Jul 20 2007

Myrtle Beach and Nickel Creek Concert

Here are some pics I took on my recent vacation. (Click on the thumbnail to see the full-size photo.)

The Hurricane Self Portrait in a Dirty Window

 Kids on the Beach 02

Peaches Corner Look Up

Family Kingdom Inside the Ferris Wheel

Guessing Booth Ocean Plaza

Club Fash Funnel Cakes

Happy Holiday Don't Preach to Me


The Paramount 01 The Paramount 02

Sign Outside Nickel Creek

Chris Thile Sara Watkins, Glen Phillips, Chris Thile

Nickel Creek Panoramic

 


Jul 18 2007

Seeking to Cure What Ails Boone County

My latest article for the Boone Standard. Should be out next week.

Senator Ron StollingsMADISON—There’s a picture that hangs on the back wall of Dr. Ron Stollings’ office, a panoramic of the State Senate, with all the representatives at their desks. He sits a couple rows back, beaming at the camera, like a kid having his picture taken for the yearbook. Stollings, who was elected to represent Boone County in 2006, is clearly proud of his new job. Having practiced medicine in Madison for over twenty years now, he knows his constituency, and being in the Senate allows him to serve not only his patients, but all of Boone County.

Dr. Stollings has been in private practice at the Madison Medical Group and on staff at Boone Memorial Hospital since 1985. Inspired by the loss of his mother to cancer and a high-school Latin teacher (who, upon hearing he wanted to become a teacher, told him “Aww phooey, you ought to be a doctor!”), Stollings decided to go into medicine his sophomore year at Scott High. He graduated from Marshall University School of Medicine in 1982.

The senator, who says he’s “always wanted to be a good citizen and be active in the community”, got his feet wet (politically-speaking) through

appointments to the Higher Education Policy Education Commission and the University System Board of Trustees. When Lloyd Jackson announced he wasn’t going to seek reelection in the last senatorial race, Stollings seized the opportunity.

So what is the good doctor’s diagnosis for Boone? Well, Stollings thinks the county could do much better if its economy underwent some changes. “We’re totally dependent on coal, and thank God we’ve got the most of it, but our economy’s not diversified enough.”

Stollings says Boone needs more developable land before any major diversification can take place, however. His solution? Get the land after mining companies have already flattened it out. “It costs money to pile dirt and rock back up, and we need flat land. Why can’t we just leave it relatively flat in areas that are close to roads? You could develop it, it could be out of the flood plane and you could use it for recreation” Stollings pointed out. “We don’t need grazing land, we need something more important than grazing land.”

Health care is also an issue understandably close to Dr. Stollings’ heart. “Southern West Virginia has pretty scary health statistics. We’re overweight, we use tobacco a lot, we have lots of strokes and heart attacks. I think the people of Boone County need to have a place where they can exercise year-round.” He says Boone County needs a space where older citizens could exercise in water. “It’s hard to tell some older person ‘Go walk’ because they say it hurts when they walk, but if you put them in a pool then they can exercise without killing their joints.” The closest such facility as of right now is the South Charleston YMCA.

Dr. Ron Stollings's PSA about strokes will air on WCHS's MDTV this fall.

Watching Stollings on a “normal” day at the office, it’s hard to imagine how anyone could balance these two worlds—the political and the medical. He’s already a difficult man to catch even in the legislative off-season. After a week or so of phone tag, the Boone Standard was finally able to sit down with the physician at his practice in Madison—but not until he had seen all his patients and finished a public service announcement for WCHS’s MDTV.

His schedule gets even more hectic during the first couple months of the year, when Dr. Stollings makes a daily commute to Charleston to represent Boone County in the West Virginia State Senate (that is, after he’s made his morning rounds at Boone Memorial Hospital). He even sees patients while the Senate’s in its 60-day session, though not nearly as many. Stollings admits it’s not always easy. “It’s a real balancing act to do both.” He says. “I’m indebted to my partners [at the Madison Medical Group] for allowing me to be a Senator.” The balancing act seems to be working well so far, and if Dr. Stollings has his way, the rest of Boone County will soon be similarly balanced.


Jul 16 2007

HOT OFF THE PRESSES: Nickel Creek video

I bootlegged this puppy last night at the Paramount Arts Center in Ashland, KY. I apologize for the shakiness and bad framing, but I shot this with a digital camera while trying to avoid the backs of heads and power-crazed ushers. Audio’s fairly good though. Full review coming soon (hopefully).


Jul 2 2007

Delegate Larry Barker: A Common-Sense Environmentalist, Fighting for Boone

This is an article I just finished for the Boone Standard.

Larry BarkerMADISON—In this age of celebrity scandal, troop surges, and failed immigration bills, it is truly refreshing to find someone who speaks plainly and honestly about their beliefs. It is even more refreshing when that person happens to be a politician.

Larry Barker was first elected to represent Boone County in the House of Delegates in 2004, but he says a run for the State Legislature wasn’t always in his plans. Barker had wanted to get on the County Commission but dropped out of the race at the last minute to give friend and fellow Democrat Mickey Brown a shot. “With two of us taking away from an incumbent, I thought we might divide the vote. When I decided not to [run], we started talking about other possibilities.”

Barker talked with his boss, County Clerk Gary Williams, about trying to unseat then-incumbent Ernie Coon. “Gary and I had gone and lobbied at the capitol on several occasions. We had gone to the Secretary of State and the senators and house members, especially regarding elections laws and so forth. I told him, I’ll just run for the office. If I were there, we’d at least have a vote over there and we’d have a voice.” Williams’ gave him his blessing, and Barker threw his hat in the ring.

As a Delegate and Chief Deputy Clerk at the county clerk’s office (where he has worked for 26 years), Larry Barker knows the problems facing Boone County quite well. Like many other policymakers, he’s concerned about the number of jobs here in the Mountain State, particularly when it comes to coal mining. “You have two times as many jobs when you do underground mining as when you do strip mining. We say we’re creating jobs, but we’re taking away jobs.”

Barker’s also concerned about coal companies that are “tearing southern West Virginia apart.” “You don’t want to be painted as an environmental wacko, but at the same time we’re not seeing that much good land being developed.”

His brand of everyman environmentalism is not widely found in state politics, where some elected officials prefer not to challenge the state’s economic bread-and-butter, coal production. Barker, however, is pretty outspoken about the shortcomings of state government when it comes to keeping the mining companies in check. “Very little is being done to protect the environment. We’re trying our best to help businesses get established, get in here, and lower some taxes, which are good things, but the companies need to be responsible once we get them there.”

Barker has introduced a couple of bills that would have helped to remedy some environmental issues, including legislation requiring companies to replant hardwood trees native to the hills of West Virginia on their reclaimed lands (like maple, walnut, and beech) instead of more resilient species like locust or pine. Another resolution he sponsored would have sent researchers to investigate sludge ponds created during the strip mining process. “[The coal companies] say they’re perfectly safe, and I think they probably are as safe as [the coal companies] can make them, but we’re talking about an earthen dam. Now, if you were a terrorist or we had an earthquake, somebody’s going to be sorry we didn’t drag this harder.” Both bills died in committee.

Despite these setbacks, Barker remains resolute. The 61-year-old speaks of his job with the vigor of a man half his age, and says he’s determined to fully represent his constituency, even if that means going against his personal opinions. “There have been a couple votes I’ve cast and thought ‘If it was just me and I didn’t have to worry about what anybody else thought or believed, I might have voted differently.’ It’s not always what I personally think about something. I’ve tried to vote what I’ve thought, given all the facts, you’d vote for.”