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Former teacher hopes Mannington Middle School benefits from endangered property status

Former teacher hopes Mannington Middle School benefits from endangered property status

Yahoo29-05-2025
FAIRMONT — After facing the possibility the school would be closed and the students merged with Blackshere Elementary, former technology teacher Rusty Elliott is now glad that Marion County Schools is taking steps to preserve the historic building that houses Mannington Middle School.
'It's one of those schools that was built in 1902,' Elliott said. 'And it's as solid as the Rock of Gibraltar.'
In March, the Preservation Alliance of West Virginia announced Mannington Middle School had been added to the state's Endangered Properties List. School Superintendent Donna Heston told WAJR's Talk of the Town in March she hoped the designation opened up opportunities for the school similar to what Alderson Elementary School in Greenbrier County received. According to an article from November 2024, the former Alderson High School was renovated into an elementary school after the school district worked with the West Virginia School Building Association, DC Shires and The Thrasher Group's engineering division to refurbish the school.
'Structurally it is sound, we've had engineers come in and look at it,' Heston said about Mannington Middle on WAJR. 'Beautiful wood floors, it has a very historically rich structure as well as a historically rich library.'
Heston said Mannington Middle Principal Jane DeVaul, a group of parents and the Preservation Alliance did the work to move the school onto the endangered properties list.
The school faced closure as the county school system worked to put together a bond proposal for the 2024 election. However, the proposal was removed from the final bond before it was presented to voters.
Elliott said while the building is structurally sound, the roof could use replacing. In 2023, Marion County Schools had the Thrasher Group check the tower area of the school. The Board of Education instituted safety precautions around the tower in 2022. The inspection led the Board of Education to believe there were no significant structural issues with the school.
On its website, the Preservation Alliance of West Virginia wrote that the building was built in the Victorian Romanesque architectural style, and is a significant part of Mannington and the state's history. It's one of the oldest functional public schools in the state. The school was designed by an architectural firm out of Wheeling, and construction finished on the school in 1925.
'While still functional, the BOE, stretched thin, hopes its inclusion on this list will help with the preservation efforts for this outstanding building,' the alliance wrote on its website.
It added the Endangered Properties List is a powerful tool used by the alliance to raise awareness about threatened historic sites across the state. Earning a place on the list increases visibility, advocacy and access to preservation resources for historic places.
Sen. Shelley Moore Capito, R-W.Va., is also working on a Rural Historic Tax Credit which could potentially support preservation projects like the one in Mannington. The Rural Historic Tax Credit Improvement Act would reduce financial barriers to historic preservation in rural areas, alleviate burdens for small developers by boosting net proceeds and lowering compliance costs, as well as increasing access to capital to small towns who suffer from high construction costs but lower lease rates, which discourages developers.
Elliott said the building should be fixed up, and doesn't require a lot of work to keep up. He supports the school now being on the Endangered Properties List.
'Let's fix it up,' he said. 'It is a treasure in the state of West Virginia. Too many times we tear down our treasures and don't keep them going.'
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41-year-old state rep files to challenge Lamont for Connecticut governor
41-year-old state rep files to challenge Lamont for Connecticut governor

Yahoo

time09-07-2025

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41-year-old state rep files to challenge Lamont for Connecticut governor

