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Commission funds staffing, salary requests; tables others

March 4, 2025
in Latest News
0

By Patrick Hurston

The Hardy County Commission met in regular session on Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2025, at 5

p.m. in the Commission chambers at the courthouse. All three Commissioners were

present.

The meeting opened with a presentation by the award-winning Moorefield High School

robotics club, the Jackbots.

Adam Sherman, William Wojtowicz, and Ralph Wojtowicz shared with the Commission

that they are well-positioned to move on to yet another competition, possibly the World

Competition in Houston, TX. The team will find out in March.

The commission received a demonstration of one of the robots being used for

competition. The team members reported that from feedback at competitions as well as

their own observations, they have one of the fastest, most efficient, and most reliable

robots in competition.

Next the Commission heard from Alexandria Smith and Elizabeth Metheny, both with

the West Virginia University Extension.

Together Smith and Metheny made a budget request for fiscal year 2026. The request

for $5,000 will revise the salaries of two staffers whose years of service and experience

level warranted the adjustment. The request was approved.

All other financial requests were tabled until the next meeting. Those requests came

from South Branch Valley Day Report Center, Valley View Golf Course, and

Wardensville’s Big Blue.

In her presentation prior to making the funding request, Smith reviewed 2024 highlights

for the Commission which included for youth agriculture, among other things, multiple

award-winning teams. She said Hardy County teams won state contests in both junior

and senior division horse judging, poultry judging, and victories in the turkey and

chicken barbecue contest, winning fourth and sixth places overall nationally.

She emphasized that the real value and growth opportunities come from getting the kids

out there, engaging in public speaking, reasoning, and confidence-building.

Critical services provided in 2024 included multiple educational sessions with area

producers to help them address last year’s severe drought by accessing relief funds

available through the Farm Service Agency and the Conservation District.

 

Smith said that Extension’s efforts led to FSA seeing an increase in local producers

signing up for services and programs. She also reported that to date, the FSA has

provided over $1 million in relief funds to Hardy County farmers.

Metheny then reported on the success and growth of the 4-H program.

“One thing I’m very, very excited about is that we have a higher membership than ever

before,” she said. Membership last year was 317, up from 211 in the 2021/22 service

year.

She said that “there’s a growing trend of kids eager to have face to face” activities

again. She said she believes that many youths who missed out on a lot of social activity

during the pandemic appear eager to volunteer and give more and more of their time.

“We’re seeing kids wanting to be more active, and it’s incredibly encouraging,” she said.

One big research project that Metheny is completing is a survey of more than 3,600

middle school youth over 14 counties. The survey was structured to help identify what

the students really want to learn and what excites them. She said she is looking to

identify other Extension programs across the county that already exist and may help

meet those needs.

Metheny said another key program she is developing centers around financial literacy.

Though she has developed some materials and distributed them across the state, she

has had difficulty finding anyone local to teach the program. West Virginia now has a

half-credit financial literacy requirement in high schools, she said.

Darren Taylor of South Branch Valley Day Report Center requested that the

Commission continue its annual support for the center by honoring a $20,000 matching

grant as identified in the Community Connections Grant Memorandum of

Understanding. The Commission agreed to honor that commitment, but tabled Taylor’s

request of an additional $30,000 from opioid settlement funds until the next meeting.

In his presentation, Taylor shared with the Commission how the Center has grown and

changed the way it operates to have an even greater impact on Hardy County.

Taylor said the Center expanded from just doing drug testing to offering a multitude of

classes to people who are in recovery.

“We’re trying to help them live better lives, stay out of jail, and you know, learn how to

live in a life of recovery,” he said.

Taylor said the greatest change is around those cases involving Child Protective

Services. He said the Center has many cases that include an evaluation period where a

client retains custody of a child or loses it.

 

Taylor said, “We can do more than just test them and give them some recovery

material.” Working with the Department of Human Services, Taylor developed classes

on parenting, life skills; anger management, codependency; and domestic violence,

among others.

“I’ve heard from the judges and the courts and the prosecutors that they’ve seen an

unprecedented level of families staying together through CPS cases, and the common

denominator is them being in our classes,” Taylor told the Commission.

He also shared that with an expanding telehealth program they are now able to provide

support services 24-hours a day.

Affirming the success of the Center and his own dedication and expertise, Taylor

reported that he was recently appointed to the West Virginia First Foundation’s regional

panel of experts. In that capacity he will represent Hardy County, ensuring its needs are

heard by the Foundation which is responsible for distributing opioid settlement funds

throughout the state.

Taylor requested an additional $30,000 to fund one full-time staff position for a period of

12 months. That request was tabled.

Steve Wratchford of Valley View Golf Course also had his funding request tabled. On

behalf of Valley View he did not request a specific dollar amount, instead choosing to

highlight the many needs of the golf course.

Wratchford pointed to the aging water system, indicating that that minimum estimate

they’ve received to upgrade the system is $250,000. He also pointed to a new farm

tractor at a cost of $35,000 and a new mower system estimated at $40,000.

He stressed the contributions the course makes by supporting members of the

community including youth programs, Veterans programs, first responder programs, as

well as all the area high school teams.

Wratchford said, “We’re about one catastrophe from closing down.”

While the Commission was supportive and agreed the course is an excellent addition to

the community, the funding was tabled until the next meeting.

Big Blue, the faith-based teen center in Wardensville, also had its funding request

tabled.

Last year, the Commission provided Big Blue with $18,000 as part of a three-year plan.

Commissioner Dave Workman recalled that as part of its three-year plan, Big Blue

attached a three-year funding request: $18,000 the first year, followed by an additional

$12,000 over two successive years. The Commissioners could not recall whether the

 

funding was approved in its entirety, or only the first $18,000 installment. It was agreed

that last year’s minutes would be reviewed and the Commission would take the matter

upon again at its next meeting.

The Commission then voted to provide West Hardy EMS $15,000 a month directly,

rather than passing the funds through Hardy County Emergency Ambulance Authority

(HCEAA) as it has been doing.

The Commission also approved Custodian Melvin Shook’s request for a part-time

employee.

The Commission agreed to provide letters and resolutions of support to McCoy’s

Theater and the Hardy County Convention and Visitors Bureau, respectively, for various

state grants they are pursuing.

The next meeting will be held on Wed., March 5, 2025, at 9 a.m. Members of the public

are encouraged to attend.

 

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