Updated June 3, 2026 09:14AM
West Virginia
Local organizations among those who received $16 million in grant awards for West Virginia victims of crime
Two local organizations received funding as part of a recent announcement of more than $16 million in West Virginia Victims of Crime Act grants to 83 projects across the state.
Mountain CAP of West Virginia received $83,328, which will be used to provide forensic interviewing, support and resources for children and their non-offending caregivers, referrals, trauma-focused therapy and outreach to the community. The Upshur County Commission received $37,630 to provide crime victims notification of criminal charges, personal safety planning, court accompaniment, court notifications, change in case status, assistance obtaining restitution and referrals.
VOCA funds provide direct services like counseling, personal advocacy, court advocacy, client transportation and support services to victims of crimes including domestic violence, sexual violence, child abuse and elder abuse. The funds will also support assistance to victims as they move through the criminal justice system.
“West Virginia is committed to ensuring victims of crime are treated with the dignity, respect and care they deserve,” Governor Patrick Morrisey said. “These VOCA funds will aid the many organizations who play a critical, yet often unseen role in the criminal justice system.”
The funds, totaling $16,327,849, are received from the Office for Victims of Crime of the U.S. Department of Justice and administered by the West Virginia Division of Administrative Services, Justice and Community Services Section.
Funds were awarded to the following:
A Child’s Place CASA – $49,384
These funds will be used to support and promote court-appointed volunteer advocacy for abused and neglected children.
Barbour County Commission – $38,856
These funds will be used to assist victims of crime, including but not limited to court notification, personal advocacy, information, referrals, transportation and victim compensation fund applications.
Branches Domestic Violence Shelter – $661,784
These funds will be used for crisis intervention services, a hotline, legal advocacy, counseling, outreach services, support groups, assistance with court accompaniment in five counties, follow-up services and assistance with housing, employment and medical and financial needs of crime victims.
Burlington United Methodist Family Services – $78,763
These funds will be used to provide community partnership of intake, investigation and follow-up services for victims of child abuse, ages 3-17, in Hampshire, Mineral and Pendleton counties.
Cabell County Commission – $212,462
These funds will be used to provide direct services such as crisis intervention, information and referral, criminal justice support and advocacy, assistance in filing crime victim compensation claims, personal advocacy, restitution, the return of items held in evidence, victim impact statements and victim rights.
CASA for Children – $191,536
These funds will be used for recruiting, training and supporting volunteers to represent the best interest of abused and neglected children in the First and Second Judicial Circuit Courts.
CASA of Marion County – $91,078
These funds will be used for recruiting and training community volunteers who are appointed by a judge to advocate for the best interest of child victims in civil abuse and neglect proceedings.
CASA of New River – $82,181
These funds will be used to provide court-appointed advocacy to children who are victims of abuse, neglect or who are impacted by domestic violence and substance abuse in Raleigh County.
CASA of the Greenbrier Valley – $89,003
These funds will be used to increase advocacy services for child victims of domestic violence and/or sexual abuse, physical abuse, emotional abuse, verbal abuse, as well as child neglect, including medical, educational and substance abuse.
CASA of the Eastern Panhandle – $341,676
These funds will be used for recruiting, training and empowering community volunteers to advocate for children who have experienced abuse and neglect in the Eastern Panhandle.
CHANGE, Inc. – $121,739
These funds will be used to ensure abused children in Brooke and Hancock Counties receive child-centered services that focus on their individual needs by assessing, investigating and offering a coordinated service response to the physical, emotional and legal dimensions of child abuse.
CHANGE, Inc. – $56,131
These funds will be used to provide free, confidential, 24-hour specialized services to domestic violence victims in Hancock and Brooke County, including crisis intervention, community referrals and help filing for victims’ compensation and protection orders.
CAMC Health Education & Research Institute – $277,306
These funds will be used to provide quality victim advocacy and forensic interviewing services to Kanawha and Jackson County child victims of abuse through the funding of family advocates, a forensic interviewer and a therapist.
Child and Youth Advocacy Center – $202,638
These funds will be used to provide direct services to victims of child abuse and support the agency’s mission of ending child abuse in Greenbrier, Monroe and Pocahontas Counties.
