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OPIOID TRIAL: WHY WASN'T HUNTINGTON'S MEDICINE SHOPPE As a result, in Huntington, the quantity of opioids shipped to Medicine Shoppe from Cardinal’s Wheeling distribution center tripled between 2006 and 2012, according to a Mountain State Spotlight analysis of DEA data compiled by The Washington Post that accounts for various opioid formulations. In 2010, the pharmacy was obtaining18,600 dose
AWAY FROM THE OPIOID TRIAL, THE FIGHT GOES ON IN HUNTINGTON Away from the opioid trial, life carries on in Huntington. West Virginia is in the spotlight for taking on major drug distributors. But outside the courtroom, it’s business as usual as residents work to help their community heal. by Lauren Peace May 24th, 2021. May 24th, 2021. A sign that hangs at the entrance of the ReBUILD buildingin
AMID OPIOID EPIDEMIC, DRUG EXECUTIVES MADE FUN OF WEST As opioid epidemic raged, drug company executives made fun of West Virginians. At the height of West Virginia’s opioid epidemic, executives at a leading drug distributor exchanged emails making light of the crisis. The emails were put forth by Cabell County attorney Paul Farrell Jr. during trial at U.S. District Court in Charleston. MILLIONS OF OPIOIDS SHIPPED TO CABELL COUNTY, WEST VIRGINIA The economist stopped short of breaking down the number of doses per capita supplied by McKesson, but showed that approximately 76% of total shipments by the distributor into Cabell County were shipped to a Veterans Affairs clinic — “the first instance when we see a significant amount going to anything but chain pharmacies,” McCann said. MOST OF W.VA.'S CONGRESSIONAL DELEGATION VOTED AGAINST THE News. American Rescue Plan sends billions in pandemic aid to West Virginia. Most of our congressional delegation voted against the help. by Douglas Soule March 22nd, 2021. March 21st, 2021. U.S. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (top left) and Reps. David McKinley (bottom left), Alex Mooney (top right) and Carol Miller (bottom right). West Virginia is W.VA. FINALLY HAS A STATE BROADBAND OFFICE- MOUNTAIN STATE February 4th, 2021. Charlie Dennie, the director of W.Va's new Office of Broadband, speaking at an event hosted by the South Charleston Chamber of Commerce on Tuesday. Photo by Lucas Manfield. For years, West Virginia has relied on a group of volunteers — with almost no funding — to address the lack of reliable, high-speed internetaccess
CAN STARLINK SOLVE WEST VIRGINIA’S INTERNET WOES As a result, the Federal Communications Commission has tentatively agreed to give SpaceX $900 million over the next decade to build out its network in areas of the country unserved by traditional internet providers, like much of West Virginia. Joel George’s Starlink receiver. Photo by Lucas Manfield. LAWMAKERS PUSH TO TURN MORE EMPLOYEES INTO INDEPENDENT Seeking ‘clarity,’ West Virginia lawmakers push to turn more employees into independent contractors. This status change matters, because independent contractors aren't eligible for unemployment benefits and other worker protections. by Erin Beck March 2nd, 2021. March 2nd, 2021. The House of Delegates on opening day: January 13,2021.
MOUNTAIN STATE SPOTLIGHT As a nonprofit newsroom, we rely on your help to power our journalism. Currently, we are operating with our partner, GroundTruth (Report for America) as a fiscal sponsor, and donations to us can be made here. All donations go entirely to Mountain State Spotlight.We are becoming an independent 501(c)(3) group and we have ambitious plans to grow the staff, build philanthropic support, and serve MORGANTOWN'S MYLAN PLANT WILL CLOSE ON JULY 31. WHAT'S NEXT? In November, Mylan, which makes generic and specialty drugs, merged with Upjohn, a Pfizer-owned company, to create Viatris. The announcement came less than a month later during a morning video meeting: as part of a global restructuring initiative, the Morgantown plant would shut down on July 31. The news was unexpected; manyemployees expected
OPIOID TRIAL: WHY WASN'T HUNTINGTON'S MEDICINE SHOPPE As a result, in Huntington, the quantity of opioids shipped to Medicine Shoppe from Cardinal’s Wheeling distribution center tripled between 2006 and 2012, according to a Mountain State Spotlight analysis of DEA data compiled by The Washington Post that accounts for various opioid formulations. In 2010, the pharmacy was obtaining18,600 dose
AWAY FROM THE OPIOID TRIAL, THE FIGHT GOES ON IN HUNTINGTON Away from the opioid trial, life carries on in Huntington. West Virginia is in the spotlight for taking on major drug distributors. But outside the courtroom, it’s business as usual as residents work to help their community heal. by Lauren Peace May 24th, 2021. May 24th, 2021. A sign that hangs at the entrance of the ReBUILD buildingin
AMID OPIOID EPIDEMIC, DRUG EXECUTIVES MADE FUN OF WEST As opioid epidemic raged, drug company executives made fun of West Virginians. At the height of West Virginia’s opioid epidemic, executives at a leading drug distributor exchanged emails making light of the crisis. The emails were put forth by Cabell County attorney Paul Farrell Jr. during trial at U.S. District Court in Charleston. MILLIONS OF OPIOIDS SHIPPED TO CABELL COUNTY, WEST VIRGINIA The economist stopped short of breaking down the number of doses per capita supplied by McKesson, but showed that approximately 76% of total shipments by the distributor into Cabell County were shipped to a Veterans Affairs clinic — “the first instance when we see a significant amount going to anything but chain pharmacies,” McCann said. MOST OF W.VA.'S CONGRESSIONAL DELEGATION VOTED AGAINST THE News. American Rescue Plan sends billions in pandemic aid to West Virginia. Most of our congressional delegation voted against the help. by Douglas Soule March 22nd, 2021. March 21st, 2021. U.S. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (top left) and Reps. David McKinley (bottom left), Alex Mooney (top right) and Carol Miller (bottom right). West Virginia is W.VA. FINALLY HAS A STATE BROADBAND OFFICE- MOUNTAIN STATE February 4th, 2021. Charlie Dennie, the director of W.Va's new Office of Broadband, speaking at an event hosted by the South Charleston Chamber of Commerce on Tuesday. Photo by Lucas Manfield. For years, West Virginia has relied on a group of volunteers — with almost no funding — to address the lack of reliable, high-speed internetaccess
CAN STARLINK SOLVE WEST VIRGINIA’S INTERNET WOES As a result, the Federal Communications Commission has tentatively agreed to give SpaceX $900 million over the next decade to build out its network in areas of the country unserved by traditional internet providers, like much of West Virginia. Joel George’s Starlink receiver. Photo by Lucas Manfield. LAWMAKERS PUSH TO TURN MORE EMPLOYEES INTO INDEPENDENT Seeking ‘clarity,’ West Virginia lawmakers push to turn more employees into independent contractors. This status change matters, because independent contractors aren't eligible for unemployment benefits and other worker protections. by Erin Beck March 2nd, 2021. March 2nd, 2021. The House of Delegates on opening day: January 13,2021.
