SlideShare a Scribd company logo
1 of 1
Download to read offline
By Michael Kunzelman
and Rebecca Santana
The Associated Press
BATON ROUGE, La. — A prom-
inent Black Lives Matter activ-
ist, three journalists and more
than 120 other people were
taken into custody in Louisiana
over the weekend, authorities
said Sunday, in connection with
protests over the fatal shooting
of an African-American man by
two white police officers in
Baton Rouge.
Spokeswoman Casey Ray-
born Hicks of the East Baton
Rouge Sheriff’s Office told The
Associated Press that nearly
100 people were taken to the
parish jail over protests that
began late Saturday. Most of
those arrested were from Lou-
isiana and faced a single charge
of obstructing a highway.
Police
release
activist
JULY 11, 2016  CHARLESTON, WEST VIRGINIA
I N S I D E Detailed index on 2A
Business7A
Comics 6B, 7B
Classified9B
Crosswords 7B, 11B
Editorials 4A, 5A
Horoscope3A
Obituaries8A
Television12A
Weather11A
G O T   A   T I P ?
304-348-5100
C L A S S I F I E D
304-348-4848
Weekday delivery by 6 a.m. Call 304-348-4800 to subscribe.
t h e ga z ette - M A I L on t w itte r
More about what’s online on 2A
Follow us on Twitter at @wvgazettemail to get all the
latest W.Va. news right on your Twitter feed.
M O N D AY
STATE EDITION 75 CENTS Mostly Sunny HIGH: 89 LOW: 65
DETAILS, 11A
wvgazettemail.com
Gazette-Mail
Charleston
By Ryan Quinn
Staff writer
Kanawha County Schools is
auctioning off two shuttered
schools on Charleston’s West
Side Wednesday.
Alan Cummings, the school
system’s purchasing director,
said the separate auctions will
take place at the schools’ ad-
dresses: Watts Elementary, at
230 Costello St., Charleston,
25302, will be auctioned at 10
a.m., and J.E. Robins Elemen-
tary, at 915 Beech Avenue,
Charleston, 25302, will be auc-
tioned at 11:30 a.m.
The schools, both about 80
years old, closed at the end of
the 2013-14 school year, and
their students were transferred
to the new Edgewood Elemen-
tary. Both have also been sub-
jected to vandalism and com-
plaints from neighbors, though
the school system only boarded
them up around the end of
May of this year.
“The goal is to just move the
buildings as quickly as possible,
to benefit the community,” Cum-
mings told a reporter Friday.
West
Side
schools
for sale
Kanawha County to
auction J.E. Robins,
Watts on Wednesday
SEE auction, 11A
SEE Protester, 11A
SAM OWENS | Gazette-Mail
A water pipe is snaked across a railroad bridge that runs across the Gauley River, Wednesday, as maintenance crews worked to bring water back to all residents in
Gauley Bridge. There are residents in town who have not had water since June 23, when severe flooding hit the area and washed water pipes away.
By Daniel Desrochers
Staff writer
Since she last had running water,
Nancy Taylor, of Gauley Bridge,
has driven around two miles to an
unmarked pipe spilling water on the
side of the road five times.
That’s where the retired school
teacher has filled the two five-gallon
jugs, or — once the five-gallon jugs
got too heavy — the eleven single
gallon jugs, that have been her main
source of fresh water for the past 16
days.
“I was determined not to take water
from the people whose houses are
messed up,” Taylor said.
Taylor’s home, which sits on the
bank of the New River, wasn’t dam-
aged in the floods. Her basement
flooded in the storm, but only the
yearbooks she kept from her years as
an art teacher were damaged.
“I don’t have any problems,” Taylor
said. “I just have an inconvenience.”
Taylor’s home was fine, but the
water infrastructure in town wasn’t.
The flood washed away pipes and
damaged the water treatment plant.
The Kanawha Falls Public Service
District, the utility service that pro-
vides water to Gauley Bridge, has
been able to restore service to the
main part of town. But Taylor, 11
families and the four businesses that
are separated from the rest of town
by the Gauley River still don’t have
running water two weeks after the
floods.
Kanawha Falls PSD is one of more
than 20 water utility services through-
out the state affected by the severe
flooding that swept through southern
West Virginia two weeks ago.
Many of them are public service
districts, already cash-strapped from a
shrinking customer base from the
decline in the coal industry.
“The infrastructure that was put in
place, and the loans that were taken
out to put in the infrastructure, don’t
go away because the customer base is
decreasing,” said Amy Swann, execu-
tive director of the West Virginia Rural
Water Association.
Floods drain water providers
Cash-strapped public service districts face strain after infrastructure battered
SEE Water, 11A
By Erin Beck
Staff writer
For about two years as a
teenager, Angie Conn, of Buf-
falo, was trapped by physical
force.
For about eight years, she
was trapped by the darkness
that followed.
Conn, a survivor of human
trafficking, couldn’t see a fu-
ture in front of her. When she
looked in the mirror, she
couldn’t see her own self-
worth. As a teenager, she
never thought she’d live past
age 20.
Conn’s spiral into darkness
started at age 15, when she
was a victim of date rape.
She felt isolated and ashamed,
and, in search of numbness,
she began to self-medicate
with alcohol. She wondered
if the experiences defined her
value as a person.
“Shame is a complex feel-
ing to be immersed in, be-
cause it’s a prison unto itself,”
she said. “You act out, and
you try to relieve some of that
darkness that continues every
morning to kind of creep
back in.”
After a second sexual as-
sault, her fight-or-flight re-
sponse kicked in, and she
chose to escape.
Human trafficking survivor to hike for awareness
CHRIS DORST | Gazette-Mail
Angie Conn, a survivor of human trafficking, trains for the Free-
dom Challenge. Conn, of Buffalo, will hike on Snow King Moun-
tain in Wyoming in an effort to raise awareness of human traf-
ficking, a modern form of slavery.
SEE Survivor, 11A
Flood coverage inside
i Disaster recovery center opens in Monroe
County / 2A
i Student helps flood victims in southern
West Virginia / 2A
i National Guard to host day camp
programs for flood-affected families / 6A
LesterRainesMazda CX-9 • Mazda CX-5 • Mazda CX-3 • Mazda MX-5 • Mazda3 • Mazda6
MEETING YOUR AUTOMOTIVE NEEDS WITH SELECTION, SERVICE, AND PRICE
5035 MacCorkle Ave • South Charleston • 304-768-1251 • MazdaLesterRaines.com

More Related Content

Viewers also liked (20)

Ertyuetrytruyrtyrtyurtuy
ErtyuetrytruyrtyrtyurtuyErtyuetrytruyrtyrtyurtuy
Ertyuetrytruyrtyrtyurtuy
 
cocacola2
cocacola2cocacola2
cocacola2
 
Latihan1 aidil 1101070002
Latihan1 aidil 1101070002Latihan1 aidil 1101070002
Latihan1 aidil 1101070002
 
Acta fmtm
Acta fmtmActa fmtm
Acta fmtm
 
Prueba
PruebaPrueba
Prueba
 
Cópias 2
Cópias 2Cópias 2
Cópias 2
 
Aves
AvesAves
Aves
 
Transformadores eléctricos
Transformadores eléctricosTransformadores eléctricos
Transformadores eléctricos
 
Bully prezi
Bully preziBully prezi
Bully prezi
 
Marketing de Relacionamento
Marketing de RelacionamentoMarketing de Relacionamento
Marketing de Relacionamento
 
13
1313
13
 
Gerencia de proyectos
Gerencia de proyectosGerencia de proyectos
Gerencia de proyectos
 
Keyfilelist
KeyfilelistKeyfilelist
Keyfilelist
 
+2
+2+2
+2
 
Exame e learning
Exame e learningExame e learning
Exame e learning
 
Anunt restante
Anunt restanteAnunt restante
Anunt restante
 
Capsicum - Diploma in Patisserie
Capsicum - Diploma in PatisserieCapsicum - Diploma in Patisserie
Capsicum - Diploma in Patisserie
 
Globos mayusculas
Globos mayusculas Globos mayusculas
Globos mayusculas
 
External harddisk
External harddiskExternal harddisk
External harddisk
 
44
4444
44
 

Similar to 1A Floods drain

Flooded in Doubt - Columbia Missourian
Flooded in Doubt - Columbia MissourianFlooded in Doubt - Columbia Missourian
Flooded in Doubt - Columbia MissourianIsabelle Roughol
 
20150705_SacBee_Psychiatries-discusses_Lim
20150705_SacBee_Psychiatries-discusses_Lim20150705_SacBee_Psychiatries-discusses_Lim
20150705_SacBee_Psychiatries-discusses_LimRussell Lim
 
2016 South Dakota Better Newspaper Contest Top Awards
2016 South Dakota Better Newspaper Contest Top Awards2016 South Dakota Better Newspaper Contest Top Awards
2016 South Dakota Better Newspaper Contest Top AwardsDavid Bordewyk
 
Katrina Law & Social Justice
Katrina Law & Social JusticeKatrina Law & Social Justice
Katrina Law & Social Justicejadymitchell
 
Feature: Why New Orleans's Black Residents Are Still Underwater After Katrina
Feature: Why New Orleans's Black Residents Are Still Underwater After KatrinaFeature: Why New Orleans's Black Residents Are Still Underwater After Katrina
Feature: Why New Orleans's Black Residents Are Still Underwater After Katrinagay6wilkinson13
 
Writing Argument Essay. Online assignment writing service.
Writing Argument Essay. Online assignment writing service.Writing Argument Essay. Online assignment writing service.
Writing Argument Essay. Online assignment writing service.Angela Lovett
 
Katrina\'s Impact Three Years After
Katrina\'s Impact Three Years AfterKatrina\'s Impact Three Years After
Katrina\'s Impact Three Years Afterjadymitchell
 

Similar to 1A Floods drain (10)

Flooded in Doubt - Columbia Missourian
Flooded in Doubt - Columbia MissourianFlooded in Doubt - Columbia Missourian
Flooded in Doubt - Columbia Missourian
 
BucketTruckLady
BucketTruckLadyBucketTruckLady
BucketTruckLady
 
20150705_SacBee_Psychiatries-discusses_Lim
20150705_SacBee_Psychiatries-discusses_Lim20150705_SacBee_Psychiatries-discusses_Lim
20150705_SacBee_Psychiatries-discusses_Lim
 
2016 South Dakota Better Newspaper Contest Top Awards
2016 South Dakota Better Newspaper Contest Top Awards2016 South Dakota Better Newspaper Contest Top Awards
2016 South Dakota Better Newspaper Contest Top Awards
 
Katrina Law & Social Justice
Katrina Law & Social JusticeKatrina Law & Social Justice
Katrina Law & Social Justice
 
Feature: Why New Orleans's Black Residents Are Still Underwater After Katrina
Feature: Why New Orleans's Black Residents Are Still Underwater After KatrinaFeature: Why New Orleans's Black Residents Are Still Underwater After Katrina
Feature: Why New Orleans's Black Residents Are Still Underwater After Katrina
 
FirefighterPic-Dec2011
FirefighterPic-Dec2011FirefighterPic-Dec2011
FirefighterPic-Dec2011
 
Writing Argument Essay. Online assignment writing service.
Writing Argument Essay. Online assignment writing service.Writing Argument Essay. Online assignment writing service.
Writing Argument Essay. Online assignment writing service.
 
Katrina\'s Impact Three Years After
Katrina\'s Impact Three Years AfterKatrina\'s Impact Three Years After
Katrina\'s Impact Three Years After
 
