Man accused of stealing donated Clendenin family vehicle facing charges

This 2005 Chevrolet Trailblazer was donated to Kelly Cole’s family after they lost four cars in the June 2016 flood. Clendenin police say David Andrew White III hopped in the vehicle that did not belong to him Monday and drove off. (Clendenin Police Department)

By: Kalea Gunderson, Anna Taylor | Posted: April 10, 2018 | Source: WCHSTV

Police said the man accused of stealing a car from a Clendenin family has been arrested in Roane County. (more…)

Mooney and Warner visit Clay County, listen to local feedback

(Left) Congressman Alex Mooney; (Right) WV Rural Development Director Kris Warner

Posted: April 10, 2018 | Source: Clay County Free Press

US Congressman Alex Mooney visited Clay County on April 6, 2018, to have a roundtable discussion with community members including Fran King, member of the Clay County Commission; Greg Fitzwater, President of the Clay County Commission; Dave Mullins, President of the Board of Education; Jason Hubbard, Town of Clay Mayor; as well as many others in attendance. (more…)

Kanawha board cancels construction manager contract for Hoover, Clendenin/Bridge elementary

Kanawha County Board of Education President Jim Crawford listens Monday to plans for closing Bridge Elementary School. Photo by: F. Brian Ferguson, Gazette-Mail

By: Ryan Quinn, Staff Writer | Posted: April 9, 2018 | Source: WV Gazette-Mail

The Kanawha County Board of Education voted unanimously Monday to cancel the contract with the construction management company the West Virginia School Building Authority had assigned to the planned new Herbert Hoover High and consolidated Bridge/Clendenin elementary.

The move, which took place in a five-minute meeting, adds Kanawha to the list of public school systems that have dumped or have moved to dump their construction managers following backlash from schools superintendents and leaders in the school design/construction industry to the SBA’s assigning of these firms.

The SBA has publicly abandoned forcing or urging counties to use the companies. Scott Raines, the SBA’s director of school planning and construction, said in October 2017, under grilling from then-new SBA board Chairman Brian Abraham, that SBA written policy wasn’t followed in the advertisement process for construction management firms.

After that advertisement process, the SBA had assigned two companies, PCS, based in Ohio and West Virginia, and MBP, which is based in Virginia but has offices in multiple states, to public school building projects around West Virginia.

Charles Wilson, the Kanawha school system’s executive director of facilities planning, estimated the cancellation to save roughly $2 million, though he noted that figure is a “moving target.”

Raines has argued in the past that the construction managers ultimately saved money. PCS declined comment Monday.

Wilson said the county will still have to pay PCS roughly half a million dollars for services it has already provided.

“We had a lot of meetings with them and FEMA [the Federal Emergency Management Agency] and the SBA, trying to get things set up,” Wilson said when asked what the roughly $500,000 went to. “They did our preliminary estimates and costs of construction and they also provided preliminary schedules for the duration of those projects.”

If the contract would have continued, Wilson said PCS’ work would’ve included “monitoring the schedules, monitoring the budgets, constructability reviews, dealing with various prime contractors on the job as kind of a go between between us and the contractors.”

He said “clerk of the works” would be hired to oversee construction for each project.

“The architects will provide additional services under their contracts to cover the areas that the construction manager — where we need construction management,” Wilson said.

“After meeting with the architectural firms for each project, we went through the various options and I started looking at some costs, and it became evident that we could find a better project delivery method that would expedite the project and save money,” Wilson said.

PCS got a $1.2 million contract, with the possibility of more money in the future, for work on schools to replace Herbert Hoover High and Clendenin Elementary, which closed after being damaged in the June 2016 flood. FEMA is planned to provide most of the funding for the projects.

Also Monday:

  • No one showed up to speak at the board’s closure hearing for Bridge Elementary, which didn’t close after the flood but is planned to be consolidated with Clendenin Elementary to create the new school. The board must still vote on whether to approve the closure.
  • The board accepted the retirement of Carver Career Center Principal L. Phillip Calvert II, effective June 30, and the retirement of Title I Director Pam Padon, effective Aug. 31. The board also approved transferring Brian Barth from his Hoover art position to an assistant principal position at Nitro High, effective today.

Reach Ryan Quinn at ryan.quinn@wvgazettemail.comfacebook.com/ryanedwinquinn, 304-348-1254 or follow @RyanEQuinn on Twitter.