WHEN A PANDEMIC CHANGES EVERYTHING, THIS IS WHAT WE HOLD DEAR Essential Appalachia: when a pandemic changes everything, this is what we hold dear. by Molly Born, 100 Days in Appalachia and Brittany Greeson, 100 Days in Appalachia May 13th, 2021. May 12th, 2021. Valerie Akers, co-owner of the Parkview Pharmacy is seen through a plexiglass window as Mary Slone lifts her disposable camera to herface.
HERE'S SOME OF WHAT PASSED THE W.VA. LEGISLATURE- MOUNTAIN The West Virginia Legislative session is over; here’s some of what passed and what didn’t. Last days of Legislature include bills on Biden gun control and harm reduction; efforts to repeal the personal income tax and diversify coal country fail. by Erin Beck April 11th, 2021. April 12th, 2021. House Speaker Roger Hanshaw (R-Clay) watches WEST VIRGINIA SUMMER FEEDING WILL FILL CRITICAL ROLE AS Kanawha County cook Ashley Young, left, Director of Child Nutrition Diane Miller, center and Kanawha County cook Shelia Murdock load food boxes at Clendenin Elementary on September 15, 2020. Photo by F. Brian Ferguson. Kayla Boerboom says she knew kids W.VA. FINALLY HAS A STATE BROADBAND OFFICE- MOUNTAIN STATE February 4th, 2021. Charlie Dennie, the director of W.Va's new Office of Broadband, speaking at an event hosted by the South Charleston Chamber of Commerce on Tuesday. Photo by Lucas Manfield. For years, West Virginia has relied on a group of volunteers — with almost no funding — to address the lack of reliable, high-speed internetaccess
CAN STARLINK SOLVE WEST VIRGINIA’S INTERNET WOES As a result, the Federal Communications Commission has tentatively agreed to give SpaceX $900 million over the next decade to build out its network in areas of the country unserved by traditional internet providers, like much of West Virginia. Joel George’s Starlink receiver. Photo by Lucas Manfield. CO-FOUNDER - MOUNTAIN STATE SPOTLIGHT Ken Ward Jr. Ken Ward Jr. is a co-founder of Mountain State Spotlight and a distinguished local reporting fellow with our partner, the nonprofit newsroom ProPublica. Ken spent nearly three decades reporting for The Charleston Gazette on the impacts of coal mining, chemical manufacturing and natural gas drilling on his home state ofWest Virginia.
AUDIT FINDS W.VA. EDA MISHANDLED MILLIONS Once again, West Virginia squandered millions of taxpayer dollars on jobs that never came. Here’s how more than $8 million, earmarked for creating local jobs, went out-of-state. by Lucas Manfield February 1st, 2021. January 31st, 2021. The West Virginia Economic Development Authority headquarters in Charleston. Photo by Lucas Manfield. FRONTIER HAS SUCKED UP MILLIONS BEFORE WITHOUT GIVING W.VA Frontier, which was allocated nearly $250 million in the state, declared bankruptcy in March. The company has a long track record of making — and then breaking — extravagant promises in West Virginia, and there’s doubt as to whether this time will be any different. “It’s unbelievable,” said Mike Holstine, the secretary-treasurer of the state council tasked with coordinatingrural
FEDERAL REGULATORS ARE REWRITING ENVIRONMENTAL RULES SO A This article was produced in partnership with the ProPublica Local Reporting Network.Sign up for ProPublica’s Big Story newsletter to get stories like this one as soon as they are published. Last month, a federal appeals court blocked one of the key permits for construction of a massive natural gas pipeline that cuts through West Virginia and that industry officials and their political SEN. JOE MANCHIN HAS BEEN THE DEMOCRATS' MOST FOSSIL FUEL The Senate’s new point man on climate has been the Democrats’ most fossil fuel-friendly senator. West Virginia's Joe Manchin once shot a hole in a climate bill in a campaign ad. People who know him say his views have since evolved. Sen. Joe Manchin during a Senate committee hearing in September, 2020. Kingmaker. MOUNTAIN STATE SPOTLIGHT As a nonprofit newsroom, we rely on your help to power our journalism. Currently, we are operating with our partner, GroundTruth (Report for America) as a fiscal sponsor, and donations to us can be made here. All donations go entirely to Mountain State Spotlight.We are becoming an independent 501(c)(3) group and we have ambitious plans to grow the staff, build philanthropic support, and serve MORGANTOWN'S MYLAN PLANT WILL CLOSE ON JULY 31. WHAT'S NEXT? In November, Mylan, which makes generic and specialty drugs, merged with Upjohn, a Pfizer-owned company, to create Viatris. The announcement came less than a month later during a morning video meeting: as part of a global restructuring initiative, the Morgantown plant would shut down on July 31. The news was unexpected; manyemployees expected
OPIOID TRIAL: WHY WASN'T HUNTINGTON'S MEDICINE SHOPPE As a result, in Huntington, the quantity of opioids shipped to Medicine Shoppe from Cardinal’s Wheeling distribution center tripled between 2006 and 2012, according to a Mountain State Spotlight analysis of DEA data compiled by The Washington Post that accounts for various opioid formulations. In 2010, the pharmacy was obtaining18,600 dose
