West Virginia
West Virginia college files for bankruptcy a month after announcing intentions to close
CHARLESTON, W.Va. — A small, private university in West Virginia declared bankruptcy on Thursday, a month after announcing that it planned to cease operations.
Alderson Broaddus University filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy in U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the state’s northern district. According to the filing, the university estimated it had between $1 million and $10 million in total assets, liabilities of between $10 million and $50 million and owed money to between 100 and 199 creditors.
The filing was signed by Alderson Broaddus interim president Andrea Bucklew. The Chapter 7 filing would allow the university to liquidate its assets. The campus community was notified of the decision, the university said in a statement.
Alderson Broaddus board chairman James Garvin said that the board “is grateful to the students, employees, alumni and donors who have embodied the Christian spirit of the University, and through them, the legacy of AB will live on.”
On July 31 the university’s Board of Trustees voted to develop a plan to disband after another board overseeing the state’s four-year colleges and universities revoked its ability to award degrees effective Dec. 31. The university said the revocation meant the school could have offered only limited classes to about 20 students this fall, and it forced the Baptist university’s 625 students on the Philippi campus to scramble to enroll at colleges elsewhere.
Other state universities, including West Virginia Wesleyan in nearby Buckhannon and Fairmont State University in Fairmont, offered application and transcript evaluation assistance to Alderson Broaddus students.
Student academic and financial records have been transferred to West Virginia Wesleyan, located about 21 miles (34 kilometers) from Alderson Broaddus. West Virginia Wesleyan will make transcripts and other information available to former Alderson Broaddus students.
Earlier in August West Virginia Wesleyan said it had accepted more than 20 transfer students from Alderson Broaddus.
Alderson Broadus said it had anticipated receiving an employee retention credit payment from the Internal Revenue Service of more than $1 million. However, the funds were not received in time.
The website of Alderson Broaddus was taken down Thursday and the school encouraged its employees to seek unemployment insurance benefits.
West Virginia
‘It’s been a real honor flying with you’: Justice gives farewell speech to WV lawmakers • West Virginia Watch
Speaking to state lawmakers Wednesday for a final time before he assumes a new role in the U.S. Senate, West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice touted his administration’s accomplishments in education, roads and tourism, among others, and promised to continue the nation’s fossil fuel industry.
“All the surpluses, all the gains, all the tourism, all the roads, all the, all the. You know what we did, we did this together,” Justice told lawmakers. “And you should be very proud. Every last one of all of y’all. Every single last one of you. You restored and gave West Virginia pride and hope. You did. You should never forget that.”
Repeating a saying from his father, Justice told lawmakers it has been “a real honor flying with you. It really has. I absolutely would wish you the best in every way.”
Justice gave his comments before a joint session of the state Legislature in the House of Delegates following swearing-in ceremonies by both bodies.
Justice, who served two terms as the state’s chief executive, was elected in November to the U.S. Senate. He’ll be sworn into the new role Jan. 13, the day of Governor-elect Patrick Morrisey’s inauguration.
Justice spoke of turning the state’s deficits into surpluses and touted his $2.8 billion infrastructure program, “Roads to Prosperity,” which rebuilt and maintained roads and bridges across the state.
He admonished the state to always celebrate Oct. 7, the anniversary of when voters approved the issuance of $1.6 billion for the program, as a day the state “pivoted and took off.”
“Don’t ever, ever not celebrate Oct. 7, because on that day, this whole state took a big turn of where we had been and where we had been for decades,” he said. “Absolutely right then and there, we took off.”
Justice also touted cutting taxes “over and over” and encouraged lawmakers to continue to work toward eliminating the state’s income tax. Lawmakers last fall approved a bill that cut the tax by 2%, eliminating about $46 million a year in state revenue. The governor had initially asked the Legislature to cut the tax by 5%, but he amended his request.
“I would tell you, don’t lose the mission,” he said. “The faster you can get rid of your personal income tax in West Virginia, this place will flood with people and opportunity over and over and over. You absolutely please keep your mission.”
Justice was first elected West Virginia’s governor in 2016 as a Democrat. The next year, while on stage in Huntington with his friend, then and president-elect Donald Trump, Justice announced he would register as a Republican and leave the Democratic Party.
