CHARLESTON – A Kanawha Circuit Court judge has scheduled a show cause hearing regarding a preliminary injunction to keep state officials from enforcing the school re-entry plan.
WINFIELD – An attorney is calling for the Putnam County Board of Education to ignore the state’s color-coded COVID-19 map and put students back in the classroom.
CHARLESTON – A Charleston attorney who has filed a petition to prohibit the government over the school re-entry plan now has filed a motion seeking a preliminary injunction to keep officials from enforcing the plan.
West Virginia Governor's Office issued the following announcement on Sept. 4.Gov. Jim Justice joined West Virginia health leaders and other officials for his latest daily press briefing regarding the State’s COVID-19 response.
CHARLESTON – A Charleston attorney has filed a petition to prohibit Gov Jim Justice, the state Board of Education and the state Department of Health and Human Resources from enforcing portions of the West Virginia School Re-entry Metrics and Protocols program.
CHARLESTON – A Kanawha County woman claims the care she received at an orthodontic practice resulted in one tooth being broke off and more having to be removed because of improper treatment.
CHARLESTON – A Kanawha Circuit Court judge has filed an order requiring the state Department of Health and Human Resources to provide information to attorneys about a registry of about 4,000 West Virginia children suffering from Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome.
CHARLESTON – A Kanawha County woman says a dog her family picked up at the Kanawha-Charleston Humane Association attacked her on Christmas morning, ripping off part of her lower lip and part of her gums and causing her to lose several teeth.
The Kanawha County Juvenile Drug Court, partnering with the Kanawha County Commission, has been awarded a $20,000 Emergency Aid grant from The Greater Kanawha Valley Foundation.
HUNTINGTON – A federal judge says West Virginia Secretary of State Mac Warner’s office has to figure out a new way to determine how candidates are placed on the ballot.
CHARLESTON – Attorneys were granted a motion requiring the state Department of Health and Human Resources to provide information about a registry of about 4,000 West Virginia children suffering from Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome.