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  • President Biden’s choice to lead the Labor Department faces an uncertain fate within the Democratic-controlled Senate because of her tenure overseeing a California unemployment agency that paid out billions in fraudulent benefits at the height of the coronavirus pandemic.  At least three members of the Democratic majority are up in the air on Julie Su, despite having voted to confirm her as undersecretary of labor in 2021. The uncertainty comes as business groups and Republicans... Read More
  • President Biden kicked off April by dealing America’s farmers and small businesses yet another blow in the name of his radical climate agenda. With the stroke of his pen, Biden rejected the will of a bipartisan majority in Congress and pushed forward his Administration’s hallmark water rule that significantly expands federal regulatory control over our land and waterways. Washington Democrats’ latest effort to force its liberal agenda on the American public is anything but... Read More
  • WASHINGTON (Nexstar) – Lawmakers who support the Green New Deal say despite skepticism from many, the platform is moving forward and they plan to continue pushing for new green initiatives. Progressives like Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio Cortez say 2022’s Inflation Reduction Act made big parts of their Green New Deal a reality. “We have started to win,” Rep. Ocasio Cortez said. “We have highlighted important issues ranging from education to renewable... Read More
  • Promise one thing, deliver another. It’s a tactic Democrats have used time and again: the bait and switch. Last year, Democrats enacted their reckless green spending spree, and labeled it the Inflation Reduction Act. Starting with the name, just about every assurance Democrats made about the bill is false. Among other claims, the White House asserted that spending a tidal wave of taxpayer money would reduce the deficit, lower costs for families, grow the economy and create jobs. Will it?... Read More
  • The hydrogen rush is on. After Congress provided $9.5 billion in funding through the 2021 public works legislation and tax credits through a 2022 climate law, politicians in Washington and U.S. states are jockeying to land federal funding for hydrogen technology demonstration projects. Together, these pillars have triggered broad interest in hydrogen, a ubiquitous element long held out, much like nuclear fusion technology, as a potential energy Shangri-La, providing stable power with scant... Read More
  • The Biden administration’s push to speed up the process of getting more electric vehicles on the roads is drawing sharp criticism from both West Virginia U.S. Senators. Proposed new auto pollution limits through the EPA (Environmental Protection Agency) would require that about two-thirds of new vehicles sold in the nation to be electric by 2032. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito, R-W.Va., called the proposed new standards “misguided,” not reflecting some realities of the development... Read More
  • Republicans in Congress may not like the Biden administration's recent proposal to squeeze greenhouse gas emissions standards in the name of advancing electric vehicle adoption, but it does provide them with leverage on one of their top priorities: an overhaul of the federal permitting process. The proposed standards released last week are by far the strictest emission rules developed by the EPA. The agency estimated that through 2055 the standards would avert nearly 10 billion tons of carbon... Read More
  • U.S. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (R-WV) on Monday introduced a bipartisan resolution in her chamber that would designate April 17-23 as National Osteopathic Medicine Week. “National Osteopathic Medicine Week provides a chance to highlight the critical role of osteopathic medicine, innovative and intelligent practitioners, our West Virginia School of Osteopathic Medicine in Lewisburg, and its importance for the health of West Virginians,” Sen. Capito said in an April 17... Read More
  • Two US senators and a host of industry allies are pushing for congressional action this spring and summer on reform of federal permitting, a costly delay-producing challenge for oil and gas companies and other infrastructure developers. Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) told a forum at the US Chamber of Commerce that Senate committees would be holding hearings starting this month and running through May with the hope of seeing a bipartisan compromise permitting bill take shape before the congressional... Read More
  • U.S. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (R-WV) recently sponsored a bipartisan, bicameral bill that would require coverage of hearing devices and systems in certain private health insurance plans. “Auditory implant devices and external sound processors can be life-changing for individuals who suffer from severe hearing loss,” Sen. Capito said on April 14. “Our senses are something we too often take for granted, and I will continue to work to establish better access to these critical... Read More
