WV Homeland Security can’t account for trailers, vehicle, water pumps, radios

MetroNews staff photo

By: Brad McElhinny | Posted: May 26, 2018 | Source: WV MetroNews

CHARLESTON, W.Va. — State officials have been trying to make sure the Department of Homeland Security can find all its equipment.

Legislative Audit published this past week shows that the agency hasn’t been able to account for $254,000 in trailers. The most expensive of those is a Pepro Trailer valued at $113,075.

The agency also is responsible for a utility task vehicle valued at $8,999 that can’t be found.

“Additionally, the Legislative Auditor was informed that assets of considerable value have been loaned out to other state agencies in the past,” the audit stated.

“However, due to the lack of inventory management over the years, Homeland Security is currently unable to locate or account for these items.”

And the agency indicated it has items located in remote locations that haven’t been inventoried. Those include items such as water pumps, valued at about $1,500 each, or radio equipment.

“The Legislative Auditor concludes that this is problematic not only because the Division uses millions of dollars in state and federal funds to purchase items, but also because the federal government gives the Division items of considerable value to be used to carry out its mission,” the audit stated.

“Despite this, no effort has been made in recent years to account for these assets and protect them against theft or misuse.”

The agency says it knows it has a problem.

“We recognize the significance of the asset problem and have and are taking major steps to correct this issue,” Homeland Security officials wrote in a response.

The problem is that the Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Management hasn’t put adequate controls in place to keep track of its equipment, the Legislative Auditor concluded.

Early this year, it dawned on Homeland Security officials that the division’s inventory was not updated or accurate, according to the audit.

A minimal number of fixed assets had been inventoried from 2013 to 2018. And it had been several years since the last physical inventory and reconciliation.

The agency gave a few reasons for its inattentiveness.

Previously, the agency did not have a section or a particular person with the specific responsibility of asset management.

“Rather, the finance and accounting manager was given the responsibility of asset management, and previous individuals in that position did not place much emphasis on it,” the audit stated.

The agency also indicated that when it transitioned to the wvOasis system, there was not much effort toward ensuring a smooth transition for asset management.

To improve, Homeland Security hired a part-time, temporary employee on Jan. 8 to make sure the agency has all its stuff.

The employee was trained at Surplus Property and started putting together an updated inventory, according to the audit. The worker is conducting walkthroughs of agency facilities, listing the assets and then having them entered into wvOasis.

Roman Prezioso

That process is how the agency discovered nine camping and box trailers that had been on its asset list could not be located.

The missing trailers drew the focus of Senate Minority Leader Roman Prezioso as he listened to the audit results during interim meetings.

“Where do you think these trailers are? How can they come up missing?” Prezioso asked.

The director for Homeland Security, Jimmy Gianato, responded that the trailers were provided by the Federal Emergency Management Agency in 2001.

State Homeland Security Chief Jimmy Gianato

Back then, Gianato said, they were distributed across the state to counties, state agencies and non-profits. At some point, he said, the trailers were titled to the Office of Emergency Services.

“We have been vigorously trying to locate all of those, and these are the ones we still have to locate,” Gianato said.

“Some have been destroyed, the roofs have started to leak, the insides have rotted out and they’ve been surplused. If you can imagine, a cheap FEMA trailer in 2001 and now we’re at 2017 — a lot of the counties after determining no more use instead of returning them they just disposed of them.”

Homeland Security has developed a corrective action plan with target dates to resolve its issues.

Those included meetings with all staff to emphasize a culture of keeping track of property, a review of agency policies to be completed by the end of this month and dedicating some employees to tracking property.

State Department of Military Affairs and Public Safety Secretary Jeff Sandy

Jeff Sandy, the secretary for the Division of Military Affairs and Public Safety, said he wants to take on a broad-based effort to keep track of materials.

“One of our weaknesses we have is separation of duties,” Sandy said.

“There will be a separate entity — Division of Administrative Services — that will do the inventories, which will make sure the money is spent properly and individuals — not to say anything about Jimmy — but Jimmy and other individuals will have that separation from that, so they know that when an employee orders something or has something that needs to be on an inventory an independent person that can be uninfluenced is handling that.”

Brad McElhinny is the statewide correspondent for MetroNews. Brad is a Parkersburg native who spent more than 20 years at the Charleston Daily Mail.Contact him at brad.mcelhinny@wvmetronews.com or on Twitter @BradMcElhinny.

Kanawha Board of Education moves ahead with Herbert Hoover demolition plan

By: Douglas Soule, Staff Writer | Posted: May 25, 2018 | Source: WV Gazette-Mail

The Kanawha County Board of Education voted during a Friday special session to remove a previous motion that required the West Virginia School Building Authority board’s approval for a contract to demolish Herbert Hoover High School.

