West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

09/17/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 09/17/2025 13:53

Chestnut Mountain Village and DoHS Expand CarePortal to offer community-based solutions to more West Virginia Families

WVDHHR> News> 2025> Chestnut Mountain Village and DoHS Expand CarePortal to offer community-based solutions to more West Virginia Families

Chestnut Mountain Village and DoHS Expand CarePortal to offer community-based solutions to more West Virginia Families

9/17/2025

Page Content


After serving more than 270 children in Monongalia and Preston counties, Chestnut Mountain Village, in partnership with the West Virginia Department of Human Services (DoHS), is expanding CarePortal into Harrison, Marion, Taylor, and Barbour counties. The technology platform connects caseworkers with local churches and community members who can respond directly to urgent needs, such as beds, clothing, school supplies, or transportation, that help stabilize children and families. The initiative builds on the measurable success of the pilot program launched earlier this year, offering timely, community-based solutions to strengthen families and support children in foster care.

By mobilizing support quickly and effectively, CarePortal reduces barriers for caseworkers, foster families, and biological families while keeping children safe in their communities.

Since its pilot launch in April 2025, CarePortal has demonstrated clear results in Monongalia and Preston counties:

  • 274 children served
  • 212 request responses
  • $58,793 in economic impact generated
  • 92% request fulfillment rate
These outcomes highlight the program's ability to deliver real, community-driven support while easing caseload pressures for child welfare staff.

"Foster care challenges in our state are too great for one agency or organization to carry alone," said Greg Clutter, Director of Chestnut Mountain Village. "CarePortal proves what's possible when churches, neighbors, and state partners work together. We can close gaps, prevent crises, and keep children safe in their own communities."

DoHS leaders agree that CarePortal reflects priorities identified in the 2025 Child Welfare Listening Tour, where more than 350 West Virginians shared 1,700 ideas for system improvement. Among the top recommendations were increased caregiver support, stronger prevention services, and more collaboration between agencies and families.

"CarePortal represents the kind of innovative, community-based solution our listening tour participants asked for," said Alex Mayer, Secretary of the West Virginia Department of Human Services. "It's one more way West Virginia is working to strengthen families and provide the right support at the right time. At the heart of this effort are our communities, because lasting success depends on neighbors, organizations, and local leaders coming together to ensure children and families have what they need to thrive."

The long-term goal is to expand CarePortal across additional regions of West Virginia, ensuring that families statewide can access timely support while caseworkers are better equipped to focus on safety and permanency.

Contact Information

[email protected]
West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources published this content on September 17, 2025, and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed via Public Technologies (PUBT), unedited and unaltered, on September 17, 2025 at 19:53 UTC. If you believe the information included in the content is inaccurate or outdated and requires editing or removal, please contact us at [email protected]