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Pecks Mill Vietnam Vet receives posthumous honor
Jun 20, 2013 | 375 views | 0 0 comments | 6 6 recommendations | email to a friend | print

Washington, D.C. – On June 14, 2013, Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund (VVMF) hosted more than 800 attendees at the annual ceremony on the East Knoll of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial.

This year 121 individuals were honored during the ceremony. Carl Edmond White, a Vietnam veteran from Pecks Mill, was posthumously honored.

There are 58,286 names on the Vietnam Veterans Memorial; names of men and women who died on the battlefield of the Vietnam War. Those men and women are honored on a daily basis by everyone who sees The Wall.

Since the war ended, many thousands more have died as a result of the Vietnam War, but their deaths do not fit the Department of Defense criteria for inclusion upon The Wall. On In Memory Day, the VVMF honors this special group of Vietnam veterans: those who have faced daily difficulties and whose lives have been cut short by their service.

The In Memory Day ceremony falls on Flag Day each June. VVMF believes this is particularly appropriate as the suffering of these veterans endured far longer than the time spent in combat, making them examples of patriotism and sacrifice for all Americans.

The ceremony also falls within PTSD Awareness Month for the Department of Veterans Affairs. Tragically, 50,000 to 100,000 Vietnam veterans have committed suicide, according to a study conducted by the Centers for Disease Control.

This year’s master of ceremonies was Capt. Denis Faherty, USN (ret.) and speakers included The Honorable Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, President of Associates of Vietnam Veterans of America Nancy Switzer, Former Executive Director of the Friends of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Ira Hamburg, and wife of In Memory honoree Raymond William Reiche, Maureen Foster.

The In Memory Honor Roll is available here: http://www.vvmf.org/inmemory

The In Memory Day ceremony is a solemn ceremony attended by friends and family and includes the presentation of Colors and the singing of the National Anthem. During the ceremony, the names of all the honorees are read aloud and certificates bearing the honorees’ names are placed at The Wall. These certificates are later collected by the National Park Service and stored in a permanent archive.

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Billionaire’s coal struggles irking biz owners
by Dylan Lovan
Associated Press
Jun 20, 2013 | 144 views | 0 0 comments | 6 6 recommendations | email to a friend | print

West Virginia billionaire Jim Justice made his fortune in coal and agriculture, and he is revered in his home state as the man who rescued the historic Greenbrier resort from bankruptcy.

Worth an estimated $1.7 billion, Justice is a prominent member of the tiny West Virginia community of Lewisburg, keeping a modest home and finding time to coach basketball at the local high school. He ranks No. 292 on a list of wealthiest Americans by Forbes magazine, which estimates that his personal wealth has grown by $500 million in the last year.

But his coal operations in Appalachia are struggling as business owners have filed at least nine lawsuits since late 2011 claiming they are not being paid for work at Justice mines. Still others say they are owed money but haven’t yet sued.

“There is some angry, angry people,” said Mark Miracle, the owner of Dynatech Electronics in Harlan, Ky. Miracle says he is owed about $150,000 for electrical mining supplies provided to three Justice mining companies more than a year ago. “They owe a lot of people a lot of money.”

In an interview with The Associated Press, Justice acknowledged his companies have some debts but said they are emblematic of the coal industry’s wider struggles.

“The coal business is terrible, it’s just terrible and we’re doing everything in our power to stay open and keep people working,” Justice said. “We’re one of the few (companies) that are even still working, trying to employ people and pay taxes.”

Coal production in central Appalachia where Justice operates dozens of mines is expected to tumble from 235 million tons mined in 2008 to about 139 million tons by 2015, a decline of more than 40 percent, according to government numbers.

The hard times have led to sluggish business in Harlan and nearby counties, where Justice is being sued by electric, repair and maintenance companies that specialize in mine work.

An Associated Press review of court records found that since the beginning of 2012, there have been at least five lawsuits — one in federal court — that seek unpaid bills in the three Kentucky counties where Justice has mining operations. Two more actions in Tennessee federal court and two in Wise County, Va., filed since August of 2011 also sought unpaid bills or debts owed as part of a contract. Four of those nine legal claims, which in total exceed $1 million in alleged debts, have been settled for undisclosed amounts.

Aside from those debt claims, a handful of other pending suits seek to settle disputes over Justice’s acquisition of mining lands in Kentucky and elsewhere.