One Month at a Time: Finding wild, wonderful food in West Virginia’s woods

For April, reporter Bill Lynch is learning about foraging for food in the wild, and then somehow eating it. He has a long way to go. Bill Lynch, Gazette-Mail photo.

By: Bill Lynch, Staff Writer | Posted: April 5, 2018 | Source: WV Gazette-Mail

I parked the car at the top of the hill and then went to the front porch of the small house.

This part of Roane County felt remote and half forgotten, just a few houses with plenty of elbow room between them, a yard full of battered heavy equipment, but no men working.

A couple of miles down the road from where I stood, half of the two-lane had collapsed. A piece of twisted guardrail dangled over the bank of the muddy creek.

The cloudy, April sky promised more rain and it was eerily quiet, just like one of the good parts in a horror movie.

It occurred to me, a little late, that maybe I should have told somebody back at the newsroom where exactly I was going, but I knocked on the door.

A burly, bleary-eyed man covered in tattoos answered with a yawn.

“Brian Lucas?” I asked.

He shook his head and said, “No.”

He looked down the hill, to the left and to the right.

“I don’t know a Brian Lucas, not around here,” he said.

I stood on the porch for half a minute, quietly cursing my GPS and wondering if I’d remembered to bring Brian’s phone number. Then I apologized and went looking for the guy who was supposed to introduce me to chickweed, fiddleheads and daylily roots.

•••

After a month of trying to climb up into the sky, I wanted to spend some time close to the ground. I looked into caving, but a friend who does that kind of thing warned me that this time of the year I might have the same problems with the weather that I’d had with learning about flight.“If you’ve got a lot of rain, we don’t go into the cave,” my friend told me.

The plan just hadn’t come together in time — so, maybe later.

Instead, I hit on foraging, harvesting food from the wild. This would not be hunting, which is an entirely different skill, but collecting roots, leaves and whatever else you can eat.

The idea had first been suggested on a list the West Virginia Division of Tourism provided me after I asked for suggestions about things I might check out around the state.

Foraging had been on the list for April, along with “training and participating in the 32nd Annual Great Greenbrier River Race.”

After a month of eating my feelings, shedding weight and getting in some kind of shape for a triathlon sounded bad. Besides, I didn’t know how the new owners of the newspaper would feel about me submitting a kayak as an expense.

I should maybe start small.

•••

Foraging sounded interesting, particularly since we are headed into the ramp season. People love ramps. Over the next couple of weeks, small church and community groups will be hosting ramp dinners around the state.You’ll see their hand-lettered signs stapled to telephone poles and posted in grocery stores.

I’ve never been to a ramp dinner and, to be honest, really never understood the fuss about ramps.

I’ve only eaten ramps once. I bought them from a food vendor at the state Capitol during the Vandalia Gathering. For a couple of bucks, I got a Styrofoam bowl with an oily potato, a little bit of rubbery egg and a couple of wilted, green strands that were supposed to be ramps.

The only impression it made on me was that it didn’t make an impression.

The texture was a little like an onion. The potato had more flavor. I dumped the bowl and went looking for ice cream.

Spending a month learning about foraging — literally learning about how you might live off the land — sounded like the opportunity to revisit ramps and learn about some of the other wild delicacies I’ve heard mentioned over the years but never tried, like molly moochers (morel mushrooms) and fiddleheads (a kind of fern).

Getting started, however, proved to be a little difficult.

While I was able to round up a list of names, the first few people I emailed didn’t seem all that interested in participating — at least, not in April. My schedule was a little early. A couple of my contacts even suggested I wait until September, when wild food enthusiasts will gather for a weekend at North Bend State Park.

Discouraged, I began to look through the classified section for kayaks. Maybe I could convince the new owners to buy me a used boat.

Then Brian Lucas sent me a list of about 20 items that could be found on his property right now. Brian was willing to show me around, point them out and help me collect them.

I just had to come to him.

•••

Brian lived out in Left Hand, a few miles from Amma, a place I had never heard of, but that my GPS assured me was real.The GPS didn’t get me lost, but the directions overshot the mark.

It took me a while, but I found Brian waiting out in his driveway with a backpack full of plastic bags and a small gardening spade.

I’d driven past him three times before I decided that the guy in camouflage clothing standing near the road holding a shovel wasn’t dangerous.

