West Virginia
Transportation secretary describes focus on Corridor H, King Coal and Coalfields highways
Transportation Secretary Jimmy Wriston nonetheless ranks Appalachian Hall H, the King Coal Freeway and the Coalfields Expressway as the highest priorities for West Virginia’s highway building program at a time of historic federal funding.
“These are high of the record. These are issues that we’re going to focus on,” Wriston advised lawmakers on Sunday.
He stated progress shall be “important” for the King Coal Freeway, a 95-mile stretch by way of McDowell, Mercer, Mingo, Wyoming, and Wayne counties in addition to for the Coalfields Expressway, a multi-lane freeway connecting the West Virginia Turnpike at Beckley with U.S. 23 at Slate, Va.
And he sees a conclusion to work on Hall H.
“I feel it’s secure to say the top of building on Hall H, the top is in web site,” Wriston stated of the longstanding work to construct four-lane freeway from central West Virginia to the Virginia line.
Wriston was offering an replace to lawmakers Sunday throughout an interim assembly of the Oversight Fee on Division of Transportation Accountability.
Senator Chandler Swope, R-Mercer, requested a number of questions of Wriston geared toward eliciting extra element about progress on the southern West Virginia highways.
On the Coalfields Expressway, Swope requested particularly about when a contract for work on Mullens to Welch would kick in.
“The design work is effectively below manner now for the following part between Mullens and the Twin Falls Connector, which we’ve added to the scope of this mission,” Wriston stated. “In order that mission is the one to search for as a result of that’s the one that can begin the drum beating. As soon as that happens, we could have one mission below building, one mission below design till we get to the Virginia line.”
Swope adopted up by asking, “What’s the timeline of completion of each initiatives? When might we stay up for these segments?”
“That might put us 2028 to Welch,” Wriston stated. “That might be an aggressive estimate.”
Swope requested what number of contracts shall be needed to increase the Coalfields Expressway to the Virginia line. “Do you might have any estimate what the entire value of that is perhaps and the way lengthy it’d take?”
“From Welch to the Virginia line? I feel that’s about $1.3 to $1.5 billion,” Wriston responded.
“What number of {dollars} wouldn’t it take to get to the Virginia border?” Swope requested.
“From the place we’re right now?” Wriston requested for clarification. “It’s most likely about $2 billion.”
Swope: “What number of years of building time would that be?”
Wriston: “Sometimes it could be 25, however I feel we are able to do significantly better than that. I feel we’re taking a look at barely greater than a decade.”
Swope then turned questions towards the King Coal Freeway. “Are you able to give us a section of that being subsequent and what the timeframe appears to be like like?”
Wriston described an identical strategy on King Coal. “In all probability as soon as that drum begins beating then I’d say the clock’s operating and we’ll have a building mission, a design mission all through.”
“What’s the scope of that mission in comparison with the $2 billion you simply referenced?” Swope requested.
“It’s practically the identical,” Wriston stated.
Swope commented, “I’d have thought it could be an important deal larger with much more mileage.”
The mileage facet is true, Wriston stated, “however we’re looking at some completely different approaches possibly the place we are able to use Route 52 to a level and solely construct two lanes possibly.”
Extra:
- Wriston, in his remarks to legislators, famous {that a} federal bridge rehabilitation program quantities to $548 million over 5 years. “It is a actually large program. That is one thing we’re actually going to make an influence with in West Virginia.”
- A nationwide electrical car formulation program quantities to about $45.6 million, Wriston stated. “That is new to us. That is going to be stuffed with challenges.
West Virginia
WVDA confirms case of bird flu in West Virginia
POCAHONTAS COUNTY, W.Va (WDTV) – The West Virginia Department of Agriculture has confirm a cause of Avian Influenza in a backyard flock in Pocahontas County.
This mark the second case of HPAI in domestic birds in West Virginia since the start of the global outbreak in early 2022.
The diagnosis was made by a field investigation, sample collection, and testing at WVDA’s Animal Health Lab in Moorefield.
The affected is currently under quarantine, and the birds have been depopulated to prevent a disease spread. These efforts help ensure the safety and integrity of the commercial food supply.
“The WVDA acted swiftly to contain the disease and remains committed to collaborating with poultry owners to prevent its spread,” stated West Virginia Commissioner of Agriculture Kent Leonhardt. “As the state’s leading agricultural commodity, protecting the poultry industry is critical, and implementing emergency response plans is essential to safeguarding its future.”
Avian influenza is an airborne respiratory virus that spreads easily among chickens through nasal and eye secretions, as well as manure. The virus also infects a wide variety of other birds, including wild migratory waterfowl. HPAI has been detected in various species of mammals—presumably after the animals come into contact with infected wild birds. For more information on current detections in domestic poultry, livestock, and wildlife across the U.S., please visit the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s webpage.
According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the public health risk associated with avian influenza remains low. As a reminder, people should properly handle and cook all poultry and eggs.
For additional precautions against the virus, visit the CDC’s Avian Influenza Guidance.
To prevent the spread of the disease, WVDA urges poultry owners to:
- Limit, monitor, and record any movement of people, vehicles, or animals on or off the farm.
- Permit only essential workers and vehicles to enter the farm.
- Avoid visiting other poultry farms or unnecessary travel off the farm.
- Disinfect equipment, vehicles, footwear, and other items in contact with flocks.
- Keep flocks away from wild or migratory birds, especially waterfowl.
- Isolate any ill animals and contact your veterinarian immediately.
Poultry owners should report unusual death loss, a drop in egg production, or any sick domestic birds to WVDA’s Animal Health Division at 304-558-2214.
Copyright 2025 WDTV. All rights reserved.
West Virginia
West Virginia hiring Noel Devine, former RB and program great, to staff as offensive analyst
West Virginia great Noel Devine is returning to Morgantown to join Rich Rodriguez’s staff as an offensive analyst, where the former star running back will reunite with the head coach who first recruited him to play for the Mountaineers. Devine, 36, announced the news Friday morning.
Devine, a former five-star recruit and one of the most exciting players of his generation, scored 31 touchdowns and amassed over 5,000 yards of total offense in his four-year career at West Virginia. Last summer his son Andre Devine signed with Rodriguez when he was the head coach at Jacksonville State.
Proud moment yesterday seeing my son Andre sign to JSU! Thank you Coach Rod and your coaching staff for welcoming my son with open arms. This means a lot to me and my family my son found a home. The Devine legacy continues with the same culture and traditions Rich Rod taught me pic.twitter.com/1JSVIKjV70
— Noel Devine (@noel_devine7) February 9, 2024
Devine was signed by the Philadelphia Eagles in 2011 after going undrafted but was only with the team briefly in the summer before spending time in the CFL. He has been working in Florida running his own speed training company and helping mentor local kids in the area where he grew up.
Devine was one of the first high school football recruits to go viral. His dazzling highlights took off on the internet starting in 2004 after Tampa-based Sunshine Preps, an independent recruiting service, posted footage of the 5-foot-7, 170-pound freshman’s varsity debut for North Fort Myers High the previous fall.
(Photo: Andy Lyons / Getty Images)
West Virginia
2027 athlete Duncan talks West Virginia offer
Bedford (Oh.) 2027 running back Rayshawn Duncan almost didn’t find out that West Virginia was extending him a scholarship offer.
Duncan, 5-foot-8, 195-pounds, was working out when his phone rang and while he initially didn’t pick it up, eventually elected to.
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