West Virginia
Water, Sewer Providers Must Assess Security Risks As Cyberattacks Rise – West Virginia Public Broadcasting
In late 2023, reports of foreign cyberattacks targeting local water systems across the United States spurred calls for providers to strengthen their cyber protections nationwide.
Now, the Public Service Commission of West Virginia (PSC) announced it will require all water and sewer utility providers across West Virginia to complete cybersecurity investigations. The investigations require providers to assess their cyber risks, with financial support from federal agencies like the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.
Water and sewer systems will also be required to develop long-term cybersecurity plans, and appoint an employee to oversee plan compliance.
“This is a seriously developing problem across the nation and the Public Service Commission wants to be in the forefront of helping assure the safety of data concerning utilities and their customers,” PSC Chairman Charlotte Lane said in a press release Thursday. “These attacks are widespread and will become more common, we fear, as we rely more and more on computers in our daily lives and in running our businesses.”
The PSC-prompted investigations mark another step in a months-long effort to reinforce water system cybersecurity in West Virginia as cyberattacks have continued to rise nationally.
In January, the Office of Environmental Health Services (OEHS) — part of the West Virginia Department of Health Bureau of Public Health — began coordinating cyberattack prevention initiatives with water providers across the state. OEHS also coordinated with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to spread awareness about free cybersecurity assessments offered by the federal agency.
Water and sewer providers in West Virginia will be required to complete their investigations by July 15 — 60 days after the PSC order was released.
West Virginia
W.Va. Building lit up in teal for Alzheimer’s Awareness Day
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (WSAZ) – The West Virginia Building in Huntington was lit up in teal on Monday night.
Nov. 3 is recognized all over as Light the World Teal for Alzheimer’s Awareness Day.
The West Virginia Building, Charleston Coliseum & Convention Center, the Kanawha Boulevard bridge, and the West Virginia state Capitol all were lit up in support.
More than 1,500 buildings and landmarks across the world were lit up in teal on Monday night to raise awareness.
Copyright 2025 WSAZ. All rights reserved.
West Virginia
WVU vs. Mount St. Mary’s: Game time, TV/stream info
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. — The new-look West Virginia men’s basketball team tips off the 2025-26 season Tuesday at home against Mount St. Mary’s.
Ross Hodge will make his WVU head coaching debut after being hired from North Texas this offseason. He is joined by an entirely new roster, as the Mountaineers did not return a single player who recorded a stat last season.
Here is everything you need to know for the game:
WVU men’s basketball vs. Mount St. Mary’s game information
WVU men’s basketball vs. Mount St. Mary’s matchup preview
Hodge brought a pair of players with him from North Texas who will start for the Mountaineers this season — forward Brenen Lorient and point guard Jasper Floyd. Lorient, the reigning American Conference Sixth Man of the Year, averaged 11.7 points and 4.9 rebounds last season. Floyd posted 9.0 points and 4.0 assists per game at UNT last year.
Lorient and Floyd will be joined in the starting five by a trio of fellow transfers — Honor Huff (Chattanooga), Treysen Eaglestaff (North Dakota) and Harlan Obioha (UNC Wilmington). Huff led the nation with 131 three-pointers last season, averaging 15.2 points per game. Eaglestaff was the only player in the country to log multiple 40-point performances last season, as he averaged 18.9 points. The seven-foot Obioha averaged 10.3 points and 6.6 rebounds per game last year.
Mount St. Mary’s went 23-13 last season and made the NCAA Tournament as Metro Atlantic Conference Champions. MSM defeated American in a First Four matchup before losing to No. 1 seed Duke in the first round.
Mount was picked ninth in the MAAC Preseason Poll and returns one starter, All-MAAC third-teamer Xavier Liscomb. The senior guard averaged 6.8 points and 4.3 assists while starting all 36 games last season.
Mount St. Mary’s is led by second-year head coach Donny Lind.
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West Virginia
Grading Houston Cougars in Upset Loss to West Virginia
The Houston Cougars issued possibly their most disappointing performance all season in their 45-35 loss to West Virginia on Saturday,
Compared to the Cougars’ Week 6 loss to a dominant, top-billed Texas Tech team on both sides of the ball, this was largely uncharacteristic in multiple ways.
Heading into Week 10, Houston, with a No. 22 AP Poll ranking, had committed just four turnovers all season, the fewest in all of FBS. Within 60 game minutes, the Cougars committed and matched that amount against a West Virginia squad that came in 0-5 in Big 12 play and having averaged only 17 points per game offensively.
This, mixed with a flurry of multiple missed defensive assignments and tackles, led to the Cougars surrendering the most points on the season, handing the Mountaineers their first Big 12 win of 2025 and only leaving questions to be answered.
Although Fritz usually nods to flushing a loss down the toilet as needed, let’s grade the Cougars on both sides of the rock to get a sense of what broke down in Week 10.
For consecutive weeks, Houston surrendered 400 total yards of offense to the opposition, but the onslaught of multiple missed tackles and assignments toward the Mountaineers with true freshman Scotty Fox Jr. under center sprinkled throughout the afternoon, and it may have begun with the first defensive possession.
Despite a streak of seven consecutive third down stops from the Cougars and a streak of five stalled drives from the second to third quarters, their efforts could not hold up enough to keep the offense in the game, as they finished by surrendering 246 yards on the ground among five Mountaineer rushers, 108 of them to redshirt freshman Diore Hubbard, and a stout 222 total yards by Fox. This was all orchestrated while they only averaged 5.4 yards per play.
It’s safe to say that stock has plummeted defensively in 2025 for the Cougars despite a strong start as a once top 30 total defense, but even in Houston being ahead of schedule in Year 2 of Fritz, we may have only begun seeing select growing pains unfold under the eyes of coordinator Austin Armstrong.
There is no other way to put other than that junior quarterback Conner Weigman looked truly rattled for the first time all season. Although he threw for 309 yards on 25 of 35 passing with four touchdown passes of his five total on the day, he was sacked three times on the day with one of them resulting in a fumble.
It was a mix of Weigman holding onto the ball too long in select snaps while protection folded in others, as it likely contributed to some of his uncharacteristic mistakes including when he threw a pick six returned 80 yards by redshirt senior cornerback Jordan Scruggs.
Weigman and his once award-winning though battered offensive line will need a breather as the turnaround is only six days heading into the Week 11 road trip to UCF.
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