Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

West Virginia losing its people

- By John Raby Raby writes for the Associated Press.

CHARLESTON, W.Va. — After her company told employees in 2017 to start working remotely, customer service representa­tive Haley Miller decided to break from her lifelong home of West Virginia.

The beaches of St. Petersburg, Fla., provide a far different view than the mountains of her native state. There are palm trees, a vivacious arts and restaurant scene — and fewer potholes.

“There are tons of things to do,” said Miller, now 29, who still works for the retail company. “It’s a very welcoming and inclusive town.”

She is not alone. According to newly released data from the U.S. Census Bureau, West Virginia lost a higher percentage of its residents than any other state in the nation. From 2010 to 2020, the population dropped 3.2%, or about 59,000 people. Because of that, West Virginia was one of seven states to lose a congressio­nal seat following the 2020 census.

Reasons for leaving vary, but common themes emerge: a lack of opportunit­y or low pay; not enough to do; a political climate that some find oppressive; and poor cellphone and internet service. According to the Census Bureau, only 79% of West Virginian households have a broadband internet subscripti­on, the fifthsmall­est rate in the country.

The population has suffered from changing demographi­cs, with deaths outpacing births for the last two decades, according to the National Center for Health Statistics.

In an effort to reverse the population losses, West Virginia started encouragin­g remote workers to move to the state of 1.79 million residents through a program that will pay them $12,000 cash along with free passes for a year’s worth of whitewater rafting, golf, rock climbing and other outdoor activities.

Miller wants no part of it.

The energy poured into luring out-of-staters, she said, should be spent “helping people there who are suffering the most.” About 16% of West Virginia’s residents live in poverty, a figure surpassed only by Arkansas, Kentucky, New Mexico, Louisiana and Mississipp­i.

The nation’s second-largest coal producer, West Virginia has lost 56% of its mining jobs since 2009 as power plants turn toward renewable energy sources.

Teachers are leaving for better-paying jobs. Despite winning 5% raises following a strike in 2018, West Virginia teachers remain 48th in the nation in average salaries, according to the National Education Assn.

When Rebecca Recco left Belle, W.Va., in 2017, she was making $42,000 as an art teacher. She now earns $68,000 teaching middle school art in Oakland.

Moving was about more than just better pay. She described an anti-union, antiteache­r sentiment, including new laws passed by the Legislatur­e creating charter schools and withholdin­g teacher pay during labor strikes.

“West Virginia reminds me of a drunk cousin,” Recco said. “It’s like this cousin

that you have that can’t get itself together. I love West Virginia. I love it. It’s where my roots are from.”

Except for the occasional gift shop, Recco said, West Virginia is merely a passing thought for motorists on the interstate­s.

“Everybody I’ve met out here has said, ‘Oh, yeah, I drove through West Virginia. I don’t remember it. Was there anything there to do?’” Recco said.

Andrew Snyder is looking for a reason to come back permanentl­y.

Snyder, 25, moved out of Charleston in 2016 to join the Army because he and his then-pregnant wife wanted to provide for their family. After leaving the Army, he found work as a defense contractor in Alabama.

Snyder, whose relatives still live in West Virginia, dreams of moving to Morgantown one day to earn a master’s degree.

Still, he’s concerned about poor broadband and spotty cell service in his native state. Coming back has “got to be the right opportunit­y,” Snyder said. “I make good money down here doing what I do.”

Affordabil­ity and retirement were two reasons why Susan Mazur-Stommen

jumped at the chance to move to West Virginia from Washington, D.C., in 2019. The 54-year-old cultural anthropolo­gist and her husband bought a 110-yearold house in Hinton for $47,000.

“West Virginia people are very independen­t-minded. You don’t get that conformity you see in other places. I think that’s really important,” she said. “There is sort of a live-and-let-live attitude. You can create your own future and your own reality here in some ways that you cannot in places that are restricted, more conformist.”

For many if not most of the people who have left, the conflict between the things that led them to leave and their fondness for sweeping mountain vistas, a manageable pace and having family close at hand never really goes away.

Snyder’s grandparen­ts are getting older. His wife has family in West Virginia, too. He loves to hunt and fish, and says they are “typical West Virginians.”

“Nothing’s ever home,” he says, “unless you’re home.”

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 ?? Craig Hudson Charleston Gazette-Mail ?? THE STATE FAIR glows in 2018 in Fairlea, W.Va. Census data show West Virginia lost a higher percentage of its residents over a decade than any other state.
Craig Hudson Charleston Gazette-Mail THE STATE FAIR glows in 2018 in Fairlea, W.Va. Census data show West Virginia lost a higher percentage of its residents over a decade than any other state.

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