Miracle and other business owners in southeastern Kentucky said when they made efforts to collect what they were owed by contacting the Justice company’s home office in Roanoke, Va., they were repeatedly delayed. Miracle, who sells specialized mining equipment and employs five people, said the debts prevented him from replenishing his inventory, harming future sales. He said his attorney is in the process of filing a lawsuit.

“When you do business with a billionaire, you think you are going to get paid,” said Lee Kersey, owner of M&D Electrical Supply in Hazard. Kersey said Justice’s companies owe him about $240,000 for work dating back to January 2012, but he has not filed a suit. Kersey, who has about eight employees, said he received a check for $28,000 in February.

Timothy Bates, a lawyer in Hindman, Ky., sued Justice subsidiary Kentucky Fuel Corporation last year for about $16,000. His client, who did some excavating work, received payment after the suit was filed.

Referring to the other lawsuits, Bates said: “There’s definitely a pattern, I’ll say that.”

Justice said he isn’t deeply involved in the day-to-day operations of his coal companies, and complaints about debts have reached him “on a limited basis.” But he said he can “absolutely promise” that outstanding debts will be paid.

“Everybody should be really confident they’re going to get paid,” he said.

Justice offered a dire outlook on the future of coal, as demand in the U.S. slumps and cheap natural gas entices electric utilities.

“You’re in a time when the world economies are really struggling, our economy is really struggling, utilities are converting to natural gas, and you may be witnessing the death of the coal industry,” Justice said.

Justice joined his dad’s business in the 1970s, and helped expand its reach into agriculture, golf courses and timber, according to Justice’s personal biography. He took over the company after his father’s death in 1993. The company’s mining interests ventured into Kentucky in 2007 and Tennessee the next year. Justice said his 80 companies employ about 5,000 people.

Federal records say Justice controls nearly 120 coal mines, most of them in central Appalachia, though only 21 are listed as actively mining coal. Another 18 are temporarily idled.

In 2009, he sold the company’s West Virginia coal operations to Russian steel firm Mechel for a reported $436 million and another $240 million in Mechel shares. That same year Justice closed on a $20 million deal to buy the historic Greenbrier Resort, which has hosted U.S. presidents and royalty.

After the purchase of the Greenbrier, Justice was hailed as “a great humanitarian” who “wants to help everyone” by then-West Virginia Gov. Joe Manchin.

Paul Bryant, principal at Greenbrier East High School in Justice’s hometown of Lewisburg, said the Greenbrier purchase saved the town of about 3,800 people. Justice is the head coach of the girls and boys basketball teams at the school.

“He saved 1,600 jobs and people’s lives and their families and their futures,” Bryant said. “I mean, if the Greenbrier Hotel would’ve gone under, I really kind of see this place as a ghost town.”

The Greenbrier has had some legal troubles since Justice took over, with federal suits filed by Delta Airlines in 2011 and a landscaping company in 2010. Both plaintiffs claimed the resort didn’t make good on contracts. Both suits have been resolved.

Justice “is absolutely a charitable, friendly person,” said Paul Snyder, an Ashland, Ky., attorney who is representing two Kentucky men who claim Justice excluded them from a land deal. “But he’s so much bigger than life, that in business he will act somewhat like (Donald) Trump, which is not good. He sees business as just a … get-out-of-my-way situation.”

The claim brought by Snyder is one of a handful that say Justice companies violated a contract over the acquisition of mine lands. Snyder’s clients allege that Justice went around them to buy a huge coal mining company, Sequoia, after they brought the potential sale to his attention while looking for partners.

In another dispute over mining lands, a group of Kentucky landowners are seeking millions in federal court from a Justice subsidiary. They claim they’ve lost millions in royalties because the company was awarded mining rights but hasn’t mined the land in two years.

Justice said settling debts isn’t as easy as writing a check when his mines are trying to remain open and producing coal.

“The alternative would be, ‘OK let’s pay everybody what we owe them and shut everything down.’ If you’re a vendor selling widgets and you get paid but you don’t sell any more widgets, that’s not any good,” he said.

Herbie Deskins, a former eastern Kentucky legislator from Pike County and attorney who is suing Justice on behalf of a drilling company, said business owners are in a bind because Justice mines are still operating when others are shutting down. He said his client, South East Drilling Supplies, would like to continue working for Justice but they want a $25,000 debt paid.

“People still want to do business with him because he’s still in business,” Deskins said.

