Cabin Creek serving lunch in Clendenin for students

According to the Herbert Hoover High School Counseling Department Twitter account, Cabin Creek is serving lunch at their office in Clendenin for students from 11:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. on Thursday, March 1.

The Cabin Creek office is located in the old Clendenin Middle School building where the Clendenin Medical Center is located at 107 Koontz Avenue, Suite 102, Clendenin, WV 25045. For more details call (304) 548-7272.

Fayette community members take school bus routes in efforts to deliver meals to students

Tamara Banks, counselor Fayetteville High School, left, and Robert Morey, pastor Fayetteville Christ Fellowship, carry away boxes meal food kits at the Fayette County Board of Education bus garage Monday morning to help feed needy school children during the teachers walkout. Teachers and bus drivers volunteered to deliver the food. Rick Barbero, The Register-Herald.

By: Jordan Nelson, Register-Herald Reporter | Posted: Feb. 27, 2018 | Source: The Register-Herald [View Full Gallery]

FAYETTEVILLE — Dozens of teachers, service personnel and community volunteers stood together Tuesday as they packed school buses full of food to be delivered to communities throughout Fayette County on the fourth day of a statewide walkout within the school system.

“The moment we heard about a teacher strike, we quickly realized it was important to gather food for the kids,” Cindy Chamberlin said, “and from that thought, things quickly began to snowball from there.”

(more…)

Brittany Dolly: Walkout about keeping educators here, investing in WV future (Gazette)

In what’s becoming a familiar sight, West Virginia teachers stood outside the Senate chamber in the state Capitol on Thursday, chanting for higher pay and better benefits. Kenny Kemp | Gazette-Mail

By: Brittany Dolly | Posted: Feb. 26, 2018 | Source: WV Gazette-Mail

When I attended college, I had no idea what path I wanted to take. While taking the general courses, I received a work-study position that changed my life. I started working with diverse students in an after-school program.

Shortly after, I declared my major (history, interdepartmental studies and secondary education) and began working toward acceptance in the education program at West Virginia University. (more…)

Peaceful protests planned; one seeks to help Roane teacher

Candlelight vigils are being held across West Virginia Sunday night by many education groups as part of the ongoing teacher strike protests. (MGN Online)

By: Ashley Bishop | Posted: Feb. 25, 2018 | Source: WVAH

Candlelight vigils are being held across West Virginia Sunday night by many education groups as part of the ongoing teacher strike protests.

Kanawha, Roane, and Braxton county plan to host them, but one county, in particular, is holding the vigil in honor of a teacher that was in a car wreck on Friday. (more…)

Teachers fill Capitol during Day 1 of statewide walkout

Thousands of teachers fill the Rotunda at the state Capitol during statewide walkout over wages and benefits.
Photo courtesy: Brad McElhinny, MetroNews.

By: Brad McElhinny | Posted: Feb. 22, 2018 at 3:01 p.m. | Source: WV MetroNews

CHARLESTON, W.Va. — Thousands of chanting teachers and service personnel poured into the state Capitol today, the first day of a statewide teachers strike.

“Hey. Hey. Whaddaya say. Fund PEIA,” they chanted.

And “55 united! 55 united!”

With two secure entrances for the public, a line grew early this morning and eventually wrapped around the back of the state Culture Center.

Teachers filled the galleries in both the House and Senate, where legislators planned to go on with normal business. Committee meetings were also going on as usual, even as teachers gathered outside.

Teachers from all 55 counties walked out today over wages and health care costs. Even as the Capitol crowd surged, many more were picketing outside their local schools.

“We’d rather be in the classroom,” said David Bannister, a physical education teacher at Pinch Elementary. “But we have to take care of our families too. We have to get their attention. We haven’t been able to get it any other way. So here we are.”

The walkout is officially set for Thursday and Friday, but could continue if matters can’t be settled. There was talk of rolling walkouts, with counties going out a few at a time.

 

Mary Ross, an English teacher at Webster County High School, left for Charleston at 6 a.m. today.

“It is nice to see so many other public employees out so you don’t feel so isolated,” Ross said. “It’s good to come out and see so many other public employees.”

On Wednesday evening, the eve of the walkout, Gov. Jim Justice signed a bill with a pay raise averaging 2 percent next year for teachers, service personnel and State Police. Each group would receive another average 1 percent raise the following year with teachers in line for another 1 percent raise the third year.

