Latest news with #Wriston
Yahoo
27-05-2025
- General
- Yahoo
Local fire department and EMS holds a boot drive to keep them financially afloat amidst uncertain times
MOUNT HOPE, WV (WVNS) – One local fire department set up at an interchange in Mount Hope to hold a boot drive to raise important funds to help them continue serving the public. The Bradley-Prosperity Volunteer Fire Department covers around 60 miles of Raleigh County, as well as offering emergency and non-emergency EMS transport services. 26th West Virginia ambulance service shuts down within 2 years Fire Chief, David Wriston told 59News it is tough for them financially, with Medicare and Medicaid payouts. He explained these reimbursements are becoming increasingly more difficult to collect because of the disqualifications in both programs. It can take 6 to 8 months after they provided a transport for them to get reimbursed, according to Wriston. 'It is incredibly important to have as many ambulances available as you can. Just because we are here at Bradley does not mean that we are only here in Bradley. We have been to Coal City, we have been to Ghent, we have been to other places. The need for ambulance transports is absolutely there. It is just [a matter of] the finances to keep it going,' said Wriston. Wriston and his department are very grateful for their county levy's financial support, but this boot drive helped them raise additional money to help them provide quality service while keeping them financially stable. The Bradley-Prosperity Fire Department will take the money from this boot drive and take it to their board of directors. These donations will help them with projects around the station, as well as filling the void when they are waiting for their reimbursement payments. Wriston said they are planning another boot drive around the Fourth of July. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
02-04-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Tucker County newspaper runs spoof stories for April Fools
DAVIS, (WBOY) — 'State officials will be turning off the Blackwater River for cleaning during the month of April' is the lead on an April Fools story by local newspaper the Tucker County Observer. In the tradition of British newspapers, the Observer took a break from their mission of reporting the news and ran several spoof stories in its latest edition. In one, a state agency called the division of Conservation, Restoration, Aspiration, and Procrastination, or CRAP, is heading the effort to stop the flow of the blackwater and clean its rocks with shampoo and conditioner. Along with a Blackwater story, the Observer ran several other full of in-jokes for Tucker County locals, written by reporters 'Laird Fasoploy' and 'Friday LaPools'(anagrams for April Fools' Day). These West Virginia streams are being stocked for Gold Rush in April 2025 Another entitled 'Wriston necktie event canceled' says that an event to help former West Virginia Department of Transportation Secretary Jimmy Wriston learn how to properly use a necktie has been cancelled. Observer publisher Thomas Yocum told 12 News Wriston was well known in Tucker County both due to his involvement in the construction of Corridor H and his habit of not tying his necktie. 'Hopefully everybody gets a laugh out of it,' Yocum said. 'You know, sometimes we take things a little bit too seriously, including ourselves.' When asked if he was afraid of people not getting the satire, Yocum said, 'I've always been an enemy of the 'no-fun-police…if this does make the 'no-fun-police' unhappy, then I'm very, very glad.' Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.