Wm0716b01
Wm0716b01Wm0716b01
Wm0716b01
 

1A Floods drain

  • 1. By Michael Kunzelman and Rebecca Santana The Associated Press BATON ROUGE, La. — A prom- inent Black Lives Matter activ- ist, three journalists and more than 120 other people were taken into custody in Louisiana over the weekend, authorities said Sunday, in connection with protests over the fatal shooting of an African-American man by two white police officers in Baton Rouge. Spokeswoman Casey Ray- born Hicks of the East Baton Rouge Sheriff’s Office told The Associated Press that nearly 100 people were taken to the parish jail over protests that began late Saturday. Most of those arrested were from Lou- isiana and faced a single charge of obstructing a highway. Police release activist JULY 11, 2016  CHARLESTON, WEST VIRGINIA I N S I D E Detailed index on 2A Business7A Comics 6B, 7B Classified9B Crosswords 7B, 11B Editorials 4A, 5A Horoscope3A Obituaries8A Television12A Weather11A G O T   A   T I P ? 304-348-5100 C L A S S I F I E D 304-348-4848 Weekday delivery by 6 a.m. Call 304-348-4800 to subscribe. t h e ga z ette - M A I L on t w itte r More about what’s online on 2A Follow us on Twitter at @wvgazettemail to get all the latest W.Va. news right on your Twitter feed. M O N D AY STATE EDITION 75 CENTS Mostly Sunny HIGH: 89 LOW: 65 DETAILS, 11A wvgazettemail.com Gazette-Mail Charleston By Ryan Quinn Staff writer Kanawha County Schools is auctioning off two shuttered schools on Charleston’s West Side Wednesday. Alan Cummings, the school system’s purchasing director, said the separate auctions will take place at the schools’ ad- dresses: Watts Elementary, at 230 Costello St., Charleston, 25302, will be auctioned at 10 a.m., and J.E. Robins Elemen- tary, at 915 Beech Avenue, Charleston, 25302, will be auc- tioned at 11:30 a.m. The schools, both about 80 years old, closed at the end of the 2013-14 school year, and their students were transferred to the new Edgewood Elemen- tary. Both have also been sub- jected to vandalism and com- plaints from neighbors, though the school system only boarded them up around the end of May of this year. “The goal is to just move the buildings as quickly as possible, to benefit the community,” Cum- mings told a reporter Friday. West Side schools for sale Kanawha County to auction J.E. Robins, Watts on Wednesday SEE auction, 11A SEE Protester, 11A SAM OWENS | Gazette-Mail A water pipe is snaked across a railroad bridge that runs across the Gauley River, Wednesday, as maintenance crews worked to bring water back to all residents in Gauley Bridge. There are residents in town who have not had water since June 23, when severe flooding hit the area and washed water pipes away. By Daniel Desrochers Staff writer Since she last had running water, Nancy Taylor, of Gauley Bridge, has driven around two miles to an unmarked pipe spilling water on the side of the road five times. That’s where the retired school teacher has filled the two five-gallon jugs, or — once the five-gallon jugs got too heavy — the eleven single gallon jugs, that have been her main source of fresh water for the past 16 days. “I was determined not to take water from the people whose houses are messed up,” Taylor said. Taylor’s home, which sits on the bank of the New River, wasn’t dam- aged in the floods. Her basement flooded in the storm, but only the yearbooks she kept from her years as an art teacher were damaged. “I don’t have any problems,” Taylor said. “I just have an inconvenience.” Taylor’s home was fine, but the water infrastructure in town wasn’t. The flood washed away pipes and damaged the water treatment plant. The Kanawha Falls Public Service District, the utility service that pro- vides water to Gauley Bridge, has been able to restore service to the main part of town. But Taylor, 11 families and the four businesses that are separated from the rest of town by the Gauley River still don’t have running water two weeks after the floods. Kanawha Falls PSD is one of more than 20 water utility services through- out the state affected by the severe flooding that swept through southern West Virginia two weeks ago. Many of them are public service districts, already cash-strapped from a shrinking customer base from the decline in the coal industry. “The infrastructure that was put in place, and the loans that were taken out to put in the infrastructure, don’t go away because the customer base is decreasing,” said Amy Swann, execu- tive director of the West Virginia Rural Water Association. Floods drain water providers Cash-strapped public service districts face strain after infrastructure battered SEE Water, 11A By Erin Beck Staff writer For about two years as a teenager, Angie Conn, of Buf- falo, was trapped by physical force. For about eight years, she was trapped by the darkness that followed. Conn, a survivor of human trafficking, couldn’t see a fu- ture in front of her. When she looked in the mirror, she couldn’t see her own self- worth. As a teenager, she never thought she’d live past age 20. Conn’s spiral into darkness started at age 15, when she was a victim of date rape. She felt isolated and ashamed, and, in search of numbness, she began to self-medicate with alcohol. She wondered if the experiences defined her value as a person. “Shame is a complex feel- ing to be immersed in, be- cause it’s a prison unto itself,” she said. “You act out, and you try to relieve some of that darkness that continues every morning to kind of creep back in.” After a second sexual as- sault, her fight-or-flight re- sponse kicked in, and she chose to escape. Human trafficking survivor to hike for awareness CHRIS DORST | Gazette-Mail Angie Conn, a survivor of human trafficking, trains for the Free- dom Challenge. Conn, of Buffalo, will hike on Snow King Moun- tain in Wyoming in an effort to raise awareness of human traf- ficking, a modern form of slavery. SEE Survivor, 11A Flood coverage inside i Disaster recovery center opens in Monroe County / 2A i Student helps flood victims in southern West Virginia / 2A i National Guard to host day camp programs for flood-affected families / 6A LesterRainesMazda CX-9 • Mazda CX-5 • Mazda CX-3 • Mazda MX-5 • Mazda3 • Mazda6 MEETING YOUR AUTOMOTIVE NEEDS WITH SELECTION, SERVICE, AND PRICE 5035 MacCorkle Ave • South Charleston • 304-768-1251 • MazdaLesterRaines.com