Local News
UPDATE — DHHR project brings services closer to residents
CHARLESTON — Officials with the Department of Health and Human Resources are trying to help save rural residents time and money by bringing services closer to them.
Out-stations opened in Nicholas and Fayette counties as a pilot project save residents from having to travel to a central DHHR office to apply for assistance.
DHHR officials say the out-stations save some residents as much as 90 minutes each way in travel time.
Louis Palma, deputy commissioner of the agency’s Bureau for Children and Families, says these stations also save residents gas costs.
Staff members also go to two senior living facilities to sign eligible seniors up for benefits.
Palma says he’s written to DHHR Secretary Martha Walker asking to expand the program.
- Local News
-
-
Back to brick surface
The Fourth Street Bridge is open.
Motorists wanting to cross between Fairmont Avenue and Locust Avenue no longer have to search for creative shortcuts to avoid the enormous hill on Seventh Street or a plethora of stoplights.
“I am very pleased that it is once again open,” said Councilman Chuck Warner, who took a trip across the bridge a few hours after it opened on Thursday morning.
-
Waterline break quickly repaired
Business was interrupted downtown Thursday by a waterline break.
City of Fairmont Utilities Manager David Sago said the break occurred in a 10-inch line on Jackson Street at about 9:30 a.m.
City crews were on the scene in less than 25 minutes, Sago said.
-
Haymond Street work set Tuesday
Motorists driving on Fairmont’s East Side next Tuesday will be running into some delays while state road crews prepare a portion of Haymond Street for a fresh coat of asphalt in about six months.
This project is part of the developing Gateway Connector Highway, the 1.5-mile, four-lane roadway set to connect downtown Fairmont to Interstate 79, which is set for completion at the end of this year.
-
‘Out of the panic period’
Economists provided their insights into the future of the local and national economy Wednesday at the annual Morgantown Economic Outlook Conference.
-
‘It’s fun to be Irish’
“I may not be Irish, but it’s fun to be Irish on St. Patrick’s Day,” said Charles Long as he sat down for lunch at McAteer’s restaurant Wednesday.
-
Fairmont hopes to add to K-9 unit
The Fairmont City Police Department has plans to introduce a pair of furry four-legged officers to its fleet in the near future.
-
East schools focus on transition
Schools in the East attendance area have truly embraced a new initiative.
-
Former county teacher acquitted
Curtis Boylen, a former Marion County teacher accused of assaulting his former stepdaughter in 2007, was acquitted of all charges earlier this week following a four-day trial in Marion County Circuit Court.
-
Arrest ‘expected’ in Fairmont woman’s death
The Monongalia County Sheriff’s Department Tuesday denied that a suspect in the case of the death of a 45-year-old Fairmont woman is “at large.”
-
Evidence in dispute
According to testimony delivered by a Marion County sheriff’s deputy Tuesday, 21-year-old Jason Clay Anderson showed “no emotion” while answering questions just hours after his infant son was pronounced dead on the afternoon of June 23, 2007.
- More Local News Headlines
-