State Rep. Josh Elliott, D-Hamden, a liberal who recently predicted that Gov. Ned Lamont would not go unchallenged for the Democratic nomination if he runs in 2026, filed papers Tuesday creating a gubernatorial campaign committee. Unclear was whether Elliott was committed to an all-or-nothing run for governor or a campaign to test Democrats' appetite for an alternative to Lamont, whose centrist politics on fiscal issues are a source of tension with some on the left. Elliott, who has called for a more progressive tax structure, said by text he will make a formal campaign announcement Monday in Hamden. Elliott, who declined further comment, ran for secretary of the state in 2022, staying in the campaign through the nominating convention, then opted to quit and seek reelection to the House. 'I don't think it's an all-or-nothing,' said Rep. Anne Hughes, D-Easton, a progressive ally of Elliott. But she also cautioned against a comparison to 2022, saying, 'I think this is a really different moment.' Hughes said the party needs a more aggressive approach to a Trump administration that she says is promoting 'a police state' and dismantling the social safety net, and there is a desire for generational change. 'The governor doesn't understand the urgency,' she said. Elliott, 41, a five-term state lawmaker, is the first Democrat to file papers creating a gubernatorial campaign committee. Lamont, 71, said last month he was seriously considering a third term but stopped far short of an announcement. Jen Tooker, the Westport first selectwoman, is a declared candidate for the Republican nomination. New Britain Mayor Erin Stewart, also a Republican, has an exploratory committee and is expected to run. House Speaker Matt Ritter, D-Hartford, said Elliott had informed him of his intention to open a campaign, but he declined to speculate on whether Elliott would try to force a primary if Lamont runs. 'Josh has become a very good friend and trusted colleague,' Ritter said. 'And he indicated to me that he wanted to go out and talk to people.' Lamont, who has consistently scored positive, if not exemplary, approval ratings since a rocky start in 2019, is widely seen as well-positioned in a general election, given fiscal policies that have cut taxes, paid down debt and produced record budget reserves. He has opposed any increase in income tax rates, including for high earners. Some of those same fiscal policies have generated criticism from some labor leaders who have urged higher taxes on the wealthy, most notably Ed Hawthorne, the president of the Connecticut AFL-CIO. Lamont's vetoes of a labor priority, a measure that would have provided jobless benefits for strikers, and an omnibus housing bill, also provoked complaints on the left. One Democratic strategist who has been privy to discussions among the potential of a challenge to the governor said of Elliott's filing: 'I think this is a shot across the bow.' The strategist declined to be quoted by name, citing the sensitivity of those discussions. If nothing else, the strategist said, Elliott could make Lamont more open to policy overtures from the left. Rob Blanchard, the governor's communications director, had no direct comment on Elliott's candidacy but stressed the governor's Democratic credentials. 'From day one, Gov. Lamont's focus has been on expanding opportunity and making Connecticut more affordable for working families. He championed progressive priorities such as free child care for families making less than $100k, paid family and medical leave, expanding our earned income tax credit for our lowest-earning residents, and increasing our minimum wage to one of the highest in the country,' Blanchard said. Blanchard indicated the governor would not rest on that record. 'While that's a proud record on affordability and opportunity that could go up against anyone,' Blanchard said, 'the governor understands that more must be done to bring costs down for families across Connecticut, and it will continue to be the No. 1 focus of his administration.' Hughes said the upset victory by 33-year-old socialist Zohran Mamdani in the New York mayoral primary has exposed an appetite for new leadership, as did the recent announcement of a 37-year-old Hartford school board member, Ruth Fortune, that she would challenge U.S. Rep. John B. Larson, D-1st District. In an interview the day after Mamdani defeated former Gov. Andrew Cuomo in a Democratic mayoral primary in New York City, Elliott was reluctant to find evidence of vulnerability by Lamont in Cuomo's defeat, given Cuomo's resignation over sexual harassment accusations. 'You need to be really aware of luck — and that's not to in any way detract from that race — but I think that Mamdani got lucky to be against a truly unsympathetic competitor, where Ned is a nice guy and is really likable,' Elliott said. Elliott did note, however, that he began his own career by announcing an intention to run a primary against Rep. J. Brendan Sharkey, D-Hamden, who then was the House speaker. Sharkey ultimately did not run in 2016. Mark Pazniokas is a reporter for The Connecticut Mirror ( Copyright 2025 © The Connecticut Mirror. This article originally appeared on The Bulletin: Democrat Josh Elliott files to challenge Lamont for CT governor

How Michigan law protects rights of LGBTQ+ community
How Michigan law protects rights of LGBTQ+ community

Yahoo

time24-06-2025

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How Michigan law protects rights of LGBTQ+ community