Justice said the state has “done a bunch of really good stuff” for education in the state in his time as governor, including giving families the choice of private schooling and homeschooling through the state’s education savings account program Hope Scholarship and expanding the Community In Schools and therapy dog programs.
“We have flipped the script in many ways with our schools, but we got a lot more to do,” he said. “There’s no question we got a lot more to do, and we can improve over and over and over. But the things we’ve done as far as choice, the things we’ve done, as far as the [School Building Authority] the things we have absolutely been able to do because of the fact that we’re economically so sound, it’s unbelievable. We’ve done good stuff, and you should really be proud of that.”
Justice said tourists spent $9 billion in West Virginia in 2024 as the state “became frogs that were proud of our own pond.”
He also bragged that the state “stood rock solid for life.” In 2022, after the U.S. Supreme Court’s overturning of Roe V. Wade, lawmakers approved an abortion ban with narrow exceptions. He touted the state’s support of guns, appointment of conservative judges and “not turning a blind eye to the border crisis.”
Justice repeated praise for Trump, saying that lawmakers, for the most part, should “love and respect him,” and said that energy is important for the country’s future.
Justice, whose family owns several coal companies, has been appointed to the Senate’s committee on Energy and Natural Resources, among others. Justice said energy will be the key to growing the country’s revenue. He said he supports Trump’s plan to “take a meat ax” to spending waste in Washington.
“The only way civilization has gone forward is that we’re standing and sitting on natural gas reserves, coal reserves,” Justice said. “Absolutely all the alternatives, whether they be solar or wind or whatever, I say, embrace them all, but for God’s sakes a living, don’t be dumb enough to absolutely turn your back on our fossil fuels. Our fossil fuels are critical to us like you can’t imagine.”
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West Virginia
In-state QB Max Anderson talks West Virginia opportunity
Spring Mills quarterback Max Anderson is taking his recruitment one step at a time but now has some things to consider with West Virginia offering him an opportunity.
Anderson, 6-foot-1, 208-pounds, spoke with inside wide receivers coach Blaine Stewart and the assistant made it clear that the Mountaineers would like for him to join the program.
“He told me the news and how much Rich Rodriguez likes me throwing the ball and that he was proud of my performance throughout the season and just catching up with me,” he said.
The Mountaineers are targeting him as a quarterback and naturally he was fired up about the news. He is coming off a season where he threw for 1,464 yards and 19 touchdowns with just 6 interceptions, while rushing for 1,078 yards and 18 scores.
“I was pumped to get offered by my home state at quarterback,” he said.
Anderson has ties to the West Virginia football program outside of being an in-state native as his uncle Josh Francis suited up for the Mountaineers and he went to plenty of his games as well as more after.
The plan is to make a visit to West Virginia in order to see the school soon and while nothing is set yet he plans to also take a trip to West Liberty.
Anderson is looking for a place where he can play football and earn a degree while growing into a successful person both on and off the field. He has no timeline for a decision.
West Virginia
4-Star RB Deandre Desinor Flips his Commitment from West Virginia to NC State
4-Star 2025 Running Back Deandre Desinor (5’10″/175) has flipped his commitment from West Virginia to NC State.
BREAKING: Class of 2025 RB Deandre Desinor ( @1deandredesinor ) has flipped his commitment from West Virginia to NC State he tells me.
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Deandre Desinor is a 5’10 (180 LBS) Running Back out of Delray Beach, FL. With a total of 40+ offers Deandre had been committed to WVU since… pic.twitter.com/75Krww0FZL— Steezo (@SteezoDsgn) January 7, 2025
Back on June 4th, Desinor verbally committed to the Mountaineers, but today he decided to join his Atlantic (Delray Beach, Florida) teammate Wide Receiver Teddy Hoffman, who flipped his commitment from FAU to run with the Wolfpack on National Signing Day (December 6th).
ESPN ranks Desinor as a 4-Star prospect, and Rivals ranks him as the #11 All-Purpose Running Back nationally in the 2025 recruiting class.
This season, he rushed for 711 yards and 8 touchdowns, averaging 6.6 yards per carry. Desinor also had 28 receptions for 302 yards and 3 touchdowns. He also averaged 30.9 yards on kickoff returns and 16.2 yards per punt return.
Desinor also held offers from Miami, FSU, Florida, Texas, Texas A&M, Ole Miss, Penn St., Georgia Tech, Syracuse, Pitt, UCF, Louisville and others.
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