Hurricane, Hoover off to hot starts in title defenses

Herbert Hoover pitcher Delani Buckner (11) is back for her sophomore season after helping the Huskies earn a Classs AA state championship as a freshman last year. Craig Hudson Gazette-Mail

By: Ryan Pritt, Staff Writer | Posted: Mar. 29, 2018 | Source: WV Gazette-Mail

Any conversation of Kanawha Valley prep softball begins with Hurricane.

And why not, after the Redskins were tagged with a sparkly national ranking of No. 8 by maxpreps.com in the preseason?

Hurricane returned seven of nine starters from last year and has plenty of weapons to make a run at yet another Class AAA state championship, which would be the Redskins’ fourth in a row and fifth in six years.

But the Redskins aren’t the only Kanawha Valley team defending some hardware.

Herbert Hoover returns six starters from a squad that peaked late in winning a Class AA crown, its second since 2014. And with plenty of experience, both are off to rip-roaring starts in 2018, with Hurricane having won its first seven games and Hoover also starting the season undefeated at 3-0.

The Redskins’ Meghan Stevens is in her first year as head coach after serving as an assistant under Josh Caldwell for nine years. There’s plenty of familiarity and continuity with the team, and Stevens said she will simply try to keep the ball rolling.

“It’s pretty much keeping things business as usual, because why change?” Stevens said. “If it’s not broke, I don’t want to fool with it too much.”

Even after losing the two-time state player of the year Katie Adams and outfielder Paige Scruggs — both of whom are continuing their careers on the college level at Marshall and Morehead State, respectively — Stevens has quite an arsenal at her disposal. Seven of the nine players in Hurricane’s lineup are currently committed to play college softball.

Highlighting that list are outfielder Kiersten Landers and third baseman Jayme Bailey, both seniors who will go to Florida State and Virginia Tech, respectively, next year. Junior shortstop Caiti Mathes is also committed to play for the Hokies.

Junior catcher Zoey Dunlap will attend Youngstown State after high school with junior first baseman Taylor McCray heading to St. Leo. Sophomores Harlie Vannatter (pitcher) and Lindsey Phares (second base) will attend Bowling Green and Wisconsin-Green Bay, respectively.

Landers (.558, 37 steals, 55 runs in 2017), Bailey (.495, five home runs, 10 doubles, 44 RBIs, 19 steals) and Vannatter (20-1, 1.09 ERA, 11 shutouts) were all first-team All-State selections last year, with Mathes (seven home runs, 37 RBIs) making the second team a year after being a first-team selection as a freshman.

As talented as the Redskins are, and with as much success as the team has had in recent years, Stevens said the leadership of players like Bailey is as paramount as her contributions on the field, especially when it comes to helping the program maintain its lofty perch for years to come.

“Making them understand that this is who we are and we can’t take it for granted,” Stevens said of her younger players. “We need to bring it every day and focus — we can’t just show up. Leaders like Jayme make that a lot easier for us. She leads by example, she leads with words … she’s just an awesome teammate.”

Landers is assuming some of the pitching load after Vannatter threw a bulk of Hurricane’s innings a year ago, spelled by Adams and, occasionally, Torie Green.

Hoover also had a senior/freshmen split in the circle a year ago with Dellani Fix and Delani Buckner tossing most of the innings for the Huskies.

Buckner, a returning sophomore, seemed to grow more comfortable throughout the season and was paramount in the Huskies’ run in Vienna last year, striking out 10 in the final five innings of the Class AA title game against Chapmanville.

That kind of experience should serve the Huskies well as they try to find their way without Fix, outfielder Kelsey Naylor (both first-team All-State selections) and catcher Madison Bowles (a second-team selection).

But while the Redskins are used to wearing a bright, red target on their backs, it’s a bit new for the Huskies.

“You have to take it for what it is and know you’re a state champion, but it doesn’t come easy and each season you have to put in the work,” Buckner said after a season-opening win over Poca. “Nerves are really hard, but when you have a team like mine they’re easy to get rid of.”

“It’s not a secret what happened at the end of last year and we all feel some pressure because of that,” Hoover coach Missy Smith added. “But once the game got going, it turned in to the game we’ve played and loved for years and they settled in.”

Junior third baseman Rebekah Woody returns after receiving a second-team All-State nod last year after hitting .455, driving in 25 runs and scoring 28 times a year ago. Seniors Kirsten Belcher, Ava Young, Mallori Chapman and Mandy Parrish were all integral parts of last year’s success and should continue what Smith praised as a great tradition of leaders over the years.

“We’ve been blessed with good seniors for years,” Smith said. “They had them in the cages all winter long. When we started practice, all the freshmen knew what I expected and the drills we do in the beginning and how to handle things because the seniors had taken them all winter and mentored them.”