Child Protect of Mercer County – $142,350
These funds will be used to mend the lives of child victims of abuse in Mercer County through the funding of various positions and expenses at the Mercer County Child Advocacy Center.
ChildLaw Services – $160,262
These funds will be used to provide legal, social and therapeutic services to child victims of domestic violence, neglect and physical/sexual abuse in Putnam, Mercer and McDowell Counties.
Children’s Home Society of West Virginia – $199,092
These funds will be used to encourage and facilitate the multidisciplinary team approach to the investigation and response to child abuse allegations.
Comprehensive Women’s Service Council – $549,725
These funds will be used to provide direct services to victims of domestic violence, dating violence, stalking and sexual assault with an emphasis on outreach.
CONTACT Huntington – $539,830
These funds will be used to provide free and confidential direct advocacy and support services for victims of sexual violence, stalking and human trafficking.
Cornerstone Family Interventions – $148,541
These funds will be used to provide services to the victims of crime in Boone and Lincoln Counties regardless of their ability to pay for services rendered or the availability of insurance.
Eastern Panhandle Empowerment Center – $656,215
These funds will be used to provide victims and survivors the resources necessary to effectively cope with the personal, social, emotional and legal ramifications of victimization.
Family Counseling Connection – $311,477
These funds will be used to provide therapy services to victims of crime.
Family Crisis Center – $298,866
These funds will be used to continue providing direct services to victims of violent crimes, domestic violence, sexual assault, stalking, dating violence and human trafficking and to provide public awareness and network on behalf of victims.
Family Crisis Intervention Center of Region V – $358,323
These funds will be used to provide direct service advocates in Wood, Jackson, Ritchie, Wirt, Tyler and Pleasants Counties who will provide allowable trauma-informed core services to victims and survivors of domestic violence, sexual violence, stalking and human trafficking.
Family Refuge Center – $547,343
These funds will be used to provide direct services to victims of domestic violence, sexual assault, abuse in later life, exploitation, stalking and dating violence.
Goodwill Industries of KYOWVA Area, Inc. – $108,459
These funds will be used to provide therapy to victims of violence, sexual/physical abuse, spousal abuse and survivors of childhood trauma.
Greenbrier County Commission – $42,093
These funds will be used to provide direct services to victims of crime via a prosecution-based advocate, coordinate access to prosecutors, contact persons for victims and provide institution and legal information for victims in Greenbrier County.
Greenbrier County Commission – $45,861
These funds will be used to support a victim advocate in the Greenbrier County Sheriff’s Department that will continue to serve as a guide, liaison and contact person for victims, while also making appropriate referrals to better serve victims as needed.
Hancock County Commission – $157,848
These funds will be used to provide assistance and support to all victims of crime in Hancock, Brooke and Ohio Counties.
Harmony House – $172,532
These funds will be used to provide a victim-centered, child-appropriate approach to victim services to reduce the effect of crime on children, adults with developmental disabilities and non-offending members by providing advocacy including therapeutic intervention and forensic interviewing at no cost to the victims and their families.
Harmony Mental Health – $277,875
These funds will be used to increase access to trauma-informed professionals, therapeutic and medication management, supportive counseling and group services for victims of crime.
Harrison County CASA Program – $121,831
These funds will be used to fund critical advocacy for children named in child abuse and neglect proceedings.
Harrison County Child Advocacy Center – $328,120
These funds will be used to increase support to child victims of crime and their protecting caregivers by providing a coordinated, comprehensive response to allegations of child maltreatment in Harrison, Doddridge, Taylor and Barbour Counties.
HOPE Inc. Task Force on Domestic Violence – $569,864
These funds will be used to provide comprehensive services to domestic violence, sexual assault and child abuse victims, including those victims in underserved population groups.
Jackson County Commission – $35,588
These funds will be used to provide direct services for victims of crimes including referrals, personal, court and legal advocacy, as well as help in filing compensation claims and working with counselors to assist victims in court situations.
Jefferson County Commission – $111,256
These funds will be used to provide direct services to all victims of crime but emphasizes serving the needs of victims of violent crimes and under-served populations.
