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Social Security reportedly reviewing Huntington area cases

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. — The Social Security Administration reportedly is reviewing disability benefits that were awarded in hundreds of cases connected to Kentucky attorney Eric Conn and former Social Security administrative judge David B. Daugherty. The Herald-Dispatch recently learned Social Security officials mailed notices, including some suspending benefit payments, to area[Read More…]

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Lower gas prices, good weather boost holiday travel

CHARLESTON, W.Va. — Lower gas prices and good weather proved to be the right combination for higher-than-expected Memorial Day weekend traffic on the West Virginia Turnpike, Parkways Authority general manager Greg Barr said Tuesday. Toll transactions for the five-day travel period topped 589,000, up more than 5 percent from the[Read More…]

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Appalachian, Wheeling Power get OK for hefty hikes

CHARLESTON, W.Va. — The state Public Service Commission on Tuesday approved a $123.5 million rate increase for American Electric Power subsidiaries Appalachian Power and Wheeling Power. The new rate system went into effect immediately for the more than 476,000 customers in 24 West Virginia counties served by the two companies.[Read More…]

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Beckley ranked ninth for ID theft per capita

BECKLEY, W.Va. — The Beckley metropolitan statistical area has the ninth highest rate per capita of identity theft-related complaints countrywide, according to a recent Federal Trade Commission study. For context, the Eastern Panhandle of the state, which is included in the Washington, D.C., metropolitan statistical area, ranked 40th in ID[Read More…]

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U.S. energy policy makes no sense

A column by Mike Myer, executive editor of The Intelligencer/Wheeling News-Register WHEELING, W.Va. — How crazy is U.S. energy policy? Try this: More than one-fourth of the oil we use in this country comes from other nations. We import nearly twice as much as we did in 1973-74, when the Arab[Read More…]

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Sick-leave payouts should follow the rules

An editorial from The Herald-Dispatch HUNTINGTON, W.Va. — Huntington City Council member Scott Caserta sparked a firestorm last week when he asked Cabell County’s prosecutor to investigate whether a payout of nearly $34,000 to a former city police chief for accrued sick time violated a city ordinance. Within two days,[Read More…]

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