Early on Wednesday morning calls went out to emergency responders reporting a house fi re on Pierpont Street in Petersburg. According to information provided by a witness, the residents of the home were asleep when the fi re began.
A neighbor, identifi ed as Travis J. Borror, entered the burning home to ensure the young woman was able to escape from the fl ames. Borror then returned to help rescue some of her pets, as the resident was desperate to save the animals’ lives.
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Shaena Crossland, originally from Grant County and a current Tucker County resident, appeared before the council to express concerns about the controversial proposed data center that could be built in Tucker County. Crossland appeared before the council as a representative of the organization Tucker United, a grassroots effort founded last year to help spread awareness about the potential dangers of the data center. One of the initial founding issues concerned a heavily redacted air quality permit from a company named Fundamental Data.
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The journey began long before tipoff. Four pep buses rolled out of Petersburg High School at 6:30 a.m. Wednesday, carrying a student section ready for a moment years in the making. Decked out in Hawaiian gear, the buses were packed, loud, and full of anticipation as they made the trip to Charleston. By the first rest stop, the energy had taken on a life of its own. Chants echoed between buses, turning the ride into a full-on competition after Principal Jodie Long raised the stakes with a promise — the winning bus would earn ice cream back at school.
Grant County Press rode along, capturing a scene that felt less like a road trip and more like a community on the move. When the buses pulled into Charleston, that energy followed. Students lined up outside the Charleston Coliseum and Convention Center, waiting to take their seats for a game that meant far more than four quarters of basketball. Inside, the Vikings were already there.
Players stepped onto the floor for warmups with a mix of smiles and quiet intensity, the weight of the moment just beneath the surface. Across the court stood Bluefield, but for Petersburg, this was about something bigger — a return to a stage the program had not seen in nearly a generation. When the ball went up, the atmosphere inside the Coliseum matched the moment.
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