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Analysis of the May 12, 2026 BOE Election Results

 


The intersection of state intervention and local electoral accountability in Pocahontas County reached a major turning point in the first half of 2026. After a year under an emergency declaration, the school system regained its independence just months before a highly consequential Board of Education (BOE) election.

1. The State-Declared Emergency & Its Resolution

The West Virginia Board of Education (WVBE) originally declared a State of Emergency for Pocahontas County Schools in February 2025. The intervention followed a Special Circumstance Review of Pocahontas County High School (PCHS) conducted in late 2024.

The review exposed significant non-compliance across five core focus areas:

  • Comprehensive School Counseling: Failure to implement a current program (the existing plan dated back to 2022–2023) and a lack of required Personal Education Plans (PEPs) for high schoolers.

  • Grade Transcribing & Scheduling: Structural deficiencies in transcript accuracy and student scheduling.

  • Special Education Services: Failing to meet strict compliance standards for exceptional students.

  • Leadership Capacity: Insufficient administrative infrastructure to self-correct operational faults.

  • School Environment: Outlined standard deficiencies regarding positive and safe environments.

The Turnaround Strategy

Upon taking office in July, new County Superintendent Dr. Leatha Williams, alongside Board President Emery Grimes, aggressively countered the crisis. Rather than contesting the state intervention, the county leadership partnered with WVDE support specialists to craft a rigorous, six-month turnaround framework.

The strategy combined peer-to-peer administrative training, classroom observations, updated data reporting verification, and structural overhauls to the counseling and scheduling departments.

Resolution

On February 11, 2026, Dr. Williams and Emery Grimes appeared before the WVBE in Charleston. Based on dramatic improvements verified by the WVDE Office of Accountability, the state board voted unanimously to terminate the State of Emergency and hand full oversight, policymaking, and operational authority back to the Pocahontas County Board of Education.

2. Analysis of the May 12, 2026 BOE Election Results

With the state of emergency officially closed, the nonpartisan general election for the Pocahontas County Board of Education on May 12, 2026, became a referendum on the county's handling of the crisis, leadership stability, and future administrative direction.

The election results revealed a clear mandate from the county's three voting districts:

CandidateDistrict RepresentedTotal Votes ReceivedElectoral Outcome
Connie RoseSouthern1,164Elected
Edwina GarberNorthern844Elected
Regina HallCentral804Elected
Andrew "Frosty" McNabb522Defeated
Karen McCoy447Defeated
Morgan McComb391Defeated
Stephen McCarty Jr.239Defeated
Fred Koerber124Defeated
Carl V. Kelk50Defeated

Political and Electoral Takeaways

  • A Mandate for Stability: The decisive victories for Connie Rose (clearing the field by over 300 votes), Edwina Garber, and Regina Hall signal that the local electorate favored stabilizing school operations following the successful lift of the state emergency. The fragmentation of the remaining votes among six other candidates indicates that anti-incumbent or radical restructuring platforms failed to build consolidated momentum.

  • Geographic Distribution of Power: Because West Virginia county school board rules require geographic representation (no more than two members can serve from the same magisterial district), the clear dispersion of wins across the Southern, Northern, and Central districts sets up a balanced countywide approach to monitoring the long-term sustainability of the state's corrective action plan.

  • Validation of the Turnaround: The election results strongly imply that public anxiety regarding the 2025 state takeover was successfully mitigated by the February 2026 resolution. By validating the current trajectory, voters chose a board positioned to maintain the hard-won "keys to the kingdom" rather than litigating past administrative failures.

Historic Political Earthquake at the Polls

 


SALT SHAKER PRESS

Independent News for the Mountain State

May 27, 2026

Rebinski ROUTED: Trash Crisis Triggers Historic Political Earthquake at the Polls

Incumbent Commission President Receives Just 90 Votes as Outraged Voters Demand Accountability

MARLINTON, WV — If the Pocahontas County Commission believed they could insulate themselves from the brewing solid waste crisis by deflecting blame onto the Solid Waste Authority (SWA), the voters shattered that illusion on May 12th.

In a primary election that local political analysts are calling a historic, single-issue referendum, the boiling public fury over skyrocketing "Green Box" fees and the privatization of county trash disposal translated into an absolute slaughter at the ballot box for the courthouse establishment.