Reach Ryan Pritt at 304-348-7948, ryan.pritt@wvgazettemail.com or follow him @RPritt on Twitter.

Years after massive Elkview rockslide, neighbors worry it could happen again

By: Kalea Gunderson | Posted: Mar. 29, 2018 | Source: WCHS

Neighbors on Blue Creek Road in Elkview are expressing their concerns about a treacherous spot that has been declining for a few years now.

The original damage was done back in 2015 when a rockslide covered part of the road. Now many are concerned that could happen again.

Nancy Marion said the road is hard to walk on and much harder to drive on as she gestured to a large gash in the road. She said it makes it difficult for neighbors in Elkview to pass each other daily, trying to avoid the trenches in the pavement.

“There’s us elderly people who live up here and if we need an ambulance, we can’t get through,” Marion said. “This road’s just going over the hill.”

Marion said the road has been going downhill, literally, since April 2015 when boulders came crashing down from the hillside.

“We couldn’t get in or out,” Marion said, looking at the front page of the newspaper from the day of the rockslide.

People were trapped for days and with the looks of the cracks in the road and hillside, they fear it could happen again and soon.

“It’s not getting any better, the road is caving away. There’s no question. It’s going to happen again. It’s just a matter of when,” Scott Keeling said.

When it rains, even lightly, they expect to see the road covered by debris.

“Even like that misty rain we’ve had the past couple days,” Keeling said. “When I came through this morning, it was all over the road. It was everywhere.”

Marion said on top of the mess, there is only one warning sign on the road, posing a hazard to more than just neighbors but school buses, mail carriers and emergency crews.

“This road needs replaced. Houses for sale up here, they probably can’t even sell them because they’ll say, ‘Well, we don’t even have a road up here.’ It’s really, really necessary,” Marion said.

Department of Transportation Communications Director Brent Walker said this stretch of Blue Creek Road is a part of a countywide slip repair project. There are plans for DOT workers to visit that road and figure out exactly how to improve it, but he said there is no set timeline in place right now.

Roane County fire claims a life

By: Matt Samples | Posted: Mar. 29, 2018 | Source: WV News

WALTON — A woman died as a result of a mobile home fire in Roane County.

The fire was reported at around 6:45 p.m. Wednesday, along Route 119, or Charleston Road, in Walton.

The woman who died in the fire was 65 years old, According to the West Virginia Fire Marshal.

According to Walton Volunteer Fire Department Chief John Kelley says that most of the fire was contained within the mobile home.

West Virginia Fire Marshal’s office is investigating.

Bankruptcy court ruling a victory for all journalists, attorney says

By: Chris Dickerson | Posted: Mar. 27, 2018 at 1:17 p.m. | Source: West Virginia Record

CHARLESTON – A federal judge has ruled that a civil judgment against a Clay County man who attacked a television reporter is not a dischargeable debt in bankruptcy court.

Chief Judge Frank W. Volk entered the order March 26 in U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of West Virginia granting veteran WCHS-TV reporter Bob Aaron’s motion for summary judgment against Howard Lilly.

In March 2016, a Clay County jury awarded Bob Aaron $11,000 in damages for a 2014 attack while he was out on assignment.

Lilly pleaded no contest in 2015 to a felony charge of destruction of property. In exchange, prosecutors agreed to drop felony robbery and grand larceny charges.

On July 7, 2014, Aaron received a tip on a potential story regarding neglected mules and horses near a home on Bomon Road and went to report on the story. While filming, Lilly allegedly took Aaron’s camera tripod and attacked the television reporter with it. Aaron was injured and the lens of his camera was smashed.

Lilly shouted at Aaron to stop filming and to “head down the road,” according to the suit, however, when Aaron informed him that he was on a public road and would leave once he was finished with the video, Lilly attacked him.

As part of the plea agreement in the criminal case against Lilly, he agreed to pay $2,800 to WCHS-TV for damage to the camera and more than $2,000 in medical expenses for Aaron.

After the civil trial, Lilly filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy on Dec. 20, 2016. Travis Griffith, Aaron’s attorney, says that was an attempt to avoid paying the judgment.

Soon thereafter, Griffith moved for summary judgment on the issue that Lilly “had acted with the prerequisite intent and maliciousness … to preclude the debt from being dischargeable in bankruptcy court.”

Griffith, who operates the Griffith Law Center in Charleston, said he considers this victory one not just for Aaron but for all media representatives working to inform the public.

“We, as a people, need to ensure the abilities of a free and impartial press to perform their duties to inform,” Griffith said. “This includes the right of a reporter to stand on a public roadway and inform the public on what he or she perceives.

“Walter Cronkite is noted as saying that ‘freedom of the press is not just important for democracy, it is democracy.’ Those who have taken it upon themselves to inform the rest of us should be able to do so without threat of attack from those who would choose to silence them.”