Just for Kids – $312,418
These funds will be used to provide direct services to children and families who are victims of sexual abuse and other criminal abuse.
Kanawha County Commission – $59,655
These funds will be used to employ one full-time advocate and one part-time advocate at the Kanawha Prosecuting Attorney’s Office to ensure victims are informed and involved with the criminal justice system throughout the entire process.
Kanawha County Commission – $100,350
These funds will be used to provide direct services to victims of domestic violence, sexual assault, stalking, dating violence, strangulation, malicious wounding, property crimes and survivors of homicide victims.
Legal Aid of West Virginia – $740,455
These funds will be used to collaborate with local victims’ programs to address service gaps and support victims with legal services.
Logan County Child Advocacy Center – $167,160
These funds will be used to provide specialized services for child abuse victims, adult survivors of childhood abuse and identified adult victims of violent crime and the underserved.
Logan County Commission – $50,411
These funds will be used to employ one full-time and one-part time system-based victim advocate in the prosecutor’s office to provide victims information, notification, referrals, shelter, relocation, court accompaniment and filing of claims.
Logan County Commission – $36,881
These funds will be used to fund one full-time victim advocate in the sheriff’s department to provide direct services to victims of crime while assisting law enforcement agencies by providing information and notification, referrals, individual advocacy and support.
Marion County Children’s Advocacy Center – $161,167
These funds will be used to provide forensic interviews, victim advocacy, case coordination and supportive services for child victims of sexual and physical abuse and their protective families.
Marion County Commission – $58,812
These funds will be used to provide direct services to all crime victims in the county to help navigate the judicial system and act as a liaison for the prosecuting attorney and law enforcement.
Mason County Commission – $42,266
These funds will be used to fund one full-time victim advocate who provides information, direction and support to crime victims during the judicial process.
Mercer County Commission – $165,687
These funds will be used to guide and serve all victims of crime and survivors through the complex criminal justice process from start to finish.
Mineral County CASA – $132,282
These funds will be used to recruit and train community-based volunteers to advocate for abused and neglected children within the Mineral County circuit courts.
Mingo County Commission – $30,899
These funds will be used to employ a full-time victim advocate in the prosecutor’s office to assist victims through the judicial process by informing them of their rights as victims and providing information about their particular cases and the steps necessary to resolve them.
Mingo County Commission – $25,248
These funds will be used to employ a full-time victim advocate in the sheriff’s department to assist victims at the onset of a case and reduce the number of victims not reported/not tracked throughout the justice process.
Monongalia Child Advocacy Center – $256,105
These funds will be used to provide forensic interviewing, family advocacy and therapy to child abuse victims to promote resiliency and decrease the costly negative long-term effects of abuse.
Monongalia County Commission – $122,587
These funds will be used to provide support/information services to victims through advocacy, crisis intervention, referrals, crime compensation, notifications, impact statements and court presentations.
Monongalia County Youth Services Center – $174,387
These funds will be used to provide consistency and support to children who have been removed from their homes because of abuse and neglect.
Mothers Against Drunk Driving – $46,958
These funds will be used to provide direct support to victims of impaired driving crashes and DWI/child endangerment crimes including crisis intervention, criminal justice advocacy, victim tributes and referrals.
Mountain CAP of West Virginia – $83,328
These funds will be used to provide forensic interviewing, support and resources for children and their non-offending caregivers, referrals, trauma-focused therapy and outreach to the community.
Nicholas County Family Resource Network – $110,256
These funds will be used to support a well-trained, highly functioning multi-disciplinary team through memorandums of understanding, team training and providing self-care for each discipline involved in the MDT.
North Star Child Advocacy Center – $221,591
These funds will be used to provide a child-friendly, safe and neutral environment where law enforcement and child protective service workers can observe forensic interviews with children who are alleged victims of abuse.
Ohio County Commission – $38,235
These funds will be used to offer guidance, support and assistance to victims of crime through information, advocating and allowing the victim to have a voice in the legal system.
Preston County Commission – $43,100
These funds will be used to employ a victim advocate to assist all crime victims who are predominately underserved and suffer from poor access to services either due to the rural nature of the county or their limited education.