LANSING, Mich. (WOOD) — When state Sen. Jeremy Moss introduced legislation to add protections for LGBTQ+ to the Michigan's civil rights law, it was personal. Moss, D-Southfield, is the first openly gay member of the Michigan Senate. The expanded protections were passed and signed into law in March 2023. 'Today, if a person is fired because they're gay or kicked out of a restaurant because they're trans(gender), they have a path to seek justice. They don't have to just deal with the discrimination and live in this shame and bigotry that the community has lived under for too long,' Moss said. GR Pride Center celebrates added LGBTQ protections Moss said the changes to the state's Elliott-Larsen Civil Rights Act were a long time coming. 'This was a fight from the very beginning of drafting our civil rights law in the early 1970s,' Moss said. 'Advocates and activists then knew that we had to put protections for LGBTQ Michiganders in the law, but we were excluded from the process.' He pointed out that the expanded protections was supported by many in the business community. 'When we put forward this proposal, I believed the moral reason was enough: We shouldn't discriminate against people. But the business community came out and said, 'This is something we support.' The Michigan Chamber of Commerce supported this. They have a conservative bent on how they see the economy, but on this issue, they said, 'We are being left behind by excluding people, by making people not feel welcome to do business in this state.' So the business community made the economic case that this is helpful for all Michiganders to ensure that everybody is protected by our civil rights law,' he said. With uncertainty about diversity, equality and inclusion programs under the Trump administration, Moss worries that not all voices will be heard — something he has experienced in his own life. 'For years and years and years, other people were talking about us (people in the LGBTQ community). Other people were making decisions about us and our futures and our prosperity and there were not LGBQT people at the table to have this conversation for a community that's impacted by these decisions,' he said. 'When other people make decisions about you and you're not a voice at the table, it impacts you disproportionately.' Despite what he called 'chaos coming from Washington,' Moss said there is an overarching layer of protection in Michigan. 'Elliott-Larsen is the law of our state,' he said. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

More local governments in Pennsylvania would be able to tax more to cover fire, EMS costs under new bill
More local governments in Pennsylvania would be able to tax more to cover fire, EMS costs under new bill

Yahoo

time19-06-2025

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More local governments in Pennsylvania would be able to tax more to cover fire, EMS costs under new bill