“I think we need to go ahead and move forward with the demolition of Herbert Hoover,” Kanawha board member Ryan White said during the meeting.

The contract allotted $382,777 to Charleston-based Rodney Loftis & Son Contracting, even though a lower bid of $338,888 was offered by Baltimore- and Fairmont-based Reclaim Co. LLC.

As a result, Reclaim filed a protest against the county school board and the SBA, said Jim Withrow, general counsel for Kanawha schools.

On May 10, the school board voted to give Rodney Loftis & Son the demolition project, but added an amendment that required the SBA board to give approval to the contract, as well.

At the time, White said he didn’t know why the SBA staff recommended against Reclaim’s bid.

“Our thought process was their staff is not accountable to us, so let’s have our approval be contingent on [the SBA board’s] approval, because their staff is accountable to them,” White said.

On Monday, the SBA board members on the Construction Committee decided not to put a vote on the demolition contract approval on future agendas, and board Executive Director David Roach also said he would not put the matter on an agenda.

A bid tabulation sheet provided with the special meeting’s agenda said that Reclaim was “disqualified per SBA recommendation.”

Reclaim wrote “not applicable” on a form where bidders must list the subcontractors and equipment/material suppliers they plan to use for a project.

While Reclaim legal representatives said May 10 that the company didn’t plan to use any subcontractors, the form says that, “if no subcontractors will be used to complete the project, indicate on the SBA Form 123 that all work will be self-performed and provide the name and contractor license number of the contractor that will be performing the work.”

The form also says the “SBA shall be the sole interpreter of this document to ensure that the information provided by the prime contractor meets the intent of the form.”

An SBA official said Reclaim also submitted this form to only the county, not the SBA, despite the wording at the top that said the form “must be submitted to the SBA within two hours of the close of bid.”

The bid protest filed by Reclaim argues that the form sent to the county was forwarded to the SBA and that irregularities in the form should have been waived for the lowest contract bidder.

The demolition project will be paid for by the SBA and Federal Emergency Management Agency flood recovery funds, Withrow said.

World Hunger Day is May 28th

By: Debi O’Dell | Posted: May 14, 2018 | Source: Elk River Backpack Blessings

THIS WORLD HUNGER DAY, THE HUNGER PROJECT IS FOCUSING ON GOOD NUTRITION.

Good nutrition – an adequate and well-balanced diet – is a cornerstone of good health. Better nutrition is related to improved infant child and maternal health, stronger immune systems and safer pregnancy and childbirth. People with adequate nutrition are more productive and can create opportunities to break the cycles of poverty and hunger. Experts agree that tackling malnutrition is not only the right thing to do, but it also makes economic sense.

World Hunger Day is an initiative by The Hunger Project. Started in 2011, it aims to celebrate sustainable solutions to hunger and poverty.

This year, the day will highlight the importance of fostering self-reliance, upholding principles of human dignity and recognizing that every human is inherently creative, resourceful, responsible and productive. Decades of systematic marginalization have kept people from making lasting changes in their communities. A holistic development approach — one that includes peacebuilding, social harmony, human rights and good governance — is essential to ensuring the empowerment of people living in hunger and poverty.

We at Elk River Backpack Blessings help children in need of nutritional meals. Please help us help them.

Click here to donate to our cause.

Millions in flood relief money stuck in the government pipeline

By: Hoppy Kercheval | Posted: May 25, 2018 at 12:02 a.m. | Source: WV MetroNews

West Virginia was hit by one of the worst floods in the state’s history on June 23, 2016.  A series of intense thunderstorms turned normally placid creeks into raging rivers that killed 23 people and destroyed hundreds of homes and businesses in central and southeastern West Virginia.

First responders, the National Guard, volunteers from here and outside the state immediately provided aid and comfort to flood victims, cleaned up mud and debris and contributed money.

Governor Tomblin requested a disaster declaration and President Obama gave his approval within hours. The state’s Congressional delegation pushed for immediate and long-term help for our devastated state.

It was a horrific time but, as usual, West Virginians pulled together.  Collectively, the burden of those hit hardest was made bearable by the unconditional help provided by friends and strangers alike. However, nearly two years after the Great Flood, many West Virginians who lost their homes in the muddy waters are still waiting for the promised help to rebuild.

Congress allocated approximately $150 million for West Virginia flood recovery through the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development, a sprawling federal agency responsible for a wide range of housing, economic development and infrastructure programs. In this case, the money came via the federal Community Development Block Grant Disaster Recovery (CDBG-DR) program.

The first grant award came in early 2017 and the second installment just a few months ago, but to date only a few million has been spent.

What happened?  That’s what a lot of people have been trying to find out.