Putnam County Commission – $35,127
These funds will be used to employ staff at the prosecutor’s office to aid victims of all crimes regarding their rights and resources available as provided by statute to serve as a liaison between the victim and the prosecutor in charge of their case in Putnam County.
Putnam County Commission – $67,470
These funds will be used to employ a position at the sheriff’s office to act as a direct and immediate line to victims for accessing victims’ services, both government and nonprofit; to inform the victim of their rights and available resources, help navigate the criminal justice system and to act as a liaison between the victim and law enforcement.
Randolph County Children’s Advocacy Center – $121,084
These funds will be used to provide expanded intervention, support and advocacy to children who have been victims, their non-offending caregivers and adult victims with intellectual or developmental disabilities.
Randolph County Commission – $46,213
These funds will be used to continue to provide support, advocacy and information to victims of crime throughout the judicial process.
Rape & Domestic Violence Information Center – $645,793
These funds will be used to provide community-based, comprehensive programs for victims of domestic violence, sexual assault, stalking, human trafficking and other victims of violent crimes and temporary emergency shelter in Monongalia, Preston and Taylor Counties.
REACHH Family Resource Center – $69,178
These funds will be used to provide child victims (and their non-offending family members) of physical abuse, sexual abuse, negligence and domestic violence with counseling, case management, forensic interviews and advocacy.
Roane County Commission – $27,300
These funds will be used to employ a full-time victim advocate in the prosecutor’s office to assist victims of crime with scheduling, transportation and barriers as they arise.
STOP Abusive Family Environments – $411,171
These funds will be used to provide services of advocacy, crisis intervention, case management, emergency shelter and criminal justice advocacy to victims of domestic violence, sexual assault, stalking, elder abuse and human trafficking.
Stop the Hurt – $79,233
These funds will be used to provide advocacy to child victims and their families with forensic interviews, forensic medical exams, home visits and parental visitations.
Team for West Virginia Children – $497,075
These funds will be used to provide direct services to approximately 950 child abuse victims by supporting trained CASA volunteers to advocate for children until they are in safe, loving and permanent homes.
Tug Valley Recovery Shelter Association – $209,694
These funds will be used to provide an array of services 24/7 to victims of domestic violence, sexual assault, child abuse, dating violence and underserved communities.
Upper Ohio Valley Sexual Assault Help Center – $267,894
These funds will be used to provide free, confidential and comprehensive services (hotline, advocacy, counseling and support) to victims of sexual violence.
Upshur County Commission – $37,630
These funds will be used to provide crime victims notification of criminal charges, personal safety planning, court accompaniment, court notifications, change in case status, assistance obtaining restitution and referrals.
Voices for Children – $98,608
These funds will be used to advocate for children who have been removed from their homes due to abuse or neglect and to ensure their well-being and best interests are met while out of the home.
West Virginia Division of Corrections and Rehabilitation – $101,782
These funds will be used to provide direct services throughout the state while networking with county prosecutors, law enforcement agencies, advocates and service providers to continue to share information to better assist victims and the safety of the public and communities in all 55 counties.
West Virginia Foundation for Rape Information Services – $256,728
These funds will be used to broaden the range of services available by trained, trauma-informed professionals to sexual assault victims by increasing training and support for advocates and sexual assault forensic examiners.
Wetzel County Commission – $80,903
These funds will be used to provide support to child victims of abuse and their protective caregivers by ensuring victims have access to all CAC core forensic interviews, advocacy and referral services.
Women’s Aid in Crisis – $586,306
These funds will be used to provide direct services, including shelter, advocacy and a 24/7 crisis hotline to victims/survivors of domestic violence, sexual violence, dating violence, child abuse, human trafficking and stalking with a focus on underserved populations experiencing abuse in 6 counties.
Wood County Commission – $71,600
These funds will be used to employ a full-time victim advocate and an assistant victim advocate to serve approximately 5,500 crime victims.
West Virginia Child Advocacy Network – $204,112
These funds will be used to support a comprehensive, statewide project aimed at expanding child advocacy services to underserved areas and enhancing the quality of services provided to victims of child abuse in the 46 counties already served by a child advocacy center.
