh (95), Mason (93), Barbour (90) and Kanawha (88).
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