Mark Doss, a vice president at Doss Fuelco in Baxter, Ky., said in February the Justice companies had settled their debts with the fuel supplier, which didn’t sue. He declined to say how much was owed.

“It only took two years,” he said.

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Death Notices, June 20, 2013
Jun 20, 2013 | 385 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print

Elkins

HURRICANE, W.Va. — Kelly Dean Elkins of Hurricane, formerly of Logan, passed away June 17, 2013. Services will be conducted at 2 p.m. Saturday, June 22, at Hurricane Kingdom Hall of Jehovah’s Witnesses. Allen Funeral Home of Hurricane in charge of arrangements.

Gunnells

HANOVER, W.Va. — Okie Gunnells, 76, of Hanover, died Tuesday, June 18, 2013. Arrangements are incomplete. Collins Funeral Home of Switzer is in charge of arrangements.

McNeely

RIDGEVIEW, W.Va. — Marcella McNeely, 68, of Ridgeview, wife of Loral Pete McNeely, died Tuesday, June 18, 2013. Services will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday, June 22, at Morning Star House of Prayer at Ridgeview. Burial will follow at the Estep Cemetery at Ridgeview. Visitation will be from noon-2 p.m. Saturday at the church. Freeman Funeral Home of Chapmanville is in charge of arrangements.

Mullins

CHAPMANVILLE, W.Va. — Mr. Paul Mullins, 83, of Chapmanville, widower of Betty Lauraine Mullins, died Wednesday, June 19, 2013. Graveside services and burial will be held at 11 a.m. Saturday, June 22, at Forest Lawn Cemetery at Pecks Mill. Evans Funeral Home and Cremation Services at Chapmanville is in charge of arrangements.

Meade

LOGAN, W.Va. — Malcolm Ray Meade, 49, of Logan, husband of Tammy Sue Meade, died Monday, June 17, 2013. Services will be held at 1 p.m. Friday, June 21, at Freeman Funeral Home. Burial will follow at Vance Family Cemetery at Dingess. Visitation will be from 11 a.m.-1 p.m. Friday at the funeral home. Freeman Funeral Home of Chapmanville is in charge of arrangements.

Sollars

BRUNO, W.Va. — Mr. James Marion Sollars, 90, of Bruno, widower of Lois Jean Lester Sollars, died Tuesday, June 11, 2013. Services will be held at 6 p.m. Monday, June 24, at Gilbert Presbyterian Church. Inurnment will be at 11 a.m. Tuesday at Forest Lawn Cemetery Mausoleum at Pecks Mill. Evans Funeral Home and Cremation Services of Chapmanville is in charge of arrangements.

Simms

MAN, W.Va. — Emma Lou Simms, 39, of Man, daughter of Helen Lorraine Gibson Simms and the late Luther Jackson Simms, died Friday, June 15. 2013. Services will be held at 1 p.m. Thursday, June 20, at Bruno Church of God. Burial will be in the Hatfield Cemetery at Hampden. Visitation will be from 6-9 p.m. Wednesday at the church. Mounts Funeral Home of Gilbert is in charge of arrangements.

Today’s services…

Dingess, Billy E. — 11 a.m. today at Chapman Memorial Freewill Baptist Church with Joseph Triplett officiating. Burial will follow at Forest Lawn Cemetery at Pecks Mill. Dingess, 81, of Harts, died Sunday, June 16, 2013. Freeman Funeral Home of Chapmanville is in charge of arrangements.

———

Condolences can be posted on the Comments section, located at the bottom of each online obituary listing at www.loganbanner.com

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W.Va. backlash emerging over education standards
by Lawrence Messina
Associated Press
Jun 20, 2013 | 113 views | 0 0 comments | 9 9 recommendations | email to a friend | print

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) — West Virginia is sticking with new standards for math, reading and writing in public schools, but faces opposition fueled by the tea party movement, which believes the benchmarks are part of an attempted federal takeover of local education authority.

The state Board of Education continues to pursue what are known as the Common Core State Standards, with a goal of phasing them in by the 2014-2015 school year. Adopted by 45 states so far, they attempt to set detailed benchmarks for students that are clear to parents and uniform across the differing school systems and districts.

For eighth-grade geometry, for instance, the standards call for students to solve real-world math problems involving the volume of cylinders, cones and spheres. By the end of high school, meanwhile, students should be able to analyze a Shakespeare play, among other works of literature. The standards envision first-graders writing book reports that explain the student’s opinion while also featuring a beginning and an end.

