West Virginia
Driver crashes into Capitol Complex building
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (WSAZ) – A person driving under the influence crashed Monday afternoon into a building at the Capitol Complex in Charleston, according to city police.
The driver crashed into Building 11, also known as the central chiller plant, and fled the scene before being apprehended by Capitol Police.
That person is in custody now, but further details have not been released.
Our crew at the scene said there is no visible damage to the building.
Keep checking the WSAZ app for the latest.
Copyright 2025 WSAZ. All rights reserved.
West Virginia
West Virginia transfer OL Ayden Bussell signs with Arkansas football | Whole Hog Sports
West Virginia
Priority Checklist: West Virginia House begins work on Jobs First agenda
- House Finance Committee Vice Chairman Clay Riley, left, explains House Bill 4007, relating to the state industrial access road program, during a Thursday morning committee meeting. (Photo by Steven Allen Adams)
- State Senate Assistant Majority Leader Patricia Rucker answers questions during a Senate Health and Human Resources Committee meeting Thursday afternoon about Senate Bill 42, which would allow for over-the-counter ivermectin sales. (Photo courtesy of WV Legislative Photography)
House Finance Committee Vice Chairman Clay Riley, left, explains House Bill 4007, relating to the state industrial access road program, during a Thursday morning committee meeting. (Photo by Steven Allen Adams)
CHARLESTON — Making good on a pledge last month to focus on improving economic development in West Virginia, several House of Delegates committees began taking up bills as part of the House’s “Jobs First – Opportunity Everywhere” agenda.
In December, the Republican House caucus released its “Jobs First – Opportunity Everywhere” agenda, a legislative roadmap designed to stimulate statewide growth by focusing on modernizing education to prepare a skilled workforce, fostering a competitive business climate through deregulation, and ensuring responsible, long-term infrastructure development.
The House Finance Committee held its first committee hearing on House Bill 4007, relating to the state industrial access road program. The bill, introduced by Del. David McCormick, R-Monongalia, proposes updates to the Industrial Access Road Fund to better align with modern construction costs and economic development goals.
HB 4007 would double the annual funding for the Industrial Access Road Fund from $3 million to $6 million while increasing the maximum grant for a single county project from $400,000 to $800,000. The Industrial Access Road Fund, managed by the state Department of Transportation, was first created in 1999.
The bill also incorporates the West Virginia Business Ready Sites Program into the fund’s eligibility and introduces a 90-day deadline for the Division of Highways to respond to project requests.
State Senate Assistant Majority Leader Patricia Rucker answers questions during a Senate Health and Human Resources Committee meeting Thursday afternoon about Senate Bill 42, which would allow for over-the-counter ivermectin sales. (Photo courtesy of WV Legislative Photography)
House Finance Committee Vice Chairman Clay Riley, R-Harrison, said that these adjustments account for 26 years of inflation and will eliminate the need for multi-year funding cycles that previously delayed construction.
“This fits into our Jobs First – Opportunity Everywhere agenda,” said Riley, a co-sponsor of HB 4007. “Over the past five years, they have expended on an average of about $4 million per year … Because of the limits that were in the previous code, they’ve had to allocate multiple years of commitment to projects in order to build them.
“We looked at the construction inflation cost between 1999 and 2025 and essentially equated the increase from $400,000 to $800,000, which is in direct correlation to the construction increase over the past 26 years,” Riley continued. “And we took the $3 million total to $6 million, which is a direct correlation. And because there was an additional program that has come into play years ago with the certified sites, we added that as also a component.”
The Industrial Access Road Fund receives three-fourths of 1% of state tax collections that are otherwise dedicated to the State Road Fund, up to its statutory cap. HB 4007 doubles the fund’s cap, which would result in an additional $3 million being shifted annually from the State Road Fund to the Industrial Access Road Fund.
HB 4007 was one of several bills on committee agendas in the House on Thursday. Others include House Bill 4005, clarifying the categories of employment which are prohibited or authorized for persons in West Virginia who are under the age of 18 and to clarify youth apprenticeships prohibited or authorized in such categories of employment; House Bill 4006, aimed at fostering the growth of the state’s aerospace industry in West Virginia; and House Bill 4008, aimed at expanding the state’s inventory of industrial sites.
Under the House’s committee process put into place last year, bills are explained in a committee hearing on day one. On a separate day, the bill goes through markup, discussion, and vote.
On the other side of the State Capitol Building, a Senate committee moved its first bills. The Senate Health and Human Resources recommended Senate Bill 42, authorizing the over-the-counter sale of ivermectin, a prescription drug used to treat people for parasites, lice, and certain skin conditions. The bill now heads to the Senate Judiciary Committee.
Prescribed for both humans and animals, the drug became popular during the COVID-19 pandemic, though the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has not approved ivermectin for COVID treatments. Claims that the drug can also treat certain kinds of cancer are also unfounded.
SB 42 would permit pharmacists in West Virginia to sell ivermectin for human consumption without a prescription. Pharmacists would be required to give customers FDA-approved information sheets, though no professional medical consultation would be mandatory.
The bill would provide legal protections to pharmacists and medical providers to shield them from civil liability or professional disciplinary actions when acting in good faith. The West Virginia Board of Pharmacy would be required to draft specific rules to oversee the implementation of these new protocols.
State Senate Assistant Majority Leader Patricia Rucker, R-Jefferson, is the lead sponsor of SB 42. She said five states have also passed bills allowing for over-the-counter ivermectin sales.
“Just like many other drugs are made over the counter when they have very few side effects and are generally safe, ivermectin is one of those drugs,” Rucker said. “The risk of side effects and abuse is small and minor, but it’s possible with every drug. You can abuse Tylenol. You can overtake Tylenol. There are people who have destroyed their stomach by taking too many over-the-counter medications.
“It is absolutely the responsibility of the individuals and the pharmacists, and I do believe that pharmacists have a very good knowledge of what it is that they are not only dispensing,” Rucker continued. “They’re there to educate the consumer when the consumer requests any drugs, whether it is with a prescription or without a prescription.”
While the bill was recommended on voice vote, there was some questioning of the need for the bill and concerns raised.
“If someone doesn’t know what dose of ivermectin or how much to take, yes, there is … significant toxicities,” said state Sen. Tom Takubo, R-Kanawha, a doctor in Charleston. “It would be nice if there would be some safeguard or some limit that we’re going to say at least, hey, you can’t take more than the max dose for some other illness or something, just so that somebody that thinks they’re treating something doesn’t hurt themselves.”
“I do think there are some risks to a bill like this,” said Senate Assistant Minority Leader Joey Garcia, D-Marion. “I’d hate to see somebody hurt when, if they did want to take a drug like this, all they would have to do is take another step and consult with a doctor about it. The fact that five or six other states have done this … doesn’t mean it’s the right thing to do.”
State Sen. T. Kevan Bartlett, R-Kanawha, was in the hospital with COVID-19 during the early days of the pandemic before the vaccines were available, including spending five weeks on life support. He said he never felt comfortable taking the first COVID vaccines at the end of 2020, but he did take ivermectin.
“My wife and I both have had COVID since our initial experience there in the fall of 2020. And both times I took ivermectin in the early days of my diagnosis,” Bartlett said. “Now, I acknowledge it may have been the equivalent of turning my hat left, but I know that my symptoms and my wife’s symptoms diminished significantly within 24 to 48 hours of taking it.”
The Senate Health Committee also recommended to the full Senate a committee substitute for Senate Bill 231, relating to value-based payment requirements, for passage. SB 231 would transition the state’s addiction recovery system from traditional fee-for-service model to a value-based payment structure, rewarding healthcare providers who achieve specific, measurable patient outcomes rather than those who provide a high volume of services.
Steven Allen Adams can be reached at sadams@newsandsentinel.com
West Virginia
West Virginia 2026 Signee Requests Release From NLI, Will Play for Another School
Class of 2026 defensive lineman Kamdon “KJ” Gillespie has informed West Virginia On SI that he has requested release from his National Letter of Intent to WVU and will begin his collegiate career elsewhere. WVU is expected to sign off on the move quickly, allowing him to reopen his recruitment.
Gillespie was previously committed to Virginia Tech, but decommitted shortly after the Hokies’ firing of Brent Pry and ultimately made a pledge about a week and a half later.
The Mooresville, North Carolina native also reeled in offers from the likes of Appalachian State, Boston College, Charlotte, Delaware, East Carolina, Elon, Gardner-Webb, Georgia Southern, Georgia Tech, Georgia State, Jacksonville State, James Madison, Kentucky, Liberty, Old Dominion, South Florida, Troy, Vanderbilt.
With Gillespie no longer in WVU’s plans, that leaves the Mountaineers’ defensive line group with the following players: Darius Wiley, Wilnerson Telemaque, Brandon Caesar, Jaylen Thomas, Nate Gabriel, K.J. Henson, Will LeBlanc, Cam Mallory, Yendor Mack, Corey McIntyre Jr., and Taylor Brown.
The transfer portal closes tomorrow for all teams except for Indiana and Miami, who will have a window of their own following the national title game. Schools can, however, host transfers on visits and sign them beyond January 16th. Even before this move took place, WVU’s coaching staff had its eye on some defensive line targets in the transfer portal. The expectation is that they will continue to add to that group, especially with Gillespie now out of the mix.
West Virginia’s updated 2026 early signing period class
QB: Jyron Hughley, Wyatt Brown, John Johnson III
RB: Amari Latimer, Lawrence Autry, Martavious Boswell, Chris Talley, SirPaul Cheeks
WR: Charlie Hanafin, Malachi Thompson, Robert Oliver, Keon Hutchins, Kedrick Triplett, Landon Drumm, Greg Wilfred
TE: Sam Hamilton, Kade Bush, Xavier Anderson
OL: Aidan Woods, Camden Goforth, Lamarcus Dillard, Rhett Morris, Kevin Brown, Deshawn Woods, Jonas Muya
DL: Carter Kessler, Cam Mallory, Yendor Mack, Jaylen Thomas
EDGE: Noah Tishendorf, Jeremiah Johnson
LB: Cameron Dwyer, Antoine Sharp Jr., Trey McGlothlin
CB: Makhi Boone, Simaj Hill, Vincent Smith, Rayshawn Reynolds, Da’Mun Allen
S: Jayden Ballard, Emory Snyder, Miles Khatri, S Da’Mare Williams, Rickey Giles, Matt Sieg
MORE STORIES FROM WEST VIRGINIA ON SI
Longtime WVU Football Assistant Jeff Casteel to Retire From Coaching
Projecting WVU’s Defensive Depth Chart After Massive Wave of Portal Additions
Ranking West Virginia’s Top Transfer Portal Acquisitions So Far
West Virginia Suffers Heartbreaking Buzzer-Beater Loss to No. 10 TCU
West Virginia Rolls Out Another Throwback and It Raises a Bigger Uniform Question
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