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There are more ways to make West Virginia healthy

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westvirginiawatch.com – Quenton King – 2025-05-15 04:55:00


West Virginia lawmakers are leading a movement to ban artificial food dyes, which are petroleum-based and linked to child health issues. This momentum encourages addressing other environmental toxins long harming residents, like lead poisoning from old pipes, paint, and soil. Lead exposure, which causes behavioral and mental problems in children, remains under-screened in the state. The Biden administration mandates utilities to inventory and replace lead water lines, but costly home pipe replacements pose challenges. Policymakers could fund health departments for lead action plans and assist homeowners financially. Other concerns include arsenic, mercury, groundwater pollution, air pollution, tobacco, black lung disease, and PFAS contamination.

by Quenton King, West Virginia Watch
May 15, 2025

I’ll hand it to West Virginia lawmakers for being on the forefront of a national movement during the recent legislative session, and educating me while doing so. I hadn’t thought much about artificial food dyes, or problems associated with them, until a bill to ban them started gaining traction in February. 

The synthetic dyes have been a target of Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and the Make America Healthy Again movement because they are petroleum-based and have been linked to adverse effects in children. 

The dyes are found in a range of foods particularly marketed to children, including cereals, candies and drinks. Growing up, I recall often, while bored, reading the nutrition labels as I ate, despite not really understanding the ingredients I saw. 

Following the legislation’s passage and considering what comes next, Del. Adam Burkhammer said, “we need to look at everything.” 

If that’s true, I encourage people under the Make America Healthy Again umbrella and West Virginia lawmakers to consider ways to address toxins that we’ve known for a long time are harmful and have been hurting West Virginians. 

Take lead poisoning, for example. Lead can be found in soil and in some pipes that pump our drinking water. It also was used in paint before 1978. Much of the housing stock in Appalachia is old, and old chipped paint and dust poses a big risk to toddlers.

There’s no safe level for lead exposure. It can cause behavior problems and mental defects in children. One way to know where lead is a problem is to screen children. And we’re not doing that enough.

Back in 2021, Clarksburg saw a sharp increase in the number of children who had high lead exposure, likely due to lead service lines. In a presentation on the state’s response, the West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources said low screening rates and lack of awareness about the harms of lead poisoning were challenges. They recommended that the state incentivize lead screenings and formulate a state action plan. 

The Biden administration finalized a rule to require utilities to conduct an inventory of water lines, and to replace ones made of lead. This will be hard work; home and business owners can be hard to reach. Then, typically the utility will be on the hook for replacing the lead pipe up to the home. The owner would have to replace the pipes in the home, which can be costly. 

Where do policymakers fit into this? The Legislature could allocate more funding to health departments to create and implement lead action plans, including intense screening outreach and education. The state could also identify ways to create (and actually put money into) a fund to help homeowners replace their lead pipes. 

This lead example has taken a lot of space. So I’ll spare the reader similar explanations on other environmental and public health issues that come to mind where I think common ground can be found with the MAHA movement. Those are:

  • Power plant arsenic and mercury emissions that seep into water
  • Groundwater pollution from oil and gas drilling, transportation spills, and manufacturing
  • Air pollution for people who live near factories, plants, major roadways
  • Tobacco use
  • Black lung disease and other workplace injuries and illnesses
  • PFAS, or forever chemical, contamination (which the state did take action on, but unfortunately has been put on pause thanks to the Trump administration) 

I hope food dyes are just a start.

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West Virginia Watch is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. West Virginia Watch maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Leann Ray for questions: info@westvirginiawatch.com.

The post There are more ways to make West Virginia healthy appeared first on westvirginiawatch.com



Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Center-Left

The content presents a generally balanced perspective but subtly leans toward Center-Left, particularly through its support of governmental intervention in public health and environmental issues. The article praises the Biden administration’s efforts to address lead contamination and emphasizes the need for more proactive government policies to mitigate public health risks. It also aligns with the “Make America Healthy Again” movement on issues such as artificial food dyes and environmental toxins. However, it maintains a factual tone without overt political endorsements, focusing more on policy solutions and public health challenges than partisan politics.

News from the South - West Virginia News Feed

Katie's Full Forecast for August 26

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www.youtube.com – WOAY TV – 2025-08-26 07:58:00

SUMMARY: Katie’s full forecast for August 26 predicts cool, crisp mornings with temperatures in the high 40s to low 50s, about 8 to 10 degrees cooler than yesterday. Daytime highs will warm into the low to mid-60s, below the average 80 degrees, offering comfortable and beautiful weather. Light northwest winds are expected with little chance of gusts. Overnight lows remain cool, with river fog likely in some areas. Rain chances are minimal this week, making it ideal for outdoor activities like washing your car. The UV index remains high despite mixed clouds and sun, so sunscreen is recommended. Labor Day weekend promises mild temperatures in the low 70s and mostly dry conditions.

