Queen Store in West Virginia
Preservatian Aliance Memebrs

Alliance seeks funds to support three W.Va. preservation organizations

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The Preservation Alliance and its partners work to preserve landmarks across the state, including this store at Crum.

The Preservation Alliance of West Virginia is seeking contributions to help support three state historical-development organizations for which funding has been cut or is in decline.

Donations, which may be processed online (below), will match funds required to employ AmeriCorps members that support the three organizations, providing each member a modest living allowance during his or her services, according to Danielle LaPresta Parker, executive director of the Preservation Alliance of West Virginia.

“Budget cuts and economic downturn seriously impacted these programs, which are very successful and vital to the communities they serve,” Parker said of the effort.

Established in 1994, AmeriCorps supports more than 450,000 adults who engage in public service work nationwide, including 30 members managed through the alliance in West Virginia.

Members commit to full- or part-time positions offered by non-profit agencies and organizations to fulfill assignments in education, public safety, healthcare, and environmental protection.

Persons who would like contribute have until July 14 to support the initiative, Parker said.

The Clio Project

A free website and GPS-enabled mobile application, the Clio connects thousands of people daily to historic landmarks across the U.S. and in West Virginia. Its foundation has requested funding to support two full-time AmeriCorps members and create four part-time positions to employ editors required to review and improve hundreds of user-submitted articles. National Coal Heritage Area National Coal Heritage Area[/caption]

The National Coal Heritage Area works to protect and interpret properties and communities associated with coal heritage in 13 counties in southern West Virginia as part of a heritage-tourism initiative. The agency supports community efforts through the distribution of community grants and by providing technical and capacity-building assistance to communities to enable them to become better stewards of their resources. Donate or share its crowdfunding page.

 

 

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David Sibray
Meet the Author

David Sibray

David Sibray is a West Virginia journalist, publisher, and historian who has spent more than four decades promoting the culture, communities and natural landscapes of Appalachia. He is the founder, publisher and editor-in-chief of West Virginia Explorer, a news and travel magazine devoted to the state’s history, tourism, outdoor recreation and economic development. Born in Wheeling and raised in Beckley, he attended West Virginia University and Wheeling Jesuit University. Since beginning his journalism career in the late 1980s, he has worked in publishing, public relations and destination marketing, including leadership roles with Theatre West Virginia and the Southern West Virginia Convention & Visitors Bureau. For more information, he may be reached at 304-575-7390 or at editor@wvexplorer.com

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