West Virginia
State Community College Council looks at what's next for Southern West Virginia Community and Technical College following take over – WV MetroNews
CHARLESTON, W.Va. — The newly-appointed interim president of Southern West Virginia Community and Technical College since the state’s take over of the institution earlier this month says it has been a busy time for him there as he looks into what the next steps are regarding its uncertain future.
West Virginia Higher Education Policy Commission Vice Chancellor of Academic Affairs Dr. Corley Dennison was appointed as interim president of Southern WV CTC on April 7 after the West Virginia Council for Community and Technical College Education took control of the school’s Board of Governors and placed its President Pamela Alderman on administrative leave.
In a meeting with the council on Thursday, Dennison said there was some questions from faculty, staff, and students surrounding exactly what his mission at the school was when he first arrived, but he continued to try and take the necessary steps in filling everyone in.
“Students, staff, and faculty have been through tense and anxious times, and there were questions about the future of the institution,” Dennison said during his update to council. “During that first week, I met multiple times with the President’s cabinet, held productive meetings and conversations with the board, and as part of a previously scheduled Governance Day, spoke to the faculty senate and addressed the full faculty and staff.”
The Council for CTC Education had previously cited “repeated instances of noncooperation” from former Southern WV CTC President Alderman, conflict between her and the board of governors, along with the “failure to follow institutional procedures,” and a pattern of behavior from her and certain members of her leadership team that was disruptive and placed college accreditation at risk.
Thus, this prompted the council’s take over of the institution, a move they had to implement at a community college for the first time in state history.
Dennison was appointed to serve as interim president there until June 30.
He said, despite the uncertainty of the institution at this present moment, they keep moving forward.
“There are still concerns about the future path for Southern, however, I can report that the campus is in the business of educating students, plans are being made for final exams and for graduation ceremonies,” Dennison said.
But the question must be asked, Dennison said addressing council– Where does it go from here? What path is the institution to take in the coming months ahead?
He said he sees this unfolding in three phases, with phase one currently underway already, which includes preparing for the registration of summer and fall classes, planning for graduation ceremonies, and planning year-end events. All of these things Dennison said the community college is currently doing to move forward.
Dennison said they must also make a decision on campus leadership past June 30th, and begin preparations for the Higher Learning Commission’s Focus visit in the fall.
He said the HLC will be focusing on a certain set of criteria dealing with the governance of the institution, specifically looking at how the president’s office and the board of governors is being run following the take over.

He said Johnson will be of great use to them there.
“She’s very well-versed in assessment and higher learning commission protocol, so she will be very vital in planning the HLC response,” he said.
Her contract goes until December of this year with the possibility of an extension.
Dennison said phase two of Southern CTC’s plan of moving forward will begin in July and will go through June 30th of 2026. During this phase, he said they will need to resolve the HLC issues.
He said the Institutional Advisory Council (IAC) of the HLC will be meeting in Chicago on May 12th and 13th, and during that time, they will find out the exact date of the commission’s upcoming visit to Southern.
However, Dennison said he’s estimating that it could take an entire academic year to resolve the HLC issue.
“It is possible, if the IAC would give us a very early focus visit, like very early September, they might be able to generate a site report, get that to the IAC in time for review and we could get on their November meeting, but my guess is the site visit will come a little later in the semester, maybe late September or early October,” he said.
If that’s the case, Dennison said that any decision made by the IAC would flip over into the second semester in the spring.
Dennison said while they are working with the HLC, they need to also simultaneously be looking at other areas to keep moving forward.
“While we’re looking at policies coming from the board and the president’s office, then we might as well go ahead and look at issues such as enrollment, retention, and campus priorities, and begin looking at developing a strategic plan for the path forward,” said Dennison.
Finally, Dennison said phase three will pick up in July of 2026 and go until sometime around April 2027.
During this phase, he said any changes mandated by the HLC would need to be implemented, and a long-term campus leader would need to be secured.
The West Virginia Council for Community and Technical College Education has reported that there have been no legal challenges since they took over Southern CTC earlier this month.
West Virginia
West Virginia First Foundation lauds Wheeling police for crisis intervention success
WHEELING, W.Va. — The West Virginia First Foundation visited the Wheeling Police Department to commend its efforts in addressing the area’s mental health and opioid crisis.
Wheeling Police Chief Shawn Schwertfeger presented to the WVFF board, highlighting the department’s progress.
Schwertfeger attributed a 14% decrease in Group A crimes from 2024 to 2025 to the department’s crisis intervention program.
“Just another great partnership,” he said. “More collaboration in this area that we are very proud of and we want to keep the momentum going,.”
WVFF Executive Director Jonathan Board praised the program’s success.
“This in particular, the CIT program, that isn’t just in the ether, but is showing success – actual scientific success about de-escalation, about bringing together services providers and to boots on the ground and first responders, this is vitally important to not only this region but the entire state,” Board said.
The visit was part of WVFF’s ‘Hold the Line’ tour across the state.
West Virginia
Where West Virginia’s Decommits in the 2026 Recruiting Class Signed & What Happened
Now that you know about West Virginia’s 2026 recruiting class, I figured it’d be a good time to give a little insight into those who were once committed to the Mountaineers and landed elsewhere.
