January 12, 2013
Statehouse Beat: Trying to stay busy
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"Please continue to treat each other with dignity and respect that we may have an [sic] work environment that is free of hostility and intimidation. Think twice about what your words and actions convey to those around you," Haddix wrote.

Meanwhile, Sharpe administrators are evidently pressing forward with criminal charges against Morris, with a preliminary hearing scheduled for later this week.

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That Sen. Jay Rockefeller was planning to retire after this term was probably the worst-kept secret at the statehouse. In fact, Congresswoman Shelley Moore Capito's announcement she would run for Senate in 2014 was based on the understanding she would not be facing Rockefeller in the general election.

(One comment was that, if her dad couldn't make Rockefeller spend it all in 1980, there was no way she was going to try to make him do it in 2014 ... )

Which launches us into the inevitable silly season of trying to sort out who may or may not run for Senate.

One name we can probably take off the board immediately is Justice Robin Davis. While she certainly has the name recognition, resources and popularity, judicial ethics would require her to step down from the bench to pursue even an interest in running -- a tall order, given that she just won re-election to a 12-year term.

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Finally, West Virginia gubernatorial inaugurations as proof of climate change: Back in 1993, my late friend Tom Searls wrote a feature about weather conditions for state inaugurations, and his research found that sub-freezing weather had been the norm for all inaugurals since 1937 -- the year that the start of the term of office was moved up from mid-March to January.

In fact, he noted, inaugurations in 1937, 1945, 1949, 1953 and 1961 had to be moved inside the Capitol because of bitter cold, and Rockefeller's inauguration in 1977 probably should have been moved indoors. (The day's high temperature was 7 degrees with a wind-chill below zero.)

In the five inaugurations since, the trend of freezing temperatures on inauguration day has been broken twice, with mild temperatures well above freezing for Bob Wise's swearing-in in 2001, and for Monday's ceremonies for Gov. Tomblin.

Of those five inaugurations in the past 20 years, only two have even been uncomfortably chilly: It was in the upper teens and windy for Cecil Underwood in 1997, and in the low teens in 2005 for Joe Manchin. (Unfortunately, the Manchins had decided to revive the inaugural parade from downtown to the Capitol that year, after a 32-year hiatus.)

Reach Phil Kabler at ph...@wvgazette.com or 304-348-1220.

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