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Optum Rx invokes open meetings law to fight Kentucky counties on opioid suits

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westvirginiawatch.com – Aneri Pattani, KFF Health News – 2025-08-25 05:00:00


Optum Rx, UnitedHealth Group’s pharmacy benefit manager (PBM), is suing five Kentucky counties to block them from joining national opioid litigation, alleging violations of Kentucky’s open meetings law. PBMs, accused of enabling the opioid crisis by failing to restrict prescriptions, face increasing legal scrutiny. Critics call Optum’s suits “frivolous” and a tactic to delay accountability and settlements. These counties, involved in early steps to add Optum as a defendant in opioid lawsuits, argue their actions were procedural and public. Advocates, including recovery advocate Tara Hyde, warn that Optum’s efforts could hinder efforts to hold PBMs responsible and reduce funding for addiction treatment.

by Aneri Pattani, KFF Health News, West Virginia Watch
August 25, 2025

UnitedHealth Group’s multibillion-dollar pharmacy benefit manager, Optum Rx, is suing five Kentucky counties in an attempt to force them out of national opioid litigation against the company.

Pharmacy benefit managers, often called PBMs, act as middlemen that negotiate prescription drug prices between drug companies, insurance plans, and pharmacies. Some lawyers and advocates say PBMs helped fuel the overdose crisis by failing to restrict the flow of opioid prescriptions.

As governments begin exploring potential lawsuits against PBMs — a step that could represent the next wave in opioid-related litigation — Optum Rx is attempting to shut down those efforts, in some cases before they even fully take shape.

In June, Optum Rx sued Anderson, Boyd, Christian, Nicholas, and Oldham counties in Kentucky for allegedly making decisions about participating in the new wave of national opioid lawsuits behind closed doors, violating Kentucky’s open meetings law. Optum Rx is asking courts to effectively force those counties to make their decisions again, this time in open meetings, potentially with the hope that some won’t bother because of the administrative burden. The result could be fewer claims against the company and possibly less money for it to pay in a future settlement.

But legal experts call Optum’s case “hypertechnical” and “frivolous,” and addiction recovery advocates say it could set a dangerous precedent for companies to evade accountability for their role in fueling the overdose crisis.

Christine Minhee, an attorney, a national expert on opioid litigation, and founder of OpioidSettlementTracker.com, said Optum’s suit reminded her of an adage among lawyers: “If the facts are on your side, pound the facts. If the law is on your side, pound the law. If neither is on your side, pound the table.”

“Right now, what we’re seeing is it pounding the table,” Minhee said of Optum Rx. The company is “desperately” trying “to find some kind of foothold” to get cases against it thrown out.

Minhee said these suits fit a pattern of Optum Rx using thin arguments to try to delay or evade opioid litigation nationwide.

Christine Minhee says Optum’s suit reminds her of an adage among lawyers: “If the facts are on your side, pound the facts. If the law is on your side, pound the law. If neither is on your side, pound the table.” (Christine Minhee courtesy photo)

Last year, Optum Rx, along with another PBM, asked a judge to throw out an opioid lawsuit filed by Los Angeles County, claiming during a December hearing that the county hadn’t shown harm. The judge appeared skeptical of the claims and ultimately rejected the companies’ request.

In April, the same companies tried to oust a federal judge overseeing national opioid litigation, claiming he was biased. Their argument was based partly on a Florida lawyer’s having said the judge was “plaintiff-oriented.” Their attempt failed.

Now, Optum Rx is working to keep five Kentucky counties out of that same sweeping opioid litigation.

That national legal undertaking began more than seven years ago, as jurisdictions saw overdose deaths climb. Many people who had become addicted to prescription painkillers were cut off by their doctors, and some transitioned to using deadlier heroin or fentanyl. Health care and public safety costs skyrocketed. Thousands of cities, counties, and states began suing health care companies for allegedly creating a public nuisance by aggressively marketing prescription painkillers and negligently distributing them.

Those cases were lassoed together into the giant multidistrict litigation, which has resulted in massive settlements. The first few waves of settlements involved opioid manufacturers, distributors, and retail pharmacies, with companies such as Johnson & Johnson, CVS, and Walgreens agreeing to pay state and local governments billions of dollars. The money is meant to be used for addiction treatment and prevention services — though its rollout has been controversial.

To add a new round of companies as defendants, jurisdictions must undertake a multistep process, said Peter Mougey, a Florida-based attorney who represents many local governments in the massive national litigation. The five Kentucky counties in question were in the early stages of that process, only having asked the judge to amend their complaint, he said. They hadn’t added Optum Rx yet.

