West Virginia Executive Summer 2017 | Page 10

In THERE WAS FLOODING IN WEST VIRGINIA. That’s what I remember about June 23, 2016. From my home in Columbus, Ohio, I kept an eye on the rising water and the forecast for more rain because being a transplant who left her heart behind in the Mountain State, my eye is always on my Mountain Mama. On Friday morning, I woke up to the news of devastation. I spent the morning scouring Facebook for articles, updates, photos and videos. As I made plans to travel to West Virginia to help, I knew my anxiety wouldn’t fade until I could get home and see for myself that my Mountain Mama was still there under the layers of mud and debris. I grew up on the Elk River on Blue Creek Road and graduated from Herbert Hoover High School. Sunday trips to my grandparents’ house in Roane County were often punctuated with a stop at the Clendenin Dairy Queen. Knowing that the places of my youth had been devastated by muddy water spilling out of the unas- suming Elk broke something inside me. On my first day home to help, when I saw a Red Cross unit off the Clendenin exit, my gut told me to pull over even though it wasn’t part of my plan. There was a long line of cars waiting for assis- tance, and the volunteers welcomed me, appreciative of the extra hands. I spent the evening loading flats of water into cars, filling buckets with cleaning supplies and offering hot meals. The flood victims were tired and muddy, and their sagging shoulders showed the extent of their personal devastation. Most of them took only what they thought they would immediately need, explaining that someone else might need those things more. Even in a moment of complete loss, West Vir- ginians were looking out for each other. 10 WEST VIRGINIA EXECUTIVE Letter from the Publishers The hashtag #NeighborsHelpingNeigh- bors caught like wildfire in the soggy com- munities of West Virginia. Even those who were directly impacted by the flood were offering assistance to others. Individu- als, schools, organizations and businesses across the state set about to make things whole again. And then, the nation stepped in. People from all over sent supplies and able-bodied volunteers, providing West Vir- ginia’s weary with a shoulder to lean on. The 2016 flood devastated people, families, businesses and communities. It also inspired generosity and goodwill both within and outside the state. In memory of this catastrophic event, we have put together a special department in this issue called WV Strong. In this section, we take a look at some of the organizations that offered assistance in the aftermath. We’ve also gathered photos from our readers depicting both the devastation and the volunteer efforts that helped put West Virginia back together. It’s no secret that West Virginia gets beat up on a regular basis by national media, outsiders and even its own. As we reflect on the 2016 flood and look toward the continued recovery of the affected com- munities, let us remember what the muddy water proved: that together, as West Vir- ginians, we are capable of anything.  Jennifer and her sister, Cheryl, delivered a carload of donations to Clay County.