WV OPIOID TRIAL: EXPERT WITNESS POINTS TO DRUG COMPANIES The federal courthouse in Charleston, where opioid distributors are on trail. Photo by Lauren Peace. The nation’s three largest drug distributors failed to set up effective programs to stop prescription painkillers from being diverted and sold illegally on the black market, a former investigator LANDMARK WV OPIOID TRIAL TO START MONDAY; HERE'S WHAT YOU An in-person trial is expected to begin at 9 a.m. Monday, but lawyers for both sides qualify that with words like “scheduled” and “expected.”. Both sides continue to negotiate toward a settlement. If they succeed, the trial would be called off and the companies would agree to pay a specific amount to end the lawsuits. MOST OF W.VA.'S CONGRESSIONAL DELEGATION VOTED AGAINST THE News. American Rescue Plan sends billions in pandemic aid to West Virginia. Most of our congressional delegation voted against the help. by Douglas Soule March 22nd, 2021. March 21st, 2021. U.S. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (top left) and Reps. David McKinley (bottom left), Alex Mooney (top right) and Carol Miller (bottom right). West Virginia is HERE'S SOME OF WHAT PASSED THE W.VA. LEGISLATURE- MOUNTAIN The West Virginia Legislative session is over; here’s some of what passed and what didn’t. Last days of Legislature include bills on Biden gun control and harm reduction; efforts to repeal the personal income tax and diversify coal country fail. by Erin Beck April 11th, 2021. April 12th, 2021. House Speaker Roger Hanshaw (R-Clay) watches SCORES OF KIDS ARE UNACCOUNTED FOR IN WEST VIRGINIA'S Scores of children in West Virginia’s foster care system are unaccounted for at any given time, and state officials can’t seem to find records about them, according to new information uncovered in an ongoing lawsuit that seeks better protections for thousands of kids under the state’s care. LAWMAKERS PUSH TO TURN MORE EMPLOYEES INTO INDEPENDENT Seeking ‘clarity,’ West Virginia lawmakers push to turn more employees into independent contractors. This status change matters, because independent contractors aren't eligible for unemployment benefits and other worker protections. by Erin Beck March 2nd, 2021. March 2nd, 2021. The House of Delegates on opening day: January 13,2021.
W.VA. FINALLY HAS A STATE BROADBAND OFFICE- MOUNTAIN STATE February 4th, 2021. Charlie Dennie, the director of W.Va's new Office of Broadband, speaking at an event hosted by the South Charleston Chamber of Commerce on Tuesday. Photo by Lucas Manfield. For years, West Virginia has relied on a group of volunteers — with almost no funding — to address the lack of reliable, high-speed internetaccess
MOUNTAIN STATE SPOTLIGHT As a nonprofit newsroom, we rely on your help to power our journalism. Currently, we are operating with our partner, GroundTruth (Report for America) as a fiscal sponsor, and donations to us can be made here. All donations go entirely to Mountain State Spotlight.We are becoming an independent 501(c)(3) group and we have ambitious plans to grow the staff, build philanthropic support, and serve MORGANTOWN'S MYLAN PLANT WILL CLOSE ON JULY 31. WHAT'S NEXT? In November, Mylan, which makes generic and specialty drugs, merged with Upjohn, a Pfizer-owned company, to create Viatris. The announcement came less than a month later during a morning video meeting: as part of a global restructuring initiative, the Morgantown plant would shut down on July 31. The news was unexpected; manyemployees expected
OPIOID TRIAL: WHY WASN'T HUNTINGTON'S MEDICINE SHOPPE As a result, in Huntington, the quantity of opioids shipped to Medicine Shoppe from Cardinal’s Wheeling distribution center tripled between 2006 and 2012, according to a Mountain State Spotlight analysis of DEA data compiled by The Washington Post that accounts for various opioid formulations. In 2010, the pharmacy was obtaining18,600 dose
WV OPIOID TRIAL: EXPERT WITNESS POINTS TO DRUG COMPANIES The federal courthouse in Charleston, where opioid distributors are on trail. Photo by Lauren Peace. The nation’s three largest drug distributors failed to set up effective programs to stop prescription painkillers from being diverted and sold illegally on the black market, a former investigator LANDMARK WV OPIOID TRIAL TO START MONDAY; HERE'S WHAT YOU An in-person trial is expected to begin at 9 a.m. Monday, but lawyers for both sides qualify that with words like “scheduled” and “expected.”. Both sides continue to negotiate toward a settlement. If they succeed, the trial would be called off and the companies would agree to pay a specific amount to end the lawsuits. MOST OF W.VA.'S CONGRESSIONAL DELEGATION VOTED AGAINST THE News. American Rescue Plan sends billions in pandemic aid to West Virginia. Most of our congressional delegation voted against the help. by Douglas Soule March 22nd, 2021. March 21st, 2021. U.S. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (top left) and Reps. David McKinley (bottom left), Alex Mooney (top right) and Carol Miller (bottom right). West Virginia is HERE'S SOME OF WHAT PASSED THE W.VA. LEGISLATURE- MOUNTAIN The West Virginia Legislative session is over; here’s some of what passed and what didn’t. Last days of Legislature include bills on Biden gun control and harm reduction; efforts to repeal the personal income tax and diversify coal country fail. by Erin Beck April 11th, 2021. April 12th, 2021. House Speaker Roger Hanshaw (R-Clay) watches SCORES OF KIDS ARE UNACCOUNTED FOR IN WEST VIRGINIA'S Scores of children in West Virginia’s foster care system are unaccounted for at any given time, and state officials can’t seem to find records about them, according to new information uncovered in an ongoing lawsuit that seeks better protections for thousands of kids under the state’s care. LAWMAKERS PUSH TO TURN MORE EMPLOYEES INTO INDEPENDENT Seeking ‘clarity,’ West Virginia lawmakers push to turn more employees into independent contractors. This status change matters, because independent contractors aren't eligible for unemployment benefits and other worker protections. by Erin Beck March 2nd, 2021. March 2nd, 2021. The House of Delegates on opening day: January 13,2021.