  • Two bipartisan bills meant to improve U.S. recycling infrastructure in underserved areas and bolster recycling-related data collection have been reintroduced in the U.S. Senate.   Lawmakers reintroduced the Recycling Infrastructure and Accessibility Act and the Recycling and Composting Accountability Act ahead of Earth Day, saying the legislation would make recycling more accessible, help create recycling-related jobs and raise the national recycling rate. The... Read More
  • WASHINGTON (WV News) — The Appalachian Regional Clean Hydrogen Hub (ARCH2) has submitted its full application to the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Clean Energy Demonstrations, according to state officials. The DOE’s Regional Clean Hydrogen Hubs program includes up to $7 billion to establish six to 10 regional clean hydrogen hubs across America. The DOE will review the submitted applications and make an announcement in 2024. Clean hydrogen hubs will create networks of... Read More
  • As the U.S. Senate gets ready for hearings on possible legislation to speed up federal review and permitting for construction projects, a coalition of industry and other business groups is pushing the case for bipartisan legislation to meet that goal. Industry officials and some key senators aired the issues surrounding permitting reform at an April 18 meeting at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, which led the formation of the large coalition pushing to see Congress clear permitting legislation by... Read More
  • The details of House Republicans’ debt limit increase bill were in flux on Tuesday as Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) and GOP leaders worked to get enough votes in a slim majority to pass it. GOP leaders have set their sights on voting on the forthcoming legislation as early as next week, as the party tries to increase pressure on the White House to negotiate spending cuts and policy reforms as a condition of raising the debt ceiling.  A framework for the legislation... Read More
  • The Friends of Coal Ladies Auxiliary helped celebrate Emma Arbutus Clay’s 104th birthday. Born April 8, 1919, Clay celebrated her birthday with close family and friends. Clay has lived in Raleigh County her entire life, spending over 40 years in the public school system as a teacher and a principal. She worked at Harpers Creek Elementary, Eccles Elementary and Eccles Junior High schools. Clay was married for over 60 years. She has three children, three grandchildren, five... Read More
  • Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) said during an event at the Chamber of Commerce on Tuesday that he would be reintroducing his legislation that failed to get enough support during a vote in the Senate last year. He also said he would take a look at Republicans’ energy package, known as H.R.1, and said it was “wrong” for Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) to call the Republican bill “dead on arrival.” Both Manchin, who chairs the Senate... Read More
  • Just seven Republicans supported Manchin’s permitting bill, which sought to preserve states’ authorities over siting transmission while still allowing FERC to step in if permits aren’t issued within a year’s time. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito, the top Republican on the Environment and Public Works Committee, was one of those seven. But, she said, making FERC the backstop, especially on cost allocation, would be a problem. “I don’t think we want to federalize... Read More
  • WASHINGTON - A coalition of centrist Republicans and Democrats say they are getting closer to a bipartisan deal on overhauling the federal permitting process to allow faster development of infrastructure projects such as power transmission lines, natural gas pipelines and broadband networks.At an event hosted by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce Tuesday, Senators Shelley Moore Capito, R-W.V., Tom Carper, D-Del., and Joe Manchin, D-W.V., along with Rep. Scott Peters, D-Calif. — many of whom... Read More
  • MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (WV News) — Almost $425,000 in federal funding will be used to collect and digitally preserve thousands of congressional archives at WVU. The $349,580 National Endowment for the Humanities grant for the Robert C. Byrd Center for History Education at West Virginia University was announced Tuesday by U.S. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito, R-W.Va., and a member of the Senate Appropriations Committee. Capito announced a smaller National Endowment for the Humanities grant —... Read More
  • Charleston, W.Va. – West Virginia’s director of the State Resiliency Office, Bob Martin, delivered his agency’s first quarter report to members of the Joint Legislative Interim Committee on Flooding on Sunday, telling lawmakers he believes the economic future of the Mountain State depends on proper flood mitigation and resiliency strategies. “This is the world according to Bob,” Martin concluded. “I think flood resiliency and flood mitigation in the state... Read More