Month: March 2017

Gazette-Mail pain pill series wins second national award

Staff reports Charleston Gazette-Mail CHARLESTON, W.Va. — Charleston Gazette-Mail reporter Eric Eyre has been named the winner of an investigative reporting award from the Association of Health Care Journalists for his stories about prescription opioid shipments to West Virginia. The association honors the best health reporting in print, broadcast and[Read More…]

Online News Association WV hosts first event

By BRENDA PINNELL West Virginia Press Association CHARLESTON, W.Va. — Online News Association West Virginia hosted its inaugural event at the West Virginia University’s Economic Development Center on Saturday morning to discuss trends in the media’s move to digital news delivery. More than 20 people representing television, print, technology innovators and academia[Read More…]

10 things to know: Monday, March 20

Dorothy Abernathy, regional media director of The Associated Press, shares 10 things you need to know Monday, March 20, 2017. Look for full stories on these late-breaking news items and much more in West Virginia newspapers. 1. SENATE HEARINGS SET FOR SUPREME COURT PICK Thirteen months after Justice Antonin Scalia’s death created[Read More…]

Around the Rotunda: Legislative, Committee Schedule for Monday, March 20

W.Va. Legislative Committee Meeting Schedule – Subject to change Watch WV Legislature Live each day at http://www.legis.state.wv.us/live.cfm SENATE:                       Monday, March 20, 2017 REVIEW BILLS INTRODUCED The Senate will convene at 11 a.m.   RESOLUTIONS   SR 42: Designating March 20, 2017, as International Pageant Day SR[Read More…]

Three income tax measures going through House and Senate

By Andrea Lannom The Register-Herald of Beckley CHARLESTON, W.Va. — Three measures that would lower or eliminate the personal income tax are working their way through the House and the Senate. And with a little less than three weeks before bills need to be on the floor, lawmakers hope they can[Read More…]

Editorial: Mudslinging in West Virginia

The Journal of Martinsburg: There is plenty of acrimony stemming from disagreement over the issues facing West Virginia state government without adding to it by making the arguments personal. Unfortunately, that has happened. It may be impossible to discover who threw the first verbal stone, but clearly, relations between Gov.[Read More…]

Editorial: Legislators whistling while the state burns

From The Register-Herald of Beckley: As the state legislature runs down the clock on this do-nothing session, state revenues continue to slide, teachers continue to receive layoff notices, young professionals continue to move out of state, schools continue to close, businesses continue to turn out the lights and opioid drug[Read More…]

Editorial: Lost in the math, two divergent views of state government

From The Exponent Telegram of Clarksburg: When discussing a $4 billion budget and its $500 million shortfall, it’s easy to get caught up in the math. It’s also easy to get caught up in the political rhetoric. Make no mistake, Republicans want us to believe that state government can function[Read More…]

Editorial: Legislation to expand broadband is at least a start

From The Herald-Dispatch of Huntington: A bill in the West Virginia legislature aimed at trying to improve residents’ access to broadband internet service can hardly be viewed as a game-changer for the Mountain State, but it’s encouraging to know that lawmakers aren’t ignoring this pressing issue in their current legislative[Read More…]

Editorial: Cut spending, not programs

From The Intelligencer of Wheeling: West Virginia University President E. Gordon Gee is right about the danger of across-the-board spending cuts in state government — to a point. Republican legislators have vowed to balance the state budget through limits on spending. Gee and many others in higher education worry that[Read More…]

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