West Virginia
Making Childcare More Affordable, Accessible – West Virginia Public Broadcasting
On this episode of The Legislature Today, leaders from both sides of the aisle have declared that childcare for the working men and women of West Virginia is a priority regarding economic and workforce development. So far, there has been plenty of talk but little legislative action. Randy Yohe spoke with Del. Joey Garcia, D-Marion, and Del. Evan Worrell, R-Cabell, to explore the issue.
In the House, the controversial Women’s Bill of Rights, House Bill 5243, was put back on the active calendar for third reading. And, yet another call for a legislative oversight committee to monitor yet another state government agency. Randy Yohe has more. There was also a public hearing held in the House on a bill that would remove a sunset clause from the current oil and gas personal property tax. Briana Heaney has more.
In the Senate, the chamber is building momentum now that it is well into the second half of the legislative session. Ten bills were passed and sent to the House, two bills were passed and sent to the governor’s desk. Briana Heaney has more.
Finally, it was Childcare Advocacy Day at the Capitol. Childcare is one of the hot topics in the 2024 regular session, directly related to the state’s economic development. Randy Yohe has more.
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The Legislature Today is West Virginia’s only television/radio simulcast devoted to covering the state’s 60-day regular legislative session.
Watch or listen to new episodes Monday through Friday at 6 p.m. on West Virginia Public Broadcasting.
West Virginia
Could West Virginia annex some Virginia counties? Here’s what would need to happen
HARRISONBURG, Va. (WHSV) – Through multiple steps, a West Virginia state senator’s proposal for the Mountain State to adopt counties from Virginia and Maryland could happen in theory if everything aligned.
After the November election, West Virginia State Sen. Christopher Rose introduced a resolution welcoming Republican voting counties in Appalachia to join West Virginia.
Gov. Patrick Morrisey also encouraged disgruntled Virginians to move to the Mountain State.
The resolution itself could not have counties transferred between states. However, there is a long process that is outlined in the United States constitution that makes it possible.
Article 4, Section 3 of the Constitution — sometimes referred to as the “Admissions Clause” — details the steps needed to admit new states into the Union. It also explains the formation of states from different territories within states.
These articles were used in the formation of West Virginia during the Civil War. The last time the Admissions Clause was used was Hawaii as the 50th state in the Union. Here are the steps needed to make this resolution possible:
- First, the resolution must be passed in all state legislatures. In this case, West Virginia, Virginia and Maryland would all need to support the measure.
- Second, a two-thirds majority must be achieved in Congress.
- The measure could face legal trouble at the Supreme Court if it progresses through Congress.
- Finally, the proposition would be signed off by the president to enact the law, just like any other bill Congress would pass.
Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., said this proposal would simply “not happen.” When WHSV first asked him about it, he was unaware of West Virginia’s messages to Appalachian Virginians.
Copyright 2025 WHSV. All rights reserved.
West Virginia
Search for coal miner trapped in flooded West Virginia mine continues for third day
A coal miner remains missing and trapped after catastrophic flooding struck the Rolling Thunder Mine in Drennen, Nicholas County, in central West Virginia, over the weekend. The miner—a crew foreman whose name has not yet been released—was assisting his team to safety when he was caught by rising waters.
The torrent was unleashed deep inside the mine when an unknown pocket was struck. The incident occurred about three-quarters of a mile into the Rolling Thunder Mine, which is owned by Alpha Metallurgical Resources (AMR). Other crew members managed to escape, but the foreman was overtaken by the flood.
The accident was reported at around 1:30 p.m. Saturday to the county emergency management office; all other miners on the team have been accounted for. The area remains flooded and the extent of the devastation below ground is still unclear.
Rescue operations began promptly and have been complicated by challenging conditions such as murky water, unstable underground air pockets, and the sheer depth of the site. For three days, crews have coordinated with county officials, state agencies, and national cave rescue experts.
Divers are working to locate any air pockets that may have provided a temporary refuge for the missing miner. Teams have employed underwater drones to try and pinpoint his location while simultaneously pumping water from the flooded section and drilling boreholes to lower water levels more rapidly.