Incumbent County Commission President John Rebinski was not merely defeated in the Republican primary—his campaign was completely obliterated. Challengers running on platforms heavily focused on local government accountability, transparency, and a structural fix to the solid waste deadlock swept the local nonpartisan and partisan races.

The Numbers: A Complete Rejection of the Establishment

Primary elections in Pocahontas County are usually quiet, low-turnout affairs where incumbents cruise to easy victories. The May 12, 2026, results turned that tradition completely on its head.

In the highly watched County Commission Republican primary, the final tally sent shockwaves through the Marlinton courthouse:

CandidateTotal VotesPercentage
Matthew Barkley61265.2%
Mike Garber23725.2%
John Rebinski (Incumbent)909.6%

To put these numbers in perspective, an incumbent sitting Commission President failed to even crack double digits, capturing less than 10% of his own party's vote. Because no Democratic candidate filed to run for the Commission seat during the January window, Barkley is currently unopposed on the November ballot—meaning the May primary effectively decided the future of the three-member body.

Why the Trash Crisis Dictated the Outcome

The geographic breakdown of the vote reveals that the epicenter of the political earthquake was in the Northern and Central districts, where rural landowners rely most heavily on the county’s Green Box dumpster stations.

For months, Rebinski had been the public face of the Commission's "hands-off" approach, repeatedly telling packed rooms of angry constituents that the Commission had no legislative authority over the SWA's 15-year private lease deal with JacMal Properties.

Voters, however, clearly connected the dots that Salt Shaker Press highlighted in our previous reporting: the Commission’s decision to deny the SWA a $300,000 operational lifeline directly triggered the doubling of the annual fee to $260.

"People are tired of being told that the money isn't there while their basic services are stripped away," said an independent voter outside the Green Bank precinct on election night. "They found millions for a new 911 facility but couldn't spare a dime to keep our dumpsters open or protect our Free Day. Ninety votes is a message."

Down-Ballot Aftershocks: The Board of Education Clean Sweep

The political contagion of the trash crisis didn't stop at the Commission race. It bled directly into the nonpartisan Board of Education (BOE) race, where voters routinely punish any candidates perceived as being aligned with the county's old guard or establishment interests.

Newcomers focused on fiscal oversight and local institutional reform dominated the school board election:

  • Connie Rose (Southern District) led the ticket with a massive 1,164 votes.

  • Edwina Garber (Northern District) secured a seat with 844 votes.

  • Regina Hall (Central District) captured the final open seat with 804 votes.

The incoming BOE members, who will take office on July 1, 2026, ran on platforms heavily emphasizing strict public budget management—a clear sign that county taxpayers are closely monitoring how every single dollar of public revenue is allocated.

The Road to November: Can the Old Guard Mount a Comeback?

With Matthew Barkley securing a dominant mandate from the Republican base, the establishment's only remaining hope to retain the seat relies on an uphill independent challenge. Under West Virginia election law, an independent or third-party candidate has until August 3, 2026, to file nominating petitions with enough verified signatures to gain access to the general election ballot.

But with public outrage still simmering over the July 1st implementation of the new flow-control regulations and the termination of public "Free Day" drop-offs, any candidate attempting to defend the current courthouse trajectory faces a steep, uphill climb.

The May primary proved that in Pocahontas County, public utilities are not an afterthought. When you touch the working man’s wallet and threaten his ability to throw away his trash on his own terms, you are no longer playing routine politics—you are organizing your own exit interview.

Trash Fire

 


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SALT SHAKER PRESS

Independent News for the Mountain State

May 27, 2026

THE TRASH FIRE IN NATURE’S PLAYGROUND

As the Landfill Inches Toward Full Capacity, Residents Ask: Where Was the Pocahontas County Commission?

MARLINTON, WV — Deep in the mountains of Pocahontas County, a crisis has been quietly rotting for years, and it isn't just the literal garbage. With the county’s sole sanitary landfill projected to hit maximum capacity and become completely unusable by the end of 2026, a bitter public war has broken out over the future of trash.

At the center of the storm is a deeply controversial 15-year, multimillion-dollar agreement to lease a private transfer station built by local developer Jacob Meck. This setup will force nearly doubled "Green Box" public disposal fees onto rural residents—skyrocketing from $135 to $260 annually—while strictly stripping locals of their long-standing "Free Day" dump privileges.

Angry citizens packed the county courtroom this spring, demanