West Virginia
Judge Jim Douglas sworn in to West Virginia Intermediate Court of Appeals
Wheeling, W.Va. (WTRF) – The newest member of the West Virginia Intermediate Court of Appeals was officially sworn in this evening.
Judge Jim Douglas defeated Dan Greear back in the May election for a spot on the Mountain State’s second highest court.
Judge Douglas currently serves as a family court judge in Kanawha County for the 11th Circuit, 5th Division.
He has a great deal of experience in family law, having spent 10 years as a judge, and also nearly 40 years as a divorce lawyer.
“I think kids and families are the most important thing there are, and I’m going to carry that, and I hope to vindicate the faith that the people in the Northern Panhandle put in me. I hope to vindicate their belief that I can do the job. I hope to justify everything positive that they thought about my ability to be a judge on the Intermediate Court of Appeals.”
Jim Douglas – Elected to West Virginia Intermediate Court of Appeals
Judge Douglas will assume office on January 1st of 2027.
West Virginia
Moore says he’s honored being mentioned as possible U.S. Secretary of Labor – WV MetroNews
WASHINGTON, D.C. — West Virginia Second District Congressman Riley Moore didn’t deny a recent report that he’s being considered as the next U.S. Secretary of Labor by President Donald Trump in an appearance Thursday on WAJR’s “Talk of the Town.”
Moore said he couldn’t confirm the report in Politico but did offer his opinion on the credibility of the report.
“The reporter cited some pretty credible sources; that’s about all I can say,” Moore said. “If it weren’t a thing, I would be able to tell you it’s not.”
Moore is in his first term in the U.S. House. He’s on the House Appropriations Committee and is a conferee for the Military Construction and Veterans Affairs, Agriculture, and Legislative Branch appropriations conference committees.
“I really can’t comment on it much further other than what I would say is it is certainly an honor to be mentioned in the conversation,” Moore said.
The House currently has four vacancies, 218 Republicans, 212 Democrats, and one Independent, creating a margin so tight it’s possible Moore wouldn’t be appointed.
“If we decide to go in that direction, the President, Speaker, and I will discuss the tight margins here,” Moore said.
Moore also said two of his Community Project Funding requests for hospitals were approved by the House Appropriations Committee as part of the Fiscal Year 2027 Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act. Requests for $1.5 million each for Grant Memorial Hospital and the Grafton City Hospital will now be considered by the full House of Representatives.
“Every little bit helps,” Moore said. “Everybody knows how important it is to have functional hospitals, especially in a very rural state like ours,” Moore said.
Moore said the area is getting spruced up for the 250th birthday party for America. He also noted the “claw” is quite visible while motoring down Pennsylvania Avenue.
“The whole town is getting decorated—there are big flags for America’s 250th,” Moore said. Things are going up all over the place, and we drove by the White House, and they have, I think they call it the “claw,” that they have put in front of the White House.”
West Virginia
West Virginia residents oppose proposed transmission line at public hearing
MORGANTOWN, W.Va (WDTV) – The Public Service Commission of West Virginia held the third of four public comment hearings Wednesday regarding the proposed MidAtlantic resiliency link, with residents expressing mostly displeasure over the transmission line.
Elected officials and residents expressed opposition to NextEra Energy Transmission constructing a resiliency link from Pennsylvania through West Virginia and Virginia.
Prior Coverage:
- Nextera Energy outlines MARL project plan
“We are a poor state. Pennsylvania is not. Florida is not. Virginia is not. Why in the world would we accept this ‘deal’ being as harmful to us as it’s going to be,” one resident said. “I just ask as we review, as you review, you say to yourself in the most simplest of terms, would I do this deal?”
Tom Bloom, president of the Monongalia County Commission, said the project raises concerns about land use and property taxes.
“When we started investigating we first were told, well you don’t have to worry, it’s only 200 feet from where the line is. Now when investigating it’s up to 600 feet on either side that you can’t have animals, you can’t have farms,” Bloom said. “The second thing we learned was they were sending out messages only to the land owners where the line went through, not the other 600 feet, which was a concern.”
Bloom said property tax revenue would be affected once NextEra Energy Transmission buys the land.
State politicians on both sides of the political aisle expressed disapproval of the project.
“All the people that are here today to speak out against what’s going on believe that other states, other entities, shouldn’t take advantage of West Virginians,” one official said. “The biggest thing I hear every single day, the biggest issue from people is about electricity rates. It’s about how everything is going to keep going up right now. And so this is just another situation where we’re not getting any benefit from the state of West Virginia and they’re trying to take our land to do it.”
The final public hearing will be at the Kingwood Civic Center.
Copyright 2026 WDTV. All rights reserved.
West Virginia
WVU announces end of FallFest as part of Welcome Week festivities – WV MetroNews
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. — West Virginia University will move forward with changes to Welcome Week that will also end a tradition that lasted nearly 30 years.
WVU Executive Director of Strategic Communications Shauna Johnson confirmed Wednesday that WVU will end FallFest as part of the Welcome Week for the coming fall semester. As a result of the change, the popular freshman-themed event Monday Night Lights will be moved to Sunday with a Mountaineer Midway and Movie event scheduled for Monday, Aug. 17 starting at 6 p.m. on the Downtown Morgantown campus.
“After a nearly 30-year run for FallFest, the University is moving forward with new experiences to fit the interests of today’s students, including the Mountaineer Midway and Movie event for all students from 6 to 10 p.m. Monday, Aug. 17, on the Downtown area of campus,” Johnson said.
The decision to remove FallFest, which has featured concerts on the Mountainlair Plaza, is part of an adjustment to Welcome Week that was based on feedback by WVU students over the past several years.
WVU Welcome Week for the Fall 2026 Semester will begin on Saturday, Aug. 15 starting WVUp All Night at the Mountainlair starting at 10 p.m. That will be followed by the annual Student Organization Fair hosted on Sunday, Aug. 16 starting at 2 p.m. at the Student Rec Center on the Evansdale Campus. Academic Day Sessions will be hosted on Monday, Aug. 17 followed by the first day of classes on Tuesday, Aug. 18.
Over the near three decades of existence, FallFest has hosted several artists such as Kendrick Lamar, Mac Miller, Kanye West, The Roots, Jon Bellion, Macklemore and Ryan Lewis, 3 Doors Down, Ludacris, Maroon 5, Akon, Black Eyed Peas, Fuel, 311, Busta Rhymes, The Chainsmokers, Schoolboy Q, Lil Yachty and Cage the Elephant.
WVU began FallFest in 1995 as an alternative to the non-university sanctioned back-to-school Grant Avenue Block Party.
-
North Dakota4 minutes agoNorth Dakota man charged with trafficking illegal drugs through eastern Idaho – East Idaho News
-
Ohio11 minutes agoCincinnati Children’s opened 6 locations in 2025. Here’s why
-
Oklahoma14 minutes agoOklahoma Department of Agriculture takes steps to prevent spread of Screwworm
-
Oregon19 minutes agoNew high-tech plane aims to find Oregon wildfires before they spread
-
Pennsylvania26 minutes agoDemolition set for historic Altoona homes damaged by fire
-
Rhode Island29 minutes agoRhode Island FC Head Coach Khano Smith shares Bermuda roots, his path to the sidelines
-
South-Carolina34 minutes agoEarly summer heat wave produces triple-digit heat index readings
-
South Dakota41 minutes ago
SD Lottery Millionaire for Life winning numbers for June 11, 2026