West Virginia Coalition Against Domestic Violence – $243,750
These funds will be used to provide direct legal services, housing and emergency financial assistance to survivors and victims of crime and support the domestic violence orientation training program.
Wyoming County Commission – $31,833
These funds will be used to provide victims with criminal justice and personal advocacy support services, crisis counseling, crime victim’s compensation and to educate individuals about their rights.
YWCA of Wheeling – $266,533
These funds will be used to provide safety and victim services through Madden House Emergency Safe Shelter and will offer and provide support services to all ages and bring awareness to domestic violence and dating violence within our community.
YWCA of Charleston – $312,656
These funds will be used to provide both emergency and comprehensive support services to victims of domestic violence.
West Virginia
Top Bike Adventures in West Virginia’s Mountain Playground
Explore the peaks and valleys of the Allegheny Range on two wheels
(Photo: Pocahontas County)
Some places are just made for biking. Start with just-right rolling terrain, add diverse riding surfaces from singletrack to country roads, and top it all off with epic scenery. That’s Pocahontas County, West Virginia, home to the rolling Allegheny Mountains and shady trails of the Monongahela National Forest and rightfully known as Nature’s Mountain Playground. It’s a place with accessible outdoor adventure for all ages and vibrant mountain towns that ground the experience in welcoming rural communities. And when you explore from the seat of a bike, you’ll go at the perfect pace for taking it all in, with long-distance rail trails, scenic highways, and world-class mountain biking terrain to guide your way.

Ride the Rails
A day of cycling along Pocahontas County’s river trails is one of the most immersive ways to experience the quiet splendor of the Alleghenies. Get a taste along the iconic Greenbrier River Trail, which meanders alongside its namesake waterway for 78 miles through lush forests and thriving wildlife habitats. Go the full distance or take it in sections. With a grade of less than 1% throughout, the trail is accessible to most riders—gravel and mountain bikes or e-bikes are recommended—while unique features like its 37 bridge crossings and two 400-plus-foot tunnels make it more than just a simple river ride. The same can be said of the 22-mile West Fork Trail, a remote route that offers plenty of opportunities for hiking and fishing side quests. E-bikes are not permitted on this trail since it’s within the Monongahela National Forest.
Pocahontas County Trails
Sample the Singletrack
Beginner, expert, or somewhere in between? No matter where you are on the mountain biking spectrum, Pocahontas County has trails for you. Novice riders can experience a truly unique outing at the Green Bank Observatory, home to the world’s largest steerable radio telescope, along with 15-plus miles of beginner and intermediate trails. If you’re looking to progress your skills, head to the Mower Basin Trail System, a haven of beginner and intermediate riding where shady singletrack opens to rolling meadows and panoramic views along 12-plus miles of stacked loop trails. Mower Basin is also a conservation success story—once cleared for strip mining, the area is now a budding home for both red spruce trees and outdoor recreation.
Mower Basin Trails
Meanwhile, the downhill mecca of Snowshoe Mountain Resort plays host to nearly 40 trails and 1,500 vertical feet of lift-serviced riding, offering everything from easy freeride trails to technical descents and park-focused features. Known as one of the East’s best mountain bike parks, Snowshoe also offers access to its own backcountry trail system.
Snowshoe Mountain Resort Trails
Country Roads
When it comes to road riding, the jewel of Pocahontas County is the Highland Scenic Highway. This 43-mile National Scenic Byway is the kind of road that cyclists dream of. This low-traffic route climbs from 2,325 feet to more than 4,500, delivering challenging terrain and expansive views of some of the most remote reaches of the Allegheny Range along the way.
And while all cycling is great in Nature’s Mountain Playground, gravel riders are especially spoiled. That’s because the Mon Forest Towns Partnership has put together an extensive collection of gravel routes throughout the Monongahela National Forest, with 60-plus rides ranging from casual day adventures to serious multiday bikepacking trips. An overnight or all-day ride in Pocahontas County is an ideal way to experience one of the country’s most rugged and remote landscapes, fittingly curated by those who call it home.