W.VA. FINALLY HAS A STATE BROADBAND OFFICE- MOUNTAIN STATE February 4th, 2021. Charlie Dennie, the director of W.Va's new Office of Broadband, speaking at an event hosted by the South Charleston Chamber of Commerce on Tuesday. Photo by Lucas Manfield. For years, West Virginia has relied on a group of volunteers — with almost no funding — to address the lack of reliable, high-speed internetaccess
OUR TEAM - MOUNTAIN STATE SPOTLIGHT Greg Moore Greg Moore is a co-founder and executive editor. Greg grew up in Morgantown and graduated from West Virginia University. He spent nearly 25 years as an editor and reporter at the Charleston Gazette and Charleston Gazette-Mail. He began his career there in 1996 as a copy editor, then covered beats including business, education, WHEN A PANDEMIC CHANGES EVERYTHING, THIS IS WHAT WE HOLD DEAR Essential Appalachia: when a pandemic changes everything, this is what we hold dear. by Molly Born, 100 Days in Appalachia and Brittany Greeson, 100 Days in Appalachia May 13th, 2021. May 12th, 2021. Valerie Akers, co-owner of the Parkview Pharmacy is seen through a plexiglass window as Mary Slone lifts her disposable camera to herface.
W.VA. FINALLY HAS A STATE BROADBAND OFFICE- MOUNTAIN STATE February 4th, 2021. Charlie Dennie, the director of W.Va's new Office of Broadband, speaking at an event hosted by the South Charleston Chamber of Commerce on Tuesday. Photo by Lucas Manfield. For years, West Virginia has relied on a group of volunteers — with almost no funding — to address the lack of reliable, high-speed internetaccess
HOW WILL REPEALING W.VA.'S INCOME TAX AFFECT RESIDENTS People making $89,000 to $177,000 would save an average of $1,019 per year, and people making between $177,000 and $413,000 would save $2,989. The top 1%, people making more than $413,000, would save an average of $12,146. The center’s analysis includes consideration of Justice’s proposed tax rebates for households that make below$35,000
BEHIND WEST VIRGINIA’S VACCINE SUCCESS STORY, CHAOS FOR Behind West Virginia’s vaccine success story, chaos for local health departments. A surprise announcement from Gov. Jim Justice to begin vaccinating the general public caught county health departments — responsible for coordinating the state’s frontline response to the pandemic — off guard. by Lucas Manfield and Lauren Peace January 8th CAN STARLINK SOLVE WEST VIRGINIA’S INTERNET WOES As a result, the Federal Communications Commission has tentatively agreed to give SpaceX $900 million over the next decade to build out its network in areas of the country unserved by traditional internet providers, like much of West Virginia. Joel George’s Starlink receiver. Photo by Lucas Manfield. GOV. JUSTICE CONTINUES TO PROMOTE HIS TAX PLAN, BUT It’s not just McKay who has concerns that the proposal will increase costs for consumers and reduce West Virginian economic activity. Businesses, groups representing businesses, tax experts and lawmakers have all criticized Justice’s plan. ERIC EYRE, AUTHOR AT MOUNTAIN STATE SPOTLIGHT Eric Eyre. Eric Eyre, who was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in Investigative Reporting in 2017 for stories on the opioid crisis, is a senior investigative reporter at Mountain State Spotlight. He is the author of Death in Mud Lick: A Coal Country Fight Against the Drug Companies That Delivered the Opioid Epidemic. FEDERAL REGULATORS ARE REWRITING ENVIRONMENTAL RULES SO A A map of the proposed path of the Mountain Valley Pipeline. Photo courtesy Mountain Valley Pipeline. Political leaders and business boosters in West Virginia have been big supporters of such projects, hoping that the rise of natural gas would replace FRONTIER HAS SUCKED UP MILLIONS BEFORE WITHOUT GIVING W.VA Frontier, which was allocated nearly $250 million in the state, declared bankruptcy in March. The company has a long track record of making — and then breaking — extravagant promises in West Virginia, and there’s doubt as to whether this time will be any different. “It’s unbelievable,” said Mike Holstine, the secretary-treasurer of the state council tasked with coordinatingrural
MOUNTAIN STATE SPOTLIGHT As a nonprofit newsroom, we rely on your help to power our journalism. Currently, we are operating with our partner, GroundTruth (Report for America) as a fiscal sponsor, and donations to us can be made here. All donations go entirely to Mountain State Spotlight.We are becoming an independent 501(c)(3) group and we have ambitious plans to grow the staff, build philanthropic support, and serve MORGANTOWN'S MYLAN PLANT WILL CLOSE ON JULY 31. WHAT'S NEXT? In November, Mylan, which makes generic and specialty drugs, merged with Upjohn, a Pfizer-owned company, to create Viatris. The announcement came less than a month later during a morning video meeting: as part of a global restructuring initiative, the Morgantown plant would shut down on July 31. The news was unexpected; manyemployees expected
OPIOID TRIAL: WHY WASN'T HUNTINGTON'S MEDICINE SHOPPE As a result, in Huntington, the quantity of opioids shipped to Medicine Shoppe from Cardinal’s Wheeling distribution center tripled between 2006 and 2012, according to a Mountain State Spotlight analysis of DEA data compiled by The Washington Post that accounts for various opioid formulations. In 2010, the pharmacy was obtaining18,600 dose