Before we got started, Brian said he was worried a little about me taking things he said out of context or editing them for effect.

I told him, “I’m just here to learn something. I don’t have an agenda.”

Brian laughed and said he did. People have become so disconnected from their own world.

“The average kid can recognize 1,000 different corporate logos, but they can’t identify 10 plants,” he said. “I think that’s wrong.”

Brian also thought that most Americans have become too accustomed to accepting whatever is on sale at the grocery store as normal and nutritious. He believed the roots, berries and leaves he regularly harvested from his four-acre plot weren’t just novelty foods but were in some ways superior to what was available at Kroger.

Most of it tasted better, once you got used to it.

“And it’s better for you,” Brian said.

He said a lot of supermarket produce has been engineered to make it more durable for transport and storage, and to make it look more attractive to the consumer.

“Grocery store tomatoes don’t ripen on the vine,” he said. “They’re picked green and then gassed with nitrogen, which turns them red.”

This is also why these same tomatoes can be as tender as a tennis ball.

Commercially grown produce also has fewer nutrients, my research showed me. Partly this has to do with genetic modification, but it’s mostly because of soil depletion. Factory farmed vegetables have less vitamins and minerals than they did decades ago because the lands they’re farmed on lost many of their nutrients due to decades of continual use.

Brian said he was a largely self-educated forager, at least in the beginning.

“I started when I was about 8 years old,” he said. “I was curious. I had a grandmother who would tell me what things were — like sour grass. I picked up the rest as I went.”

Now 62, Brian said he’s learned from other foragers, as well as a few survival experts who also have an interest. He’s happy to pass along what he knows, and the wildcraft lore is part of what he teaches at Premium Martial Arts in Dunbar, where he works as an instructor.

Edible plants are all over, Brian said. Most people just don’t know what to look for. Once they’re shown them, they’ll see them all the time, he said.

Of course, there can be some risk, too, particularly for people new to the hobby. Some deadly plants can be confused with the nonlethal variety, and even if a plant doesn’t kill you, it can make you feel like it’s going to.

“And allergies,” Brian acknowledged. “If you have a lot of food allergies to begin with, this might not be a good idea.”

I told him I was fine.

With trying wild food, Brian recommended moderation, trying different items in small amounts and separately, at least at first.

•••

Brian handed me his backpack, picked up his gardening spade and told me to follow him. We walked out to the front end of his property and began.We pulled up dandelion roots and leaves.

“You want the tips of the leaves and not the stems,” he told me.

The leaves could be eaten in a salad or made into a tea. The roots could also be roasted and eaten or used for tea.

Earlier is better for eating the leaves, as they tend to get bitter with age.

Brian pulled up wild garlic, which he said most people think of as wild onions.

“You can use these in soup,” he said. “You just chop up the green parts when they’re small.”

We gathered white clover, yarrow and willow bark, which Brian said had medicinal value.

“Yarrow is good for wounds,” he said. “Willow makes a kind of aspirin. You would boil it to make a tea and then use it if you felt kind of yuck, had a slight headache or something.”

We dug up daylilies and picked off the tiny tubers among the roots.

“You want to wash those,” he said.

Brian recommended treating them like potatoes — boiling them, sauteing them in butter or roasting them — but warned me not to gorge myself.

“They can have a laxative effect,” he said.

We packed everything in separate plastic bags, labeled them and stuffed the bags into the backpack.

Foraging, Brian said, could be a lot like gardening. Good gardeners know what a particular plant or crop needs and where it grows best.

“Ginseng, for example, likes shade and well-drained soil,” he said. “So, you look on the eastern or northern slopes of mountains.”

Brian said ginseng also needs soil with a lot of calcium.

“So, you look for trees like sugar maple. There’s a lot of calcium in the leaves of sugar maples,” he said.

Sympathetic plants will also sometimes grow together, which makes it easier to locate a difficult to find plant, if you know what it will grow next to.

On a certain level, I understood this.

Some gardeners plant beans, squash and corn together. They’re called “the three sisters” because they work well in unison. Squash leaves provide ground cover, which reduces weeds. Beans fix nitrogen in the soil, providing nutrients to the other plants and corn stalks give beans something sturdy to climb.

I tried that once, but the weird, mutant zucchini squash I got from my father just climbed up the corn stalks, pulled them down to the ground and then strangled the bean plants in their sleep.

The deer were delighted.