The complexity of the effort reflects both the seriousness of the situation and the persistent danger in the coal mining industry.
The West Virginia Office of Miners’ Health, Safety, and Training (OMHST) and the Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA) have been present on the scene. West Virginia Governor Patrick Morrisey, while covering for the $2 billion mining corporation, has postured as a friend of the miners saying, “There is nothing that we would spare to try to save the life of the miner,” and assuring that all available resources, including national experts, are being utilized in the search operation. The company has not issued a single word on the disaster.
Nicholas County Commissioner Garrett Cole described the scene as one of relentless work and notes that while divers have entered the mine more than once, the process of pumping out enough water to allow exploration remains an immense challenge.
AMR has not answered critical questions about safety protocols and mine conditions at Rolling Thunder Mine. Backing up the governor, UMWA President Cecil Roberts and Region 2 Director Mike Dalpiaz have stepped in to divert and contain the anger of coal miners.
Roberts issued a statement that did not hold the company or the government responsible, saying, “This disaster is a reminder of the risks our miners confront daily, and we will do everything possible to support our brothers, their families, and the teams working underground now.”
Dalpiaz went further making the absurd statement that the UMWA, “stands ready to ensure that safety remains the priority, and we urge the company and regulators not to cut corners during this perilous search.”
AMR, with headquarters in Bristol, Tennessee, controls 11 underground mines and multiple surface mines in West Virginia and Virginia. The mine originally opened in 2005, employs about 25 workers, and extracts metallurgical coal, with property owned outright through Nicholas Contura LLC, an Alpha subsidiary.
Rolling Thunder’s coal seam extends along and below the drainage of TwentyMile Creek, with extensive historical records from prior operators. An engineering report prepared for AMR in February 2025 stated that “no significant hydrologic concerns” existed for further coal extraction at the property, which raises critical questions about the subordination of a mine safety evaluation that failed to anticipate this flood to the corporate and financial interests at AMR.
Once again, like every workplace disaster, the events at Rolling Thunder Mine show how the capitalism subordinates life-threatening risks faced by miners to the drive for profit.
Just days before the Rolling Thunder flood, on Thursday, November 6, 25-year-old Joey Mitchell Jr. was killed at Mettiki Coal’s Mountain View Mine in Mount Storm, Tucker County. Mitchell died before dawn while working underground; another individual was seriously injured and airlifted to the hospital.
While Governor Morrisey was quick to mourn Mitchell’s death and call for West Virginians to keep his family, friends, and fellow miners “in our thoughts and prayers,” details about the cause of the accident remain undisclosed, continuing the stonewalling policy among coal industry operators and local authorities.
According to reports, this was not the first fatality at the Mettiki Coal site. On January 16, 2014, Daniel Lambka, a 20-year-old worker was crushed to death in a coal feeder accident at the Mountain View Mine. MSHA officials detemined that the coal company has been negligent by failing to prevent the equipment from moving.
Mettiki Coal’s parent company, Alliance Resource Partners, also had safety violations at other operations.
In 2010, a roof collapse at the Dotiki Mine in Kentucky claimed the lives of two miners, Justin Travis and Michael Carter. That same year, the Dotiki operation accumulated 216 MSHA citations.
There have been at least three other mining fatalities in 2025 in West Virginia. These include:
- On January 29, Steven Fields, a 55-year-old drill operator, was killed at the Twilight Surface Mine in Boone County.
- In February, Billy Stalker, 46, a contractor with Wright Concrete Underground LLC, died in an underground incident.
- On August 26, Eric Bartram, 41, a preparation plant electrician, was fatally injured at the Marfork Preparation Plant in Raleigh County.
The number of fatal mine accidents in 2025 has been rising at an alarming rate despite the sharp reduction in mining employment. According to MSHA, fatalities reached 18 by early August, outpacing 2024, which had 12 by the same point. The industry is on pace for about 30 fatalities for 2025, matching 2022’s year-end total. The increase in death rates comes amid ongoing attacks on safety enforcement, including funding cuts, elimination of federal programs, and a drive to lower standards and oversight by MSHA and OSHA.