West Virginia is calling its version the Next Generation Content Standards and Objectives. Aided by the state Department of Education, the 55 county schools systems already have adapted them to kindergarten coursework as well as to the first, fourth, fifth and ninth grades.

The state board voted at its meeting last week to open a 30-day public comment period for some of the policies changed as a result of the emerging standards. One policy change revamps math benchmarks, while the other updates standards for second-grade reading and writing.

But the board also heard from a delegation led by state Sen. Donna Boley that wants the standards scrapped. Among other concerns, the opponents alleged that Common Core strips schools and counties of local oversight while handing over more control to the federal government. They also object to the collecting of student data in the name of assessing the standards’ performance.

“We’re turning our education system into a national education system,” Boley said Friday.

Backed by tea party and conservative groups, such critics have emerged throughout the states that have adopted the standards. Besides trying to repeal the benchmarks, Common Core opponents have sought to have them de-funded or delayed. A Pleasants County Republican, Boley led fellow GOP senators during this year’s session in seeking legislative scrutiny of the Common Core standards. She expects the topic to be studied during the Legislature’s monthly interim meetings.

Supporters of the Next Generation benchmarks include a veteran teacher from Boley’s district. Kriss Bodnar taught in Pleasants County schools for 36 years, and explains the standards in a video posted on the state Department of Education website. She helped develop the standards through an effort headed by the National Governors Association Center for Best Practices and the Council of Chief State School Officers that began before President Barack Obama took office.

“The standards themselves are a state-based initiative. (The multistate groups) were the driving force to gather the people to write the standards,” Bodnar told The Associated Press. “Nationwide, all students would be striving for the same goals as they go through their education.”

Now retired, Bodnar said the intent was to have concise, explicit and easy-to-understand goals of what the students should achieve by the end of each grade year, from kindergarten through high school. Unaware of Boley’s objections, Bodnar said the biggest hurdle may be helping teachers adjust their classroom approach to standards-based learning.

“The changes aren’t really that dramatic,” Bodnar said. “There are perhaps more expectations of kids, and more focus on what students need to do to improve achievement.”

Associated State Superintendent Robert Hull said the opponents may be confusing standards with curriculum.

“That’s still locally driven,” Hull said. “The curriculum is all about how we are going to get there and what materials we are going to use.”

Hull said he’s also heard all manner of rumors about the data collection, very little of it true.

“The information we’re talking about is nothing more than what we’ve always collected from students,” Hull said. “The schools and the district own the data, and it is not shared outside of them. We’ll know on a state level how schools and districts perform.”

Critics of Common Core have had some successes elsewhere. Indiana has blocked the Common Core phase-in from continuing there for one year, pending a review. Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal signed an executive order last month barring the collection of such information as religious and political affiliations of students and their families. The Republican governor noted that such personal information is not currently being collected, but said he wanted to guard individual rights.

——————

Online:

Common Core State Standards Initiative: http://www.corestandards.org

W.Va. Dept. of Education resource pages: http://wvde.state.wv.us/next-generation

WV Against Common Core: http://on.fb.me/178hhNS

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Public opinion for statewide growth
Jun 20, 2013 | 92 views | 0 0 comments | 11 11 recommendations | email to a friend | print

Planning.

It seems like a relatively simple term, but when it comes right down to it, when we are talking about how it impacts the future and progress for our region and state, the importance of public input can’t — and mustn’t — be overlooked.

Both Mount Hope and Beckley are currently in the process of developing comprehensive plans that will be used as the guiding tools for growth during the next decade and beyond.

Statewide, a Blue Ribbon Panel appointed by Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin, has done its preliminary work on a study of the highways system and its growing needs. Over the next several weeks at various locations across the state, including Beckley, meetings will be held to garner public opinion.

Now is the time for the citizenry to step out and let your voices be heard. This is the part of the process when meaningful thought and serious consideration can be given before final plans are pieced together.

People shouldn’t wait for the end result to start the conversation.

Too many times are plans made, discussed and changed … then afterward, the complaining begins. Subscribing to that “nobody listens anyway” mentality can’t be an excuse or reason any more.

The public needs to be informed, attend scheduled meetings, ask questions and provide their views.

That’s the way a truly comprehensive approach can be developed and worked on together for the betterment of our region and state.

— Distributed by The Associated Press

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