“With ginseng, you should look for the maiden’s head fern,” Brian told me.

It was also a little early for ginseng.

Brian told me he and his family have been living on the property for about five years. He walked his land often. What was available to harvest changed with the season, and he always carried his cellphone.

Like with every other hobby or interest, there are smartphone apps for foragers. Brian used Forager’s Buddy, which uses GPS to keep track of plants or mushrooms you find and when.

“So, if you find it once, you can find it again,” he said.

After around two hours of stumbling through the mud, picking leaves and digging roots, Brian gave me a bunch of bags full of things to take home and try.

“If you have any questions, give me a call,” he said.

Reach Bill Lynch at lynch@wvgazettemail.com, 304-348-5195 or follow @lostHwys on Twitter. He’s also on Instagram at instagram.com/billiscap/ and read his blog at blogs.wvgazettemail.com/onemonth.

Brian Lucas, a martial arts instructor at Premium Martial Arts in Dunbar, took reporter Bill Lynch out to show him about foraging for wild foods. Brian collected a mushroom he thought might be turkey tail mushroom, which is used in medicinal teas. Before consuming, Brian recommended checking it to be sure. Bill Lynch, Gazette-Mail photo.

Brian Lucas, a martial arts instructor at Premium Martial Arts in Dunbar, took reporter Bill Lynch out to show him about foraging for wild foods. Brian collected a mushroom he thought might be turkey tail mushroom, which is used in medicinal teas. Before consuming, Brian recommended checking it to be sure. Bill Lynch, Gazette-Mail photo.

WVU cancels Gold-Blue spring football game

By: Mitch Vingle, Staff Writer | Posted: April 5, 2018 | Source: WV Gazette-Mail

Spring supposedly began back on March 20 in the northern hemisphere.

Yet that’s not what’s reflected by weather forecasts — especially in the Morgantown area.

Many forecasts are calling for snow showers before noon in “Touchdown City,” and that was enough for WVU’s athletic department to cancel Saturday’s 2018 Gold-Blue Spring Football Game scheduled for Milan Puskar Stadium.

“Fan and player safety have to take priority,” said WVU athletic director Shane Lyons via a release. “When you have snow predicted for much of the state, we need to take the utmost caution to assure the safety of our student-athletes, while also avoiding elements that are problematic for our fans. You would expect to not have to worry about snow accumulation in April, but that’s the forecast. After much consideration, we made this decision for the safety of all involved.”

Later on Thursday, Lyons told the Gazette-Mail that “in an ideal scenario we would have been able to hold for an updated forecast” but could not because of the logistics of staging such a game.

The long-running event, which has coincided with the end of spring drills, has been benefiting WVU Medicine Children’s hospital for years. Former Mountaineer coach Don Nehlen first orchestrated the tie-in with the hospital in 1984.

According to Mike Montoro, director of football communications, the Mountaineers practiced on Thursday to conclude drills. While technically WVU had another opportunity to practice, he said the team will participate in the scheduled “Walk the Talk with Dana” fund-raising event and the NCAA views that as an accountable date.

Another factor that may have gone into the decision is the rash of injuries WVU has been experiencing. This week, Mountaineer linebacker Brendan Ferns suffered his third overall career injury and second ACL tear, putting his 2018 season in peril. Prior to that, projected strong-side linebacker starter Quondarius Qualls also suffered an ACL injury.

Overall, it had been a rough couple of weeks for the team and, especially, the defense. Starting nose tackle Lamonte McDougle announced he was transferring. Previously, potential defensive end starter Adam Shuler left as well as reserves Jalen Harvey and Jaleel Fields. Defensive backs Kevin Williams and Fontez Davis were among those to also depart.

The “Walk the Talk with Dana” event, sponsored by United Bank and the Hoss Foundation, along with the Family Resource Center 5K, will still be held Saturday morning at 9 a.m. and the Li’l Mountaineer Kids Dash will still take place at 10 a.m. The events will start at the Puskar Center.

Tickets sold to fans in advance of the spring game will be automatically refunded by the Mountaineer Ticket Office if paid by credit card or check. Fans who paid cash should contact the Mountaineer Ticket Office at 1-800-WVU GAME to initiate their refund process.

Mitch Vingle can be reached at 304-348-4827 or mitchvingle@wvgazettemail.com. Follow him on Twitter @MitchVingle.