11 legislators want to make the
Bible the official state book of West Virginia. This in a year when 10,000
people per year are leaving our state, businesses are closing and our
legislators haven't done anything to fix the workforce and the economy.
The 11 legislators who introduced
or sponsored this bill are Jeff Eldridge, Ralph Rodigherio, Zach Maynard,
Rodney Miller, Justin Marcum, Brad White, Kenneth Hicks, Erikka Storch, Steve
Westfall, Mark Dean and Bill Hamilton.
This just in: After I posted this, I got an email from Delegate Rodney Miller telling me he has removed his name from the Bible bill.
This just in: After I posted this, I got an email from Delegate Rodney Miller telling me he has removed his name from the Bible bill.
These 11 legislators showed up
at the 2017 session without a plan to
fix the workforce or the economy but they have time to introduce silly,
unnecessary legislation? Please, if you live in one of these legislators'
districts, call or write them and tell them that you will remember how they
fiddled as West Virginia burns down.
And since our legislators still
haven't submitted a plan to get Wes Virginia working, let me remind these 11
legislators that I have introduced a plan (below) that I welcome them to steal.
1.
Make the Promise Scholarship a STEM scholarship. Companies won’t come here for
our English majors, political science majors and communications majors, but
they will come here to gain access to our mathematicians,
software engineers, chemists and other STEM grads if we produce them in large
numbers.
2. Require Promise Scholarship
recipients to sign a contract with West Virginia obligating them to stay in
West Virginia for, say, 5 years after graduation. Too many of West Virginia’s
college grads are leaving with their degrees and making some other
state’s workforce magnetic to outside investment. If they give us five years,
they’ll marry, have children, build houses, make friends. Most will never
leave. Maybe along the way they’ll invent things and, who knows, maybe some of
them will start the next Apple or the next Google.
3.
Expand the Promise Scholarship to fund tens of thousands of students’ annually
instead of the current 3,000 to 3,500 annually. At its current size, the
Promise Scholarship is the right medicine in a dosage insufficient to heal the
West Virginia economy.
4.
Double the per-student annual scholarship award from its current $4,750 to
around $9,000 or $10,000 so students can carry full loads and finish in 4
years.
5.
Pay the college debt of STEM grads who want to come to West Virginia and are
willing to sign a contract requiring them to become part of West Virginia’s
workforce for at least five years.
6.
Pay for the above with a severance tax, an excise tax or the proceeds from the
state lottery or some combination of the aforementioned. For example, the
Tennessee Promise program provides 2 years of free technical or community
college to Tennessee high school grads at a cost of about $35 million annually
and is paid for by the state lottery.
About Joseph Higginbotham:
Joseph Higginbotham is a former member
of the West Virginia Region III Workforce Investment Board, a former executive
and technical search consultant, a former general manager and a former
columnist and writer for newspapers, magazines and journals such as Business
Lexington, Rx HomeCare, Leadership, Drug Store News, Campus Career Counselor,
Home Health Care Dealer and more. Higginbotham has spoken professionally at
over 40 venues, served as an “expert panelist” at jobseeker workshops and a
guest on numerous talk radio shows.
--
Higginbotham At Large neither reads
nor publishes comments from pseudonymous or anonymous commenters. No Ring of
Gyges for you.
Mitch Carmichael, Tim
Armstead, Senator Mike Hall, Corey Palumbo, Hoppy Kercheval, Mayor Danny Jones,
Tom Roten, Jake Jarvis, Ashton Marra, Scott Finn, #StruggleToStay,