The teachers have said the raise amounts don’t keep pace with their increased health care costs.

The Public Employees Insurance Agency Finance Board met this week and froze the current plan. That will cost the state an estimated $29 million. But teachers and other public employees say they want serious movement toward long-term stability for the plan.

Ross said her top priority is getting health care costs under control.

“We need to get our public insurance system fixed so our children can stay in this state,” Ross said. “I’ll be retiring next year. I want my students to be able to be teachers and stay in West Virginia. I want my colleagues to be able to raise their families on a teacher’s salary.”

HOPPY KERCHEVAL: Teacher and service worker strike: Day 1

Delegate Marty Gearheart, a Republican from Mercer County, was among those looking out at the crowd as it continued to grow. He noted that this was the latest of several recent rallies and protests at the Capitol.

“I’m not certain that it has been this loud and boisterous, but people have an opinion and they have every right to come to their Capitol and express it,” Gearheart said.

“I think we do have to listen to the message,” Gearheart said. “We have to carry on business. We have to recognize what can be done within the state budget and with the revenues that are available.”

Brad McElhinny

Brad McElhinny is the statewide correspondent for MetroNews. Brad is a Parkersburg native who spent more than 20 years at the Charleston Daily Mail.

Herbert Hoover Students Awarded Governor’s STEM Initiative Mini-Grant for Flash Flood Water Level Sensor

The Office of the Secretary of Education and the Arts, on behalf of the Governor’s STEM Initiative, recently approved mini-grant funding to five Kanawha County schools. Herbert Hoover High School was one of the five recipients for their Flash Flood Water Level Sensor Project. According to an announcement by Briana Warner, Communications Director with Kanawha County Schools, the mini-grant program supports learning in the fields of science, technology, engineering, and math across the state of West Virginia. Selected schools were awarded up to $3,000 to implement their STEM project. (more…)

Weekend of school threats leads to criminal charges in West Virginia

The Charleston Police Department sent extra officers to George Washington High School on Friday, the second time it responded to alleged threats in two days. Giuseppe Sabella | Gazette-Mail photo

By: Giuseppe Sabella, Staff Writer | Posted: Feb. 19, 2018 | Source: WV Gazette-Mail

Thursday’s alleged threat against George Washington High School by a student was followed by more statewide threats, news releases, criminal charges against students, fears among parents and increased burdens on law enforcement.

The majority of threats were unfounded, investigators said, but at least four were serious enough to warrant criminal charges or other discipline. The string of statewide investigations followed a mass shooting in Florida on Feb. 14, when a gunman killed 17 people at his former high school.

There is likely a direct link between the massacre in Florida and the rising concerns in West Virginia, said Morgan County Sheriff K.C. Bohrer.

“Historically, any time that we have any sort of an active-shooter incident or bombings or anything in the country, there seems to be a lot of misinformation and a lot of pandemonium,” Bohrer said.

“And we see increases of threats … generally not credible, but occasionally credible,” he later added.

On Friday night, his deputies charged Colby S. Woodal, 18, with threats of terrorist acts. The Berkeley Springs High School student allegedly made a threat against fellow students, according to information gathered by the FBI and the Morgan County Sheriff’s Office. Bohrer said authorities searched Woodal’s house and found nothing that could be used to actually carry out the threat.

Woodal’s arrest followed other credible threats and baseless rumors in the state, and such incidents carried through the weekend.

