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Offering World-Class Health Care
Looking around Wheeling Hospital, its inclusion into the West Virginia University Health System is obvious.
The “Flying WV,” the logo synonymous with WVU, can be found prominently and abundantly. Yet, Wheeling Hospital CEO Douglass Harrison said that the hospital joining the WVU team is much more than a cosmetic change. It’s a change that he feels will benefit Wheeling and the Ohio Valley immediately and well into the future.
“You’re joining a world-class academic health center and health system,” Harrison said. “As a part of that, WVU medicine will provide the resources necessary to make sure Wheeling Hospital is successful. If you look around our system, every hospital that we’ve brought in, if you look from day one and look through a three-year scope, you’ve seen growth.
Easter services once again different with COVID-19 but leaders share message of hope By
Bishop Mark Brennan leads Easter Sunday service in Wheeling.
WHEELING, W.Va. Many West Virginians were back in pews for Easter Sunday this year, following closed services in 2020 during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic.
But churches were far from full, as congregations were socially distanced and masked up.
Mark Brennan, the Bishop of the Diocese of Wheeling-Charleston led services at St. Joseph’s Cathedral in Wheeling that were also streamed online. He praised Catholics in West Virginia for following the COVID-19 guidelines.
“It’s so good to see so many of you here. Again I’ll commend you for wearing the masks. I’ll wear one when I am not talking,” he said.
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From staff reports
WHEELING Families of Catholic school students, and of some former Catholic school students, in West Virginia will get an extra helping hand thanks to a $1.2 million investment from the Diocese of Wheeling-Charleston.
Bishop Mark Brennan announced the investment Monday, which will help families enrolled in the diocese’s 24 Catholic schools around the state. It also will help those who had to leave Catholic school in the last year due to financial strains from the COVID-19 pandemic.
These qualifying families, regardless of religious affiliation, will receive $250 per child in grades PK-12 in the parochial school system to be used for tuition and fees during the 2021-2022 school year. This grant is in addition to any tuition assistance for which families are eligible, including the Diocesan Tuition Assistance Program for Catholic families; and funds granted at the local parish and school level.