WV OPIOID TRIAL: EXPERT WITNESS POINTS TO DRUG COMPANIES The federal courthouse in Charleston, where opioid distributors are on trail. Photo by Lauren Peace. The nation’s three largest drug distributors failed to set up effective programs to stop prescription painkillers from being diverted and sold illegally on the black market, a former investigator LANDMARK WV OPIOID TRIAL TO START MONDAY; HERE'S WHAT YOU An in-person trial is expected to begin at 9 a.m. Monday, but lawyers for both sides qualify that with words like “scheduled” and “expected.”. Both sides continue to negotiate toward a settlement. If they succeed, the trial would be called off and the companies would agree to pay a specific amount to end the lawsuits. MOST OF W.VA.'S CONGRESSIONAL DELEGATION VOTED AGAINST THE News. American Rescue Plan sends billions in pandemic aid to West Virginia. Most of our congressional delegation voted against the help. by Douglas Soule March 22nd, 2021. March 21st, 2021. U.S. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (top left) and Reps. David McKinley (bottom left), Alex Mooney (top right) and Carol Miller (bottom right). West Virginia is HERE'S SOME OF WHAT PASSED THE W.VA. LEGISLATURE- MOUNTAIN The West Virginia Legislative session is over; here’s some of what passed and what didn’t. Last days of Legislature include bills on Biden gun control and harm reduction; efforts to repeal the personal income tax and diversify coal country fail. by Erin Beck April 11th, 2021. April 12th, 2021. House Speaker Roger Hanshaw (R-Clay) watches SCORES OF KIDS ARE UNACCOUNTED FOR IN WEST VIRGINIA'SFOSTER KIDS INAZAZ MISSING KIDS
Scores of children in West Virginia’s foster care system are unaccounted for at any given time, and state officials can’t seem to find records about them, according to new information uncovered in an ongoing lawsuit that seeks better protections for thousands of kids under the state’s care. LAWMAKERS PUSH TO TURN MORE EMPLOYEES INTO INDEPENDENT Seeking ‘clarity,’ West Virginia lawmakers push to turn more employees into independent contractors. This status change matters, because independent contractors aren't eligible for unemployment benefits and other worker protections. by Erin Beck March 2nd, 2021. March 2nd, 2021. The House of Delegates on opening day: January 13,2021.
W.VA. FINALLY HAS A STATE BROADBAND OFFICE- MOUNTAIN STATE February 4th, 2021. Charlie Dennie, the director of W.Va's new Office of Broadband, speaking at an event hosted by the South Charleston Chamber of Commerce on Tuesday. Photo by Lucas Manfield. For years, West Virginia has relied on a group of volunteers — with almost no funding — to address the lack of reliable, high-speed internetaccess
MOUNTAIN STATE SPOTLIGHT As a nonprofit newsroom, we rely on your help to power our journalism. Currently, we are operating with our partner, GroundTruth (Report for America) as a fiscal sponsor, and donations to us can be made here. All donations go entirely to Mountain State Spotlight.We are becoming an independent 501(c)(3) group and we have ambitious plans to grow the staff, build philanthropic support, and serve MORGANTOWN'S MYLAN PLANT WILL CLOSE ON JULY 31. WHAT'S NEXT? In November, Mylan, which makes generic and specialty drugs, merged with Upjohn, a Pfizer-owned company, to create Viatris. The announcement came less than a month later during a morning video meeting: as part of a global restructuring initiative, the Morgantown plant would shut down on July 31. The news was unexpected; manyemployees expected
OPIOID TRIAL: WHY WASN'T HUNTINGTON'S MEDICINE SHOPPE As a result, in Huntington, the quantity of opioids shipped to Medicine Shoppe from Cardinal’s Wheeling distribution center tripled between 2006 and 2012, according to a Mountain State Spotlight analysis of DEA data compiled by The Washington Post that accounts for various opioid formulations. In 2010, the pharmacy was obtaining18,600 dose
WV OPIOID TRIAL: EXPERT WITNESS POINTS TO DRUG COMPANIES The federal courthouse in Charleston, where opioid distributors are on trail. Photo by Lauren Peace. The nation’s three largest drug distributors failed to set up effective programs to stop prescription painkillers from being diverted and sold illegally on the black market, a former investigator LANDMARK WV OPIOID TRIAL TO START MONDAY; HERE'S WHAT YOU An in-person trial is expected to begin at 9 a.m. Monday, but lawyers for both sides qualify that with words like “scheduled” and “expected.”. Both sides continue to negotiate toward a settlement. If they succeed, the trial would be called off and the companies would agree to pay a specific amount to end the lawsuits. MOST OF W.VA.'S CONGRESSIONAL DELEGATION VOTED AGAINST THE News. American Rescue Plan sends billions in pandemic aid to West Virginia. Most of our congressional delegation voted against the help. by Douglas Soule March 22nd, 2021. March 21st, 2021. U.S. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (top left) and Reps. David McKinley (bottom left), Alex Mooney (top right) and Carol Miller (bottom right). West Virginia is HERE'S SOME OF WHAT PASSED THE W.VA. LEGISLATURE- MOUNTAIN The West Virginia Legislative session is over; here’s some of what passed and what didn’t. Last days of Legislature include bills on Biden gun control and harm reduction; efforts to repeal the personal income tax and diversify coal country fail. by Erin Beck April 11th, 2021. April 12th, 2021. House Speaker Roger Hanshaw (R-Clay) watches SCORES OF KIDS ARE UNACCOUNTED FOR IN WEST VIRGINIA'SFOSTER KIDS INAZAZ MISSING KIDS
Scores of children in West Virginia’s foster care system are unaccounted for at any given time, and state officials can’t seem to find records about them, according to new information uncovered in an ongoing lawsuit that seeks better protections for thousands of kids under the state’s care. LAWMAKERS PUSH TO TURN MORE EMPLOYEES INTO INDEPENDENT Seeking ‘clarity,’ West Virginia lawmakers push to turn more employees into independent contractors. This status change matters, because independent contractors aren't eligible for unemployment benefits and other worker protections. by Erin Beck March 2nd, 2021. March 2nd, 2021. The House of Delegates on opening day: January 13,2021.