If Optum Rx’s suits are successful, those counties would have the option of redoing the initial steps of the process in a public meeting, then continuing to add Optum Rx as a defendant, Mougey explained. The company may hope that some counties won’t undertake the extra administrative effort.

Optum Rx’s “goal is clearly just to wear down and tire out these small counties,” Mougey said. “They’re trying to have a chilling effect on the litigation.”

It’s not clear why Optum Rx targeted those five counties out of the many localities undertaking the process to add the company as a defendant. The Kentucky counties range from having fewer than 8,000 residents (Nicholas) to more than 70,000 (Christian). One is among the richest in Kentucky (Oldham), while others are poorer. Boyd County, in Appalachia, is one of the hardest hit, with a recent overdose rate twice the state average.

Optum Rx, in its filing against Boyd County, which was similar to claims against the other counties, said local authorities had taken official legal action by asking the judge to make a change in its case. The suit said such action must be done in a public meeting and that the county did not hold one.

Optum spokesperson Isaac Sorensen told KFF Health News that the company’s argument is not about “a technicality.”

It is “an important legal requirement designed to ensure accountability and transparency before a county takes legal action,” said the statement Sorensen provided. “We have found many counties ignored this requirement, alongside their duty to preserve relevant evidence, and Optum Rx will defend against these improper legal actions.”

The five Kentucky counties disagree with these assertions, according to court records. As of late July, all five had filed motions to dismiss Optum Rx’s claim.

Boyd County, like the others, argued in its motion to dismiss that asking a judge to amend its complaint was a routine, procedural step that did not require a public meeting. Optum Rx jumped the gun, the county argued, filing a case before any final action had been taken.

“No amended complaint has been filed. No new defendant, OptumRx included, has been added. No new lawsuit has been initiated,” Boyd County’s response said.

The county also pointed out that it held an open meeting in 2017 that kicked off its involvement in the national litigation and authorized future amendments to that litigation.

Hearings on the counties’ motions to dismiss Optum Rx’s suits are set for late August and early September, according to court records.

These cases are shaping up to be a Goliath-versus-David legal action. Although Oldham County is the wealthiest of the Kentucky counties that Optum Rx sued, its most recent budget is less than 0.1% of Optum Rx’s annual revenue, which the company reported as exceeding $133 billion in 2024.

Oldham County Attorney D. Berry Baxter told KFF Health News he’d seen the impact of the opioid epidemic as a prosecutor working on a growing number of drug-related cases over the years. Now, as settlement money is arriving from other companies, it has funded increased addiction treatment in local jails. More settlement money from additional companies could expand such services, Baxter said.

If Optum Rx succeeds in kicking Kentucky counties out of the national litigation, it would set “a really horrific precedent” for other PBMs and health care companies to do something similar, said Tara Hyde, CEO of the statewide nonprofit People Advocating Recovery.

Hyde said she’s been in recovery for more than a decade from an addiction that began with prescription painkillers for a broken leg. She wants to see PBMs and other companies held accountable and made to change their processes to prevent future crises.

Despite a recent decrease in overdose deaths nationwide, Hyde said people in her state, their families, and the economy are still hurting.

“Recovery doesn’t just happen overnight,” she said. “Without these dollars that have been a direct result of people being misled, mistreated, and taken advantage of, we will still be detrimentally impacted.”

KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF—an independent source of health policy research, polling, and journalism. Learn more about KFF.

This article first appeared on KFF Health News and is republished here under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

West Virginia Watch is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. West Virginia Watch maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Leann Ray for questions: info@westvirginiawatch.com.

The post Optum Rx invokes open meetings law to fight Kentucky counties on opioid suits appeared first on westvirginiawatch.com



Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Center-Left

This content leans center-left as it emphasizes corporate accountability, particularly targeting large healthcare companies and pharmacy benefit managers for their role in the opioid crisis. It highlights the struggles of affected communities and advocates for transparency and justice through legal action. The article supports regulatory and legal interventions to address public health issues, reflecting a perspective that favors government and community efforts to hold powerful entities responsible, which is characteristic of center-left viewpoints.

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Rock Hill rolling into 2025 with hunger to win

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www.youtube.com – WCHS Eyewitness News – 2025-08-24 19:00:59

SUMMARY: Rock Hill High School, led by head coach Tony Love in his 32nd year, is gearing up for the 2025 football season with determination to win. After hosting a playoff game last year and advancing two rounds, the team is older, stronger, and hungrier. Emphasizing hard work, discipline, and mental toughness, the players have trained rigorously through winter. The offensive and defensive lines are crucial, handling the tough, physical battles on the field. This young but battle-tested squad is ready to start their season opener on the road, aiming to build on last year’s postseason experience and achieve greater success.

Football season is here and Rock Hill is ready to rock-and-roll on the gridiron. This team hosted a playoff game last year and was …

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