 Tired of long-term commitment plans? Then Appalachian Wireless has the new plans for you! No credit checks, no contracts, and most of the features of PostPaid is ForwardPaid, the simpler way to do wireless on the region's premier cellular provider. And it starts as low as $19.99 a month with unlimited talk and text. We are you. We are Appalachian Wireless. Wayland Mayor Jerry Fultz was presented with the East Kentucky Humanitarian Award Saturday, April 29th, at the first ever SOAR EKY Gala Awards Banquet. Mayor Fultz has helped the town of Wayland recover from last summer's historic flooding and has revamped the Wayland Gym, which is now home to the Mountain Sports Hall of Fame and Museum. First and foremost, it was a very humbling experience. You know, I get up each day and we work and we try to make our little community and our part of the county a little bit better place to live, whether that be a cleaner place, a healthier place, safer place. And we think many times that we're working hard, and I guess all in all we do, but one of the things that I learned and was able to experience Saturday evening there at the Mountain Art Center was that there's a lot of folks in East Kentucky that are working hard, and I truly was humbled to be there and be a part of that evening. But for me it was heartwarming to see other people and hear what they were doing in their communities, very similar to what we do. Fultz hopes to encourage other small communities across Eastern Kentucky to continue working to improve the region. I think one of the things that we had to embrace first and foremost was we can't go back. You know, as you get older, you look back and the farther you get away from a situation, sometimes the rosier it looks. It wasn't always rosy growing up in Whalen. That's home for me. But I do remember Fondertimes. I remember a time when there were more people there. There were jobs there and so on. So I had that to draw on. We can't go back, but how do we create a better place today? How do we make it safer, cleaner, healthier? I think we start off with visual things, which I just described. Sidewalks. We've started remodeling and bringing up the old gym to code. We've done some things that visually you can see progress. There's a lot of other things that we do that you don't see, such as meetings in the City Commission. We have a wonderful group to work within the City Commission, but we're going to do all that we can do as a small city. We're going to try harder. Reporting for Mountain Top News, I'm Brianna Robinson.