Pocahontas County Convention & Visitors Bureau (PCCVB), located in West Virginia, promotes Nature’s Mountain Playground, where unspoiled landscapes, rich heritage, and year-round outdoor recreation create meaningful visitor experiences. Through strategic marketing and partnerships, PCCVB supports sustainable tourism that strengthens local communities while preserving the region’s natural beauty and cultural legacy.
West Virginia
West Virginia Virtual Academy celebrates second graduating class
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (WSAZ) – West Virginia Virtual Academy celebrated its second graduating class Tuesday at the Clay Center.
The ceremony featured a keynote speech and performance from West Virginia native and season six winner of America’s Got Talent’ Landau Eugene Murphy Jr., where he set out to inspire the class.
The class graduated 140 students, with eight earning a Promise Scholarship and 26 intending to attend college in the fall.
The academy’s director Doug Cipoletti said the virtual learning is about more than sitting behind a screen.
“Then we provide this [ceremony] where kids can actually come together and meet one another and build those relationships,” Cipoletti said. “So yes, we’re a virtual school, but there’s a lot more to it than just being behind a computer and I think that really shows today.”
West Virginia Virtual Academy is a K-12 school.
Copyright 2026 WSAZ. All rights reserved.
West Virginia
West Virginia Democrats have an open competition at the top of the state party – WV MetroNews
West Virginia Democrats have a competition for leader of the state party.
Teresa Toriseva, who currently serves as first vice chair of the West Virginia Democratic Party, says she is running for the top spot currently held by Mike Pushkin, who also serves as a state delegate from Charleston.
“This is not a civil war within the Democratic Party. On the contrary, the party is quite unified in message and in mission. And that’s what I found as I’ve been campaigning to run for chair, and I’ve never believed it to be more true,” Toriseva said on MetroNews Midday. “It’s an exciting time for what is a growing, robust opposition party.”
But, “There has been a call for us to prepare for the future better and differently than the past and one of those things that I’m going to be focusing on is building relationships with coalition members from groups that think like us, groups that want to work together with us, from labor to women’s groups to organizing groups that are on the ground doing the work, bringing messages to voters.”
Toriseva is a Wheeling attorney who ran in 2024 for state attorney general, losing in the general election.
Democrats, which used to be the dominant political party in West Virginia, now have almost 327,000 registered voters in the state, about 27% of the overall number of registered voters.
The Republican Party has more than 521,000 registered voters, about 43% of the total number.
Toriseva says Democrats have had a successful period of candidate recruitment that can serve as a base for revitalization.
“Democrats are back, and does that mean we’re going to look like we did a decade ago? No, it’s a new party, and we’re moving forward in a new way, but the future is going to look very different than the past,” she said.
Democrats, under the direction of their own bylaws and state code, are having an organizational meeting at 3 p.m. Saturday in Charleston. The meeting’s focus will be on the election of officers. The meeting will be broadcast to the public via wvdemocrats.com/live
Toriseva has worked alongside Pushkin as one of the top officers of the party for the past several years.
“It’s either have an election now or anoint the incumbent for four more years, and so I do think that elections are healthy, that competitive elections are a sign of a growing and robust party and I don’t think that it’s any indication of a civil war,” Toriseva said.
Pushkin, in response, agreed that anyone is entitled to run for chair and make their case to the members of the executive committee.
And he said the resurgence of the West Virginia Democratic Party has been the result of the hard work of county committees, labor organizations, women’s clubs, Young Democrats, grassroots activists, candidates and countless volunteers across the state.
“What leadership does deserve credit for is creating a plan, bringing people together around that plan, and providing the tools and support necessary to execute it. Our record-breaking candidate recruitment effort did not happen by accident,” Pushkin said.
He said party leaders developed an organizing strategy, held weekly recruitment calls, engaged county leaders and allied organizations, launched the first large-scale candidate recruitment texting program in party history and raised funds to cover filing fees for candidates willing to step forward and put their names on the ballot.
“The question before us now is not who gets credit. The question is whether we continue building on that momentum or allow ourselves to become distracted by internal disagreements while Republicans remain deeply divided,” Pushkin said.
“My focus remains exactly where it has always been: bringing Democrats together, supporting our candidates and taking the fight to Republicans every single day.”
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