U.S. Bankruptcy Court case number 2:16-bk-20692

Ravenswood’s Isaiah Morgan named LKC Player of Year


Photo by Jay W. Bennett Ravenswood High School senior Isaiah Morgan, pictured here at the Class A state tournament earlier this month, was honored by league coaches as the Little Kanawha Conference’s Player of the Year.

By: Jay W. Bennett, Sports Writer | Posted: Mar. 25, 2018 | Source: The Parkersburg News and Sentinel

PARKERSBURG — Only one player on this year’s all-Little Kanawha Conference boys basketball squad is a three-time first-teamer — Ravenswood’s Isaiah Morgan. (more…)

Charleston chef finds freedom to move at new Noah’s Restaurant & Lounge

Chef Noah Miller prepares main courses, including pan-roaster halibut, seared sea scallops, eggplant-wrapped swordfish and beef fillet, at Noah’s Restaurant & Lounge in downtown Charleston for its soft opening Tuesday. Craig Hudson, Gazette-Mail photos

By: Maria Young, Features Editor | Posted: Mar. 24, 2018 | Source: WV Gazette-Mail (Full Article and Photo Gallery)

Watching Chef Noah Miller whip up a meal for a restaurant full of hungry patrons is like watching a ballet — or maybe a hip-hop performance — that’s been carefully choreographed around searing flames, glistening knives and lots of breakable glass.

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Census Bureau: Kanawha again leads all WV counties in population loss

By: Caity Coyne | Posted: Mar. 23, 2018 | Source: Charleston Gazette-Mail

CHARLESTON — For the fifth consecutive year, Kanawha County topped the state in the number of people leaving a county, according to 2017 population estimates released Thursday by the U.S. Census Bureau.

With 2,804 people leaving Kanawha in 2017, the county holds the 10th-highest population decrease by individuals of all counties in the nation. In 2016, it ranked 19th.

“Sometimes, these numbers don’t mean a lot. When people leave here, they could be leaving 8 miles down the road to a new [housing] development or something similar,” said Kent Carper, Kanawha County Commission president. “It’s not good, we don’t like to see our people leave, but with some new activities we have going — some new construction jobs, and other things — we expect to see that turn around in 2018.”

Despite the high number of individuals leaving, they only made up 1.5 percent of Kanawha’s total population, which sits at an estimated 183,293 people and is the largest in the state, according to the Census data. Since Kanawha is home to more people than any other county in West Virginia, Carper said, it’s common sense that there are more people who could leave.

The last time Kanawha saw an increase in population was 2012, when an estimated 51 individuals moved to the county.

That also was the last time West Virginia as a whole saw an increase in population.

Farther south, McDowell County held the highest percentage of population decrease, with 3.5 percent — 683 individuals — leaving the county. This percentage decrease was the fourth-highest in the nation, according to the Census, and leaves the county with a total population of 18,456 people. In 2016, the county ranked 13th highest in percentage of population loss.

McDowell has been consistently losing residents for more than six years, and while the news is disappointing, McDowell County Commissioner Cecil Patterson said he isn’t surprised.

The most eastern counties in the Eastern Panhandle held the top three highest percentages of population growth in the Mountain State. Berkeley saw a 1.5 percent increase, Jefferson, 0.9 percent, and Morgan, 0.6 percent.

This was the first year in the past six that Monongalia County had less than 500 people move within its limits. In 2012, roughly 1,700 moved to that county. Last year, the population increase dipped below 1,000 for the first time, with 631 people moving in. This year, only 259 individuals moved to Monongalia.

West Virginia’s population as a whole is on a steady decline, according to past Census numbers. If the trend continues, the Mountain State could lose one of its three congressional seats by 2022.

In 2017, a total of 45 counties had a population decline. Nine saw population increases, and one — Pleasants County — stayed exactly the same.

43 Kanawha County Students Qualify for National DECA Marketing & Management Competition

By: Briana Warner, Communications Director | For Immediate Release: Mar. 22, 2018 | Source: KCBOE

Charleston, West Virginia – Forty-three high school students from Herbert Hoover High School, Nitro High School, Sissonville High School and St. Albans High School have qualified to compete in the national competition at the DECA International Career Development Conference April 21 – 24 in Atlanta, GA. DECA is a nonprofit international student organization that prepares students for a future in marketing, finance, hospitality and management. (more…)

Herbert Hoover opens softball season with extra-inning win over Poca

By: Ryan Pritt, Staff Writer | Posted: Mar. 22, 2018 | Source: WV Gazette-Mail Preps

As far as season openers go, Thursday night’s was certainly eventful for the defending Class AA softball state champions.

And while there was certainly some rust and some developing parts, for both teams, Herbert Hoover eventually picked up where it left off last season — with a win.

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