December 28, 2012
'Reconnecting McDowell' is gaining, Gayle Manchin says
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WELCH, W.Va. -- One year into the initiative to revive a long-struggling Southern West Virginia county, the Reconnecting McDowell initiative has 110 partners and has made notable progress in expanding broadband access, literacy programs and health services.

Educators, government agencies, private companies and nonprofit groups are all focused on ways to bolster the school system while also addressing chronic problems caused by poverty, drugs and economic decline.

The American Federation of Teachers and state Board of Education Vice President Gayle Manchin helped launch the efforts. Manchin told West Virginia Public Broadcasting the work so far has just scratched the surface, but it's vital to lay a strong, sustainable foundation for the long-term goals.

"It's a marathon, not a sprint," she said, "but I believe through this first year we have made significant strides. I think we have the credibility with the community now."

The state Department of Education took over control of McDowell County's schools more than a decade ago, but the county of 22,000 residents continues to suffer West Virginia's worst dropout rate and has become among the nation's poorest areas.

More than a third of the residents live in poverty, and median incomes are less than half the U.S. average.

"We've all seen projects where money was thrown at something and it didn't last," Manchin said. "The good didn't survive. So we want to make sure as we invest grant monies and corporation monies that we know exactly where that money is going and how it is going to strengthen that village that's going to raise these children."

Frontier Communications has wired every school with fiber optics in the past year so students have good Internet access, and Manchin said Shentel Communications is finishing work on Internet service to 10,000 homes. Five of those homes are brand-new -- the first to be built in 20 years.

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Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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