W.VA. FINALLY HAS A STATE BROADBAND OFFICE- MOUNTAIN STATE February 4th, 2021. Charlie Dennie, the director of W.Va's new Office of Broadband, speaking at an event hosted by the South Charleston Chamber of Commerce on Tuesday. Photo by Lucas Manfield. For years, West Virginia has relied on a group of volunteers — with almost no funding — to address the lack of reliable, high-speed internetaccess
OUR TEAM - MOUNTAIN STATE SPOTLIGHT Greg Moore Greg Moore is a co-founder and executive editor. Greg grew up in Morgantown and graduated from West Virginia University. He spent nearly 25 years as an editor and reporter at the Charleston Gazette and Charleston Gazette-Mail. He began his career there in 1996 as a copy editor, then covered beats including business, education, WHEN A PANDEMIC CHANGES EVERYTHING, THIS IS WHAT WE HOLD DEAR Essential Appalachia: when a pandemic changes everything, this is what we hold dear. by Molly Born, 100 Days in Appalachia and Brittany Greeson, 100 Days in Appalachia May 13th, 2021. May 12th, 2021. Valerie Akers, co-owner of the Parkview Pharmacy is seen through a plexiglass window as Mary Slone lifts her disposable camera to herface.
W.VA. FINALLY HAS A STATE BROADBAND OFFICE- MOUNTAIN STATE February 4th, 2021. Charlie Dennie, the director of W.Va's new Office of Broadband, speaking at an event hosted by the South Charleston Chamber of Commerce on Tuesday. Photo by Lucas Manfield. For years, West Virginia has relied on a group of volunteers — with almost no funding — to address the lack of reliable, high-speed internetaccess
HOW WILL REPEALING W.VA.'S INCOME TAX AFFECT RESIDENTS People making $89,000 to $177,000 would save an average of $1,019 per year, and people making between $177,000 and $413,000 would save $2,989. The top 1%, people making more than $413,000, would save an average of $12,146. The center’s analysis includes consideration of Justice’s proposed tax rebates for households that make below$35,000
BEHIND WEST VIRGINIA’S VACCINE SUCCESS STORY, CHAOS FOR Behind West Virginia’s vaccine success story, chaos for local health departments. A surprise announcement from Gov. Jim Justice to begin vaccinating the general public caught county health departments — responsible for coordinating the state’s frontline response to the pandemic — off guard. by Lucas Manfield and Lauren Peace January 8th CAN STARLINK SOLVE WEST VIRGINIA’S INTERNET WOES As a result, the Federal Communications Commission has tentatively agreed to give SpaceX $900 million over the next decade to build out its network in areas of the country unserved by traditional internet providers, like much of West Virginia. Joel George’s Starlink receiver. Photo by Lucas Manfield. GOV. JUSTICE CONTINUES TO PROMOTE HIS TAX PLAN, BUT It’s not just McKay who has concerns that the proposal will increase costs for consumers and reduce West Virginian economic activity. Businesses, groups representing businesses, tax experts and lawmakers have all criticized Justice’s plan. ERIC EYRE, AUTHOR AT MOUNTAIN STATE SPOTLIGHT Eric Eyre. Eric Eyre, who was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in Investigative Reporting in 2017 for stories on the opioid crisis, is a senior investigative reporter at Mountain State Spotlight. He is the author of Death in Mud Lick: A Coal Country Fight Against the Drug Companies That Delivered the Opioid Epidemic. FEDERAL REGULATORS ARE REWRITING ENVIRONMENTAL RULES SO A A map of the proposed path of the Mountain Valley Pipeline. Photo courtesy Mountain Valley Pipeline. Political leaders and business boosters in West Virginia have been big supporters of such projects, hoping that the rise of natural gas would replace FRONTIER HAS SUCKED UP MILLIONS BEFORE WITHOUT GIVING W.VA Frontier, which was allocated nearly $250 million in the state, declared bankruptcy in March. The company has a long track record of making — and then breaking — extravagant promises in West Virginia, and there’s doubt as to whether this time will be any different. “It’s unbelievable,” said Mike Holstine, the secretary-treasurer of the state council tasked with coordinatingrural
MOUNTAIN STATE SPOTLIGHT As a nonprofit newsroom, we rely on your help to power our journalism. Currently, we are operating with our partner, GroundTruth (Report for America) as a fiscal sponsor, and donations to us can be made here. All donations go entirely to Mountain State Spotlight.We are becoming an independent 501(c)(3) group and we have ambitious plans to grow the staff, build philanthropic support, and serve MORGANTOWN'S MYLAN PLANT WILL CLOSE ON JULY 31. WHAT'S NEXT? In November, Mylan, which makes generic and specialty drugs, merged with Upjohn, a Pfizer-owned company, to create Viatris. The announcement came less than a month later during a morning video meeting: as part of a global restructuring initiative, the Morgantown plant would shut down on July 31. The news was unexpected; manyemployees expected
OPIOID TRIAL: WHY WASN'T HUNTINGTON'S MEDICINE SHOPPE As a result, in Huntington, the quantity of opioids shipped to Medicine Shoppe from Cardinal’s Wheeling distribution center tripled between 2006 and 2012, according to a Mountain State Spotlight analysis of DEA data compiled by The Washington Post that accounts for various opioid formulations. In 2010, the pharmacy was obtaining18,600 dose
WV OPIOID TRIAL: EXPERT WITNESS POINTS TO DRUG COMPANIES The federal courthouse in Charleston, where opioid distributors are on trail. Photo by Lauren Peace. The nation’s three largest drug distributors failed to set up effective programs to stop prescription painkillers from being diverted and sold illegally on the black market, a former investigator LANDMARK WV OPIOID TRIAL TO START MONDAY; HERE'S WHAT YOU An in-person trial is expected to begin at 9 a.m. Monday, but lawyers for both sides qualify that with words like “scheduled” and “expected.”. Both sides continue to negotiate toward a settlement. If they succeed, the trial would be called off and the companies would agree to pay a specific amount to end the lawsuits. MOST OF W.VA.'S CONGRESSIONAL DELEGATION VOTED AGAINST THE News. American Rescue Plan sends billions in pandemic aid to West Virginia. Most of our congressional delegation voted against the help. by Douglas Soule March 22nd, 2021. March 21st, 2021. U.S. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (top left) and Reps. David McKinley (bottom left), Alex Mooney (top right) and Carol Miller (bottom right). West Virginia is HERE'S SOME OF WHAT PASSED THE W.VA. LEGISLATURE- MOUNTAIN The West Virginia Legislative session is over; here’s some of what passed and what didn’t. Last days of Legislature include bills on Biden gun control and harm reduction; efforts to repeal the personal income tax and diversify coal country fail. by Erin Beck April 11th, 2021. April 12th, 2021. House Speaker Roger Hanshaw (R-Clay) watches SCORES OF KIDS ARE UNACCOUNTED FOR IN WEST VIRGINIA'SFOSTER KIDS INAZAZ MISSING KIDS
Scores of children in West Virginia’s foster care system are unaccounted for at any given time, and state officials can’t seem to find records about them, according to new information uncovered in an ongoing lawsuit that seeks better protections for thousands of kids under the state’s care. LAWMAKERS PUSH TO TURN MORE EMPLOYEES INTO INDEPENDENT Seeking ‘clarity,’ West Virginia lawmakers push to turn more employees into independent contractors. This status change matters, because independent contractors aren't eligible for unemployment benefits and other worker protections. by Erin Beck March 2nd, 2021. March 2nd, 2021. The House of Delegates on opening day: January 13,2021.
W.VA. FINALLY HAS A STATE BROADBAND OFFICE- MOUNTAIN STATE February 4th, 2021. Charlie Dennie, the director of W.Va's new Office of Broadband, speaking at an event hosted by the South Charleston Chamber of Commerce on Tuesday. Photo by Lucas Manfield. For years, West Virginia has relied on a group of volunteers — with almost no funding — to address the lack of reliable, high-speed internetaccess
MOUNTAIN STATE SPOTLIGHT As a nonprofit newsroom, we rely on your help to power our journalism. Currently, we are operating with our partner, GroundTruth (Report for America) as a fiscal sponsor, and donations to us can be made here. All donations go entirely to Mountain State Spotlight.We are becoming an independent 501(c)(3) group and we have ambitious plans to grow the staff, build philanthropic support, and serve MORGANTOWN'S MYLAN PLANT WILL CLOSE ON JULY 31. WHAT'S NEXT? In November, Mylan, which makes generic and specialty drugs, merged with Upjohn, a Pfizer-owned company, to create Viatris. The announcement came less than a month later during a morning video meeting: as part of a global restructuring initiative, the Morgantown plant would shut down on July 31. The news was unexpected; manyemployees expected
OPIOID TRIAL: WHY WASN'T HUNTINGTON'S MEDICINE SHOPPE As a result, in Huntington, the quantity of opioids shipped to Medicine Shoppe from Cardinal’s Wheeling distribution center tripled between 2006 and 2012, according to a Mountain State Spotlight analysis of DEA data compiled by The Washington Post that accounts for various opioid formulations. In 2010, the pharmacy was obtaining18,600 dose
WV OPIOID TRIAL: EXPERT WITNESS POINTS TO DRUG COMPANIES The federal courthouse in Charleston, where opioid distributors are on trail. Photo by Lauren Peace. The nation’s three largest drug distributors failed to set up effective programs to stop prescription painkillers from being diverted and sold illegally on the black market, a former investigator LANDMARK WV OPIOID TRIAL TO START MONDAY; HERE'S WHAT YOU An in-person trial is expected to begin at 9 a.m. Monday, but lawyers for both sides qualify that with words like “scheduled” and “expected.”. Both sides continue to negotiate toward a settlement. If they succeed, the trial would be called off and the companies would agree to pay a specific amount to end the lawsuits. MOST OF W.VA.'S CONGRESSIONAL DELEGATION VOTED AGAINST THE News. American Rescue Plan sends billions in pandemic aid to West Virginia. Most of our congressional delegation voted against the help. by Douglas Soule March 22nd, 2021. March 21st, 2021. U.S. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (top left) and Reps. David McKinley (bottom left), Alex Mooney (top right) and Carol Miller (bottom right). West Virginia is HERE'S SOME OF WHAT PASSED THE W.VA. LEGISLATURE- MOUNTAIN The West Virginia Legislative session is over; here’s some of what passed and what didn’t. Last days of Legislature include bills on Biden gun control and harm reduction; efforts to repeal the personal income tax and diversify coal country fail. by Erin Beck April 11th, 2021. April 12th, 2021. House Speaker Roger Hanshaw (R-Clay) watches SCORES OF KIDS ARE UNACCOUNTED FOR IN WEST VIRGINIA'SFOSTER KIDS INAZAZ MISSING KIDS
Scores of children in West Virginia’s foster care system are unaccounted for at any given time, and state officials can’t seem to find records about them, according to new information uncovered in an ongoing lawsuit that seeks better protections for thousands of kids under the state’s care. LAWMAKERS PUSH TO TURN MORE EMPLOYEES INTO INDEPENDENT Seeking ‘clarity,’ West Virginia lawmakers push to turn more employees into independent contractors. This status change matters, because independent contractors aren't eligible for unemployment benefits and other worker protections. by Erin Beck March 2nd, 2021. March 2nd, 2021. The House of Delegates on opening day: January 13,2021.
W.VA. FINALLY HAS A STATE BROADBAND OFFICE- MOUNTAIN STATE February 4th, 2021. Charlie Dennie, the director of W.Va's new Office of Broadband, speaking at an event hosted by the South Charleston Chamber of Commerce on Tuesday. Photo by Lucas Manfield. For years, West Virginia has relied on a group of volunteers — with almost no funding — to address the lack of reliable, high-speed internetaccess
OUR TEAM - MOUNTAIN STATE SPOTLIGHT Greg Moore Greg Moore is a co-founder and executive editor. Greg grew up in Morgantown and graduated from West Virginia University. He spent nearly 25 years as an editor and reporter at the Charleston Gazette and Charleston Gazette-Mail. He began his career there in 1996 as a copy editor, then covered beats including business, education, AWAY FROM THE OPIOID TRIAL, THE FIGHT GOES ON IN HUNTINGTON Away from the opioid trial, life carries on in Huntington. West Virginia is in the spotlight for taking on major drug distributors. But outside the courtroom, it’s business as usual as residents work to help their community heal. by Lauren Peace May 24th, 2021. May 24th, 2021. A sign that hangs at the entrance of the ReBUILD buildingin
WHEN A PANDEMIC CHANGES EVERYTHING, THIS IS WHAT WE HOLD DEAR Essential Appalachia: when a pandemic changes everything, this is what we hold dear. by Molly Born, 100 Days in Appalachia and Brittany Greeson, 100 Days in Appalachia May 13th, 2021. May 12th, 2021. Valerie Akers, co-owner of the Parkview Pharmacy is seen through a plexiglass window as Mary Slone lifts her disposable camera to herface.
W.VA. FINALLY HAS A STATE BROADBAND OFFICE- MOUNTAIN STATE February 4th, 2021. Charlie Dennie, the director of W.Va's new Office of Broadband, speaking at an event hosted by the South Charleston Chamber of Commerce on Tuesday. Photo by Lucas Manfield. For years, West Virginia has relied on a group of volunteers — with almost no funding — to address the lack of reliable, high-speed internetaccess
BEHIND WEST VIRGINIA’S VACCINE SUCCESS STORY, CHAOS FOR Behind West Virginia’s vaccine success story, chaos for local health departments. A surprise announcement from Gov. Jim Justice to begin vaccinating the general public caught county health departments — responsible for coordinating the state’s frontline response to the pandemic — off guard. by Lucas Manfield and Lauren Peace January 8th CAN STARLINK SOLVE WEST VIRGINIA’S INTERNET WOES As a result, the Federal Communications Commission has tentatively agreed to give SpaceX $900 million over the next decade to build out its network in areas of the country unserved by traditional internet providers, like much of West Virginia. Joel George’s Starlink receiver. Photo by Lucas Manfield. GOV. JUSTICE CONTINUES TO PROMOTE HIS TAX PLAN, BUT It’s not just McKay who has concerns that the proposal will increase costs for consumers and reduce West Virginian economic activity. Businesses, groups representing businesses, tax experts and lawmakers have all criticized Justice’s plan. FEDERAL REGULATORS ARE REWRITING ENVIRONMENTAL RULES SO A A map of the proposed path of the Mountain Valley Pipeline. Photo courtesy Mountain Valley Pipeline. Political leaders and business boosters in West Virginia have been big supporters of such projects, hoping that the rise of natural gas would replace ERIC EYRE, AUTHOR AT MOUNTAIN STATE SPOTLIGHT Eric Eyre. Eric Eyre, who was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in Investigative Reporting in 2017 for stories on the opioid crisis, is a senior investigative reporter at Mountain State Spotlight. He is the author of Death in Mud Lick: A Coal Country Fight Against the Drug Companies That Delivered the Opioid Epidemic. FRONTIER HAS SUCKED UP MILLIONS BEFORE WITHOUT GIVING W.VA Frontier, which was allocated nearly $250 million in the state, declared bankruptcy in March. The company has a long track record of making — and then breaking — extravagant promises in West Virginia, and there’s doubt as to whether this time will be any different. “It’s unbelievable,” said Mike Holstine, the secretary-treasurer of the state council tasked with coordinatingrural
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BEHIND DRUG DISTRIBUTORS’ EFFORTS TO DERAIL WV OPIOID REPORTING A 2019 memo outlines a plan to “turn the tide” in WV. But that “tide” wasn’t the abuse of opioids; it was reporting on theabuse of opioids.
by Lucas
Manfield
June 3rd, 2021June 4th, 2021LATEST NEWS
FACING ANOTHER PANDEMIC SUMMER, WV SCHOOLS ARE BETTER PREPARED TO FEED KIDS. YET, GAPS WILL LIKELY PERSISTby Amelia Ferrell
Knisely June 1st,
2021May 28th, 2021
HEALTH
WITH THE MYLAN PLANT CLOSING, MORGANTOWN WONDERS WHAT’S NEXTby Douglas Soule
May 26th, 2021May
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