This story was produced by the State College regional bureau of Spotlight PA, an independent, nonpartisan newsroom dedicated to investigative and public-service journalism for Pennsylvania. Sign up for Talk of the Town, a weekly newsletter of local stories that dig deep, events, and more from north-central PA, at STATE COLLEGE — Hundreds of local governments in Pennsylvania would gain expanded taxing power to fund their cash-strapped fire departments and emergency medical services under a bill advancing in the legislature. Last year, the state legislature gave some local governments the ability to levy higher property taxes to fund fire companies and EMS providers. Now, a bill that would expand that opportunity to over 1,400 more municipalities has passed the Democratic-controlled state House. Local governments in Pennsylvania decide how to fund these emergency services for their communities. Governing boards can pay for these costs out of their main account, usually called the general fund, or they can set money aside using a special real estate tax and restrict that income to only fire or EMS services. David Greene, executive director of the Pennsylvania Local Government Commission, a legislative agency, described such a dedicated property tax as a 'lock box mechanism.' It 'gives the public an understanding that that portion of their tax bill is going [to] and is guaranteed for that specific purpose,' he told Spotlight PA. But for decades, state law has imposed an upper limit on how much local governments can tax property owners for these purposes: no more than 3 mills for a fire tax, and no more than half a mill for an EMS tax. These kinds of limits have been criticized by some as arbitrary. But that changed — to a small extent — last year when state lawmakers approved Act 54, which raised the fire tax limit to 10 mills and the EMS tax cap to 5 mills for about 150 boroughs and townships in Bucks, Delaware, and Montgomery Counties, according to a count compiled by the Pennsylvania Local Government Commission. In Bucks County's Northampton Township, the board of supervisors decided it was 'absolutely critical' to fund a full-time fire department that is on call every hour of the day, Township Manager Robert Pellegrino told Spotlight PA. The trouble was that the township was already charging property owners the maximum rate of a fire tax it could under state law: $3 for every $1,000 of the assessed value of a property — or 3 mills. That translates to about $1.8 million, which is less than one-third of the township fire department's budget, Pellegrino said. Before the tax cap increase, Northampton Township had limited options to make up the difference. It could transfer money from its general fund, which could put severe strain on other services like police, or it could raise its taxing limits through a voter referendum, which Pellegrino said is an 'unsustainable model.' Pellegrino said his township worked with state legislators on behalf of the measure. Northampton Township was one of the three local governments (all in Bucks County) that have exercised this new, higher taxing authority so far. 'It's a huge relief and a very big help,' Pellegrino told Spotlight PA. Northampton Township is able to almost entirely fund its fire department with the new tax. At least 855 of the state's 2,558 municipalities impose some form of fire tax, according to a database maintained by the Department of Community and Economic Development, which includes tax information submitted by about 80% of local governments. The same dataset showed 224 local governments reported having a tax for ambulance, rescue, and emergency services. A Spotlight PA analysis of state data found that among municipalities that have a form of fire tax, about 7.5% have reached or exceeded the cap. For those with an EMS tax, 62% have met or gone beyond half a mill. The increases allowed by Act 54 were 'a step in the right direction,' state Rep. Chris Pielli (D., Chester), prime sponsor for House Bill 393, wrote in a memo seeking support from his colleagues. His proposal would allow second-class townships in Pennsylvania — where a majority of commonwealth residents live — the same 10-mill limit for a fire tax and 5-mill cap for an EMS tax. Pielli, a former township supervisor, told Spotlight PA that his proposal has the support of local fire and EMS agencies. He said that funding is only one aspect of the crisis facing public safety services and that additional actions in Harrisburg, like tax breaks for first responders, should be considered. 'This is a problem that requires a multipronged approach,' Pielli said. Nearly 90% of the state's 1,770 registered fire departments are entirely staffed by volunteers, according to the U.S. Fire Administration. A 2021 survey of Pennsylvania's 744 certified EMS agencies found more than half of them had experienced a budget deficit, according to the Center for Rural Pennsylvania, a legislative agency. Many local fire companies and EMS providers have sounded the alarm on funding and operational challenges. 'EMS systems are collapsing under the weight of outdated reimbursement models [and] the lack of funding to maintain 24/7 readiness and workforce attrition,' Janette Swade, executive director for the independent Pennsylvania Emergency Health Services Council, told Spotlight PA in an email. Swade's organization doesn't take positions on legislation, including Pielli's. But she said raising municipal EMS taxes, increasing mutual aid among agencies, and establishing EMS authorities are some solutions the council supports. David Sanko, executive director of the Pennsylvania State Association of Township Supervisors, told Spotlight PA that the higher taxing limits proposed in Pielli's bill would enable better local decision-making. Arden Knapp, chair of the Pleasant Township Board of Supervisors in Warren County, told Spotlight PA the proposed measure is 'really necessary.' Knapp's rural township now taxes the maximum rates for both fire and EMS services, but revenue continues to be strained, because a third of the township's land mass is public forest that does not generate tax income. The township is 'taking every bit of that EMS tax' as well as additional monies from the general fund to ensure ambulance services for residents, he said. Part of the cost goes to hiring a private, nighttime ambulance, because staffing has been a struggle. Knapp said he believes residents will support a potential increase because they realize the financial reality of fire and ambulance services — something Pellegrino, Sanko, and Pielli told Spotlight PA they have observed. 'When you're dealing with municipalities, I think for the most part, they try to be as responsible as possible and set the rates precisely [as] what they believe is the reasonable amount of revenue that they need,' Greene, of the Local Government Commission, said. The commission tracks which municipalities take advantage of Act 54 and studies the impacts. Some key questions Greene and his agency will study include why municipalities opt to levy these special real estate taxes, how the increased funding is spent, and whether higher fire and EMS taxes alleviate fundraising pressures. The commission's assistant director, Kristopher Gazsi, said the study will hopefully inform future bills. and help us reinvigorate local news in north-central Pennsylvania at Spotlight PA is funded by foundations and readers like you who are committed to accountability and public-service journalism that gets results. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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