Wayne Palmer, Trump’s nominee who was approved for Assistant Secretary of Labor for MSHA previously held executive posts in mining and mineral industry business associations.
Jordan Barab, a former OSHA official and publisher of the “Confined Spaces” blog who continues to tally the rising fatalities, stressing that they are neither accidental nor random but the direct product of deliberate corporate and government policies that place profits over lives.
Among the workplace deaths reported by Barab on Tuesday alone were 14 workers killed in the UPS plane crash in Louisville, Kentucky; a postal worker killed in a collision with a pick-up truck in Aliceville, Alabama; and a lawn maintenance worker was killed when his lawn mower rolled onto him in Bryan County, Oklahoma.
On Saturday morning, a postal worker in Allen Park, Michigan—a suburb of Dearborn—was found dead after becoming trapped in a mail handling machine at the United States Postal Service facility. The 36-year-old man, identified as a maintenance worker, was discovered by firefighters after his wife contacted authorities when he failed to return home following his shift.
He had been stuck in the machine for approximately six to eight hours before his body was found. As is the case with many workplace fatalities, the USPS facility remains operational, while federal authorities are conducting an investigation. No details about the circumstances leading to the accident have been released.
Seven months ago, Ronald Adams Sr. was crushed to death at the Stellantis Dundee Engine Plant in Michigan when a automatic hoist cycled unexpectedly during maintenance. The Michigan Occupational Safety and Health Administration (MIOSHA) says the case is “still open” and Adams’s family and co-workers remains without answers from the company or the United Auto Workers although full production has resumed.
The rise in workplace deaths is taking place globally. As enormous wealth concentrates in fewer hands—with the billionaire elite soon growing into the trillionaire elite—workers are being killed and injured at alarming rates.
With the approval of both the Democrats and Republicans and the backing of the union officialdom, owners are being shielded while workers die, are maimed, or denied compensation and their families left with no answers.
This situation will not be reversed by either capitalist party or the union apparatus. Workers themselves must act—organizing independent rank-and-file committees to enforce safety, demand accountability and safeguard lives through direct intervention in the workplace.
Find out more about joining a rank-and-file committee
We are building a network of rank-and-file committees of workers in key industries and workplaces to stop the spread of COVID-19 and save lives, and prepare for a political general strike.
West Virginia
Southern West Virginia communities gear up to honor those who served with Veteran’s Day celebrations – WOAY-TV
West Virginia (WOAY)- Communities across southern West Virginia are preparing to honor the men and women who’ve served our nation with a full slate of Veterans Day events.
In Summersville, a ceremony is set for 11:11 a.m. at Veterans Park.
Mayor Robert Shafer will deliver what will be his final public speech before leaving office at the end of December.
Beckley will host its annual Veterans Day Parade beginning at 11:00 a.m. The theme this year is “Service to our Nation, Forever Grateful.”
Lineup starts as early as nine at Park Middle School and the Beckley Intermodal Gateway.
A Memory and Honor Walk will allow families to march with photos or mementos of their loved ones.
An awards ceremony and musical performances will follow at the Bill Withers Plaza.
In Welch, the 107th Annual Veterans Day Parade steps off downtown at 10:00 a.m., celebrating this year’s theme “In Unity Comes Strength, In Honor Comes Veterans.”
Fayetteville’s Veterans Parade begins at 11:00 a.m., with lineup at Fayetteville PK-8 at 10. The parade will travel down Maple Avenue toward the courthouse.
And in Princeton, the city’s parade starts at 11:00 a.m. on Mercer Street, with the lineup at 10:00.
The route ends at the Mercer County Courthouse, where veterans and families are invited to gather in remembrance and celebration.
Organizers across the region are encouraging everyone to come out, wave a flag, and show appreciation for those who’ve served.
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