What happened, and where did they go?
QB Brodie McWhorter (Mississippi State)
McWhorter committed to Neal Brown and his coaching staff, but reopened his recruitment when the coaching change was made. Rich Rodriguez did recruit him at the beginning, holding several conversations with him before backing off and pursuing Jyron Hughley and Legend Bey. Hughley committed, Bey committed to Ohio State (signed with Tennessee), while WVU added two more quarterbacks in Wyatt Brown and John Johnson III.
RB Jett Walker (Texas)
Walker fit the bill for what Rodriguez wanted in the backfield. A big, physical presence who could absorb contact and hammer it in between the tackles. With multiple backs committed and feeling good about a few others, WVU didn’t feel pressed to hold onto him. Walker flipped to Minnesota and then flipped to Texas just three weeks later
WR Jeffar Jean-Noel (Georgia Tech)
Jean-Noel was the second recruit to commit to Rodriguez in the 2026 class, but reopened his recruitment in mid-April. He then considered Purdue, Pitt, Kentucky, UCF, and Florida State before landing at Georgia Tech.
OL Justyn Lyles (Marshall)
The Mountaineers had a number of offensive line commits, and with the late additions of Kevin Brown and Aidan Woods, and their chances of securing Jonas Muya, Lyles took a visit to Marshall and flipped his commitment.
LB Caleb Gordon (North Carolina)
Gordon’s commitment to WVU was very brief. As a matter of fact, it was the shortest of the bunch, announcing his pledge on November 24th and then flipping to NC State on the first day of the early signing period (December 3rd).
LB Daiveon Taylor (Kent State)
Taylor was the first commit in the class; however, it was so early that he was committed to Neal Brown’s staff, announcing his decision in April of 2024. He backed off that pledge the very day Brown was fired (December 1st) and eventually signed with Kent State.
CB Emari Peterson (unsigned)
Peterson decommitted from WVU just days before signing day, likely due to the Mountaineers zeroing in on a pair of JUCO corners in Rayshawn Reynolds and Da’Mun Allen. He will sign in February and currently has offers from Appalachian State, Arkansas State, Bowling Green, Charlotte, Cincinnati, East Carolina, Florida Atlantic, FIU, Georgia State, Georgia Tech, Illinois, Kentucky, Liberty, LSU, South Florida, Southern Miss, Texas A&M, Toledo, Wake Forest, and a few others.
S Aaron Edwards (committed to Tulsa)
West Virginia chose to part ways with Edwards and ultimately replaced his spot with fellow JUCO safety Da’Mare Williams.
S Jaylon Jones (undecided)
Jones decommitted in late October and did not sign during the early signing period. He will likely choose between Central Michigan, Hawai’i, Sam Houston, Stephen F. Austin, and Texas State.
S Taj Powell (Louisville)
Taj is the brother of former Mountaineer basketball guard Jonathan Powell, who is now at North Carolina. He decommitted the day after West Virginia lost to Ohio and flipped to Louisville that same day.
MORE STORIES FROM WEST VIRGINIA ON SI
Two Michigan Players WVU Should Pursue if They Enter Portal Following Coaching Change
Cooper Young Adds Name to Growing List of Expected WVU Portal Entries
WVU is Set to Lose Former Top In-State Recruit to the Transfer Portal
Former West Virginia Coordinator Fired After Just One Season at Texas
Another West Virginia Running Back Expected to Hit the Transfer Portal
West Virginia
West Virginia National Guard member killed in DC laid to rest
A West Virginia National Guard member who was fatally shot last month in the nation’s capital was laid to rest with full military honors in a private ceremony.
Spc. Sarah Beckstrom’s funeral took place Tuesday at the West Virginia National Cemetery in Grafton, Gov. Patrick Morrisey said in a statement.
“The ceremony was deeply moving and reflected the strength, grace, and love of a remarkable young woman and the family and friends who surrounded her,” Morrisey said.
Beckstrom graduated with honors from Webster County High School in 2023 and joined the National Guard several weeks later. She served in the 863rd Military Police Company.
Beckstrom and Staff Sgt. Andrew Wolfe were ambushed as they patrolled a subway station three blocks from the White House on Nov. 26. She died the next day.
Rahmanullah Lakanwal, a 29-year-old Afghan national who was also shot during the confrontation, has been charged with murder. He pleaded not guilty.
Morrisey has said Wolfe, who remains in a hospital in Washington, is slowly healing and his family expects he will be in acute care for another few weeks.
-
Alaska6 days agoHowling Mat-Su winds leave thousands without power
-
Politics1 week agoTrump rips Somali community as federal agents reportedly eye Minnesota enforcement sweep
-
Ohio1 week ago
Who do the Ohio State Buckeyes hire as the next offensive coordinator?
-
Texas6 days agoTexas Tech football vs BYU live updates, start time, TV channel for Big 12 title
-
News1 week agoTrump threatens strikes on any country he claims makes drugs for US
-
World1 week agoHonduras election council member accuses colleague of ‘intimidation’
-
Washington3 days agoLIVE UPDATES: Mudslide, road closures across Western Washington
-
Iowa5 days agoMatt Campbell reportedly bringing longtime Iowa State staffer to Penn State as 1st hire