One explanation is, well, that’s just how government works. It’s a bureaucracy and allocating that much money through various government agencies can be complicated and slow.

Also, there was an issue with how the state Department of Commerce, which is the state agency charged with managing the CDBG-DR money from HUD, handled the procurement of a contract with Horne LLP, a Mississippi company that specializes in accounting and business advisory services that help states navigate the vast federal bureaucracy in a disaster.

The Justice administration stopped any distribution of HUD money through the WV RISE housing program for nearly four months over the contract bidding concerns. The administration was worried that missteps in handling the HUD money could lead to the state ultimately losing funding. The last thing the Justice administration wanted was a repeat of how the state handled the broadband and router fiasco during the Obama stimulus era.

But now HUD has reportedly placed West Virginia on a “watch list” because of delays in getting the money into the pipeline to help people. HUD spokesman Brian Sullivan told our Brad McElhinny that the agency was taken aback when it learned the program was suspended.

“What I can tell you is we were surprised when we learned–and it was not from the state, but through other parties–that the state had suspended the program, at least temporarily,” Sullivan said. “People in the state of West Virginia are desperate to get their homes back. Suspending a program when so many people need housing recovery is a problem.”

These setbacks and miscues add insult to injury for West Virginians who lost everything in the flood. Reporters who have looked more deeply into the story have turned up a fair amount of the usual finger pointing as well as the search for a scapegoat. West Virginians deserve to know what has gone wrong and why.

In the meantime, however, the delays for the folks hardest hit by the flood must seem interminable, especially when they know that $150 million is stuck in the government pipeline.

The radio “dean” of West Virginia broadcasters, Hoppy Kercheval joined West Virginia Radio Corporation in 1976. Email hoppy@wvradio.com and follow @HoppyKercheval on Twitter.

PHOTO: State title twice as nice for Herbert Hoover softball team

Members of the Herbert Hoover High School softball team celebrate their second-straight Class AA state championship Thursday in Vienna after knocking off Chapmanville High by an 11-1 score. Still, Hoover has a ways to go to catch Hurricane High School, where the softball team won its fourth-straight Class AAA title by shutting out John Marshall High, 8-0. CRAIG HUDSON | Gazette-Mail | Buy Now

Parade welcomes Herbert Hoover Girls Softball State Champions

The Herbert Hoover softball team celebrates after winning its second consecutive state championship. (WCHS/WVAH)

By: Sean Delancey | Posted: May 24, 2018 | Source: WCHSTV

The Herbert Hoover girl’s softball team returned to Elkview victorious after capping off their undefeated season with a state championship.

It was their second one in two years.

“We worked pretty hard,” senior shortstop Mallori Chapman said. “You know, both years, to be able to make it here and do this again. It’s pretty crazy.”

The team loaded onto trailers on the outskirts of town for a welcome home parade.

The community rallied around their team because of the adversity they’ve overcome.

Two years ago, they lost everything to the 1,000 year flood that ravaged portions of West Virginia killing 23 people.

“We lost everything we had,” Chapman said. “To be able to do this for our community, show them we’re still here, was pretty great.”

Huskies Head Coach Missy Smith said the girls earned this victory and their welcome home because they never gave up.

“I’m blessed to be a part of them,” Smith said.

Like a professional sports team, police and fire crews led the team into Elkview for a victory lap around town because there, they’re heroes too.

Even though they endured a dark past, Smith said they’re headed for a bright future.

“I expect them to come in day one in 2019 ready to go,” she said.

West Virginia Methodists help flood victims after state recovery program falls short

With a multi-million dollar state run program under heavy scrutiny, one local group has been stepping up since day one, helping families affected by the 2016 flood rebuild. (WCHS/WVAH)

By: Jessi Starkey | Posted: May 24, 2018 | Source: WCHSTV

As the two-year anniversary of the deadly West Virginia flood approaches, many flood victims are still in need of assistance, and fingers are being pointed at the state capitol over who is responsible. (more…)

Person of interest in Clay County homicide investigation taken into custody in Alabama

West Virginia State Police said Joshua E. Robertson has been taken into custody in Birmingham, Ala. (West Virginia State Police)

By: Jarrod Clay | Posted: May 24, 2018 | Source: WCHSTV

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (WCHS/WVAH) — A man who was wanted as a person of interest in a Clay County death investigation has been taken into police custody in Alabama.

West Virginia State Police said Joshua E. Robertson was taken into custody in Birmingham, Ala Thursday night.

Robertson is considered a person of interest in the death of his father, Milton Robertson III, 67, who was discovered in his home in Wallback on May 9.

State Police believe the body had been at the residence for some time and had been shot and stabbed multiple times.