  • Charleston police officers charged Corey Michael Duff, 18, with threats of terrorist acts on Friday. Duff was already on a suspension from George Washington High School, in South Hills. He allegedly used Snapchat, a cellphone application, to post a video of himself holding a handgun and a high-capacity magazine on Thursday night, and it was perceived as a threat against the high school. The video included a message that read, “Plenty for errbody.”
  • On Friday, a juvenile used Snapchat to threaten Valley High School in Smithers, according to a news release from the Fayette County Sheriff’s Department. Charges were pending on Monday morning, the release said.
  • According to the same news release, two more juveniles are facing charges after they made a separate threat against Valley High School on Sunday. “This matter will now be submitted to Fayette County Prosecuting Attorney Larry Harrah to determine appropriate criminal charges for both juveniles,” the release said.
  • Word spread that a school shooting was supposedly planned for 2 p.m. at Webster County High School on Friday, according to a news release published by Webster County 911. Local and state law enforcement agencies later said there was no truth to the claim. Still, the release said, an estimated 200 students left school that day. The rumor traveled as far as Wisconsin, where a student saw it on Snapchat.
  • On Saturday at about 2:15 p.m., Riverside High School announced that it learned of a potential threat the day before. An investigation found no actual threat against the school. Classes continued with the addition of extra police patrols.
  • Kanawha County Schools announced a potential threat against Herbert Hoover High School on Sunday. No threat was found, and classes went as scheduled Monday with the addition of extra police patrols.
  • On Sunday night, police and school officials learned of a threat against Nitro High School. A 14-year-old student allegedly made the threat, and school officials will take “the appropriate disciplinary actions,” according to a text message from Nitro Police Chief Bobby Eggleton.
  • Authorities and school officials investigated a possible threat against St. Albans High School on Monday morning. “The source of the alleged threat was identified and it was determined that no threat had been directed toward the school or any of our students,” according to a message sent to parents by the school system.
  • Horace Mann Middle School went on a brief lockdown Monday afternoon. A social media threat circulated among students, but it was actually a copy of the recent threat against Oak Hill High School, in Fayette County, according to an email from Briana Warner, a spokeswoman for Kanawha County Schools.
  • Oak Hill High School said in a Monday news release that its school system would “prosecute anyone involved with social media posts or threats of any kind.” The release did not detail what alleged threat took place.
  • In a news release on Monday, the Charles Town Police Department said it investigated a “non-specific” threat against Washington High School. Though investigators said the threat was not credible, the release said charges are pending against “the individual responsible.”

Keith Vititoe, executive director of security for the Kanawha County school district, said it’s common for threats and rumors to emerge in the week after a tragedy.

“What we have is some mass hysteria generated by constant bombardment of the issue in the news and on social media,” Vititoe said.

“Copycat” shooters are a legitimate concern, and Vititoe said parents are rightfully concerned. However, with help from social media and cellphones, bad information now stokes the rumors and pre-existing anxiety. The result is often that hundreds of students miss school, countless hours are devoted to baseless claims and, in some cases, reputations are permanently damaged.

Vititoe said two students in the county were wrongly accused of threatening their own schools. Though the rumors were untrue, those students may be treated differently by their peers.

“If there’s one thing I can ask that the community does is, if they get information about a possible threat to a school, that the first call not go to Facebook,” he said. “I mean literally, they need to call 911 or get a hold of the school.”

Reach Giuseppe Sabella at giuseppe.sabella@wvgazettemail.com, 304-348-5189 or follow @Gsabella on Twitter.

Hundreds of teachers brave rain to rally in the Capitol again

By: Jake Jarvis, Staff Writer | Posted: Feb. 16, 2018 | Source: WV News

The Clendenin Leader 2018 WV Legislative SessionCHARLESTON — Braving long lines in the pouring rain, hundreds of teachers once again left their classrooms Friday to fill the halls of the state Capitol.

Teachers from at least seven counties came to Charleston to demand lawmakers give them a bigger pay raise, protect their seniority rights and fix public employees’ health insurance. (more…)

Kanawha school board approves $108K to re-roof Pinch Elem, suggests local-vendor preference

By: Ryan Quinn, Education Reporter | Posted: Feb. 15, 2018 | Source: WV Gazette-Mail

The Kanawha County Board of Education approved Thursday evening paying about $108,000 to re-roof Pinch Elementary, heard schools were getting 400 more carbon monoxide detectors and proposed a policy change that would improve chances for “resident vendor” companies to win county public school system contracts over non-resident vendors. (more…)

Clay, Lincoln, Mason to join Cabell, Wayne in Friday school work stoppages

By: Ryan Quinn, Education Reporter | Posted: Feb. 14, 2018 | Source: WV Gazette-Mail

Ruffner Elementary School teachers Diana Bailey (left) and Krystal McConihay attend a January teachers' rally in the Capitol Rotunda by Kenny Kemp Gazette-Mail

Ruffner Elementary School teachers Diana Bailey (left) and Krystal McConihay attend a January teachers’ rally in the Capitol Rotunda. KENNY KEMP | Gazette-Mail file photo

Public school employees in at least three more counties, Lincoln, Clay and Mason, are joining those in Cabell and Wayne counties Friday in shutting down their schools and protesting in the state Capitol.

School workers in Logan, Mingo and Wyoming counties, and possibly other Southern West Virginia counties, already shut down their schools on Feb. 2, and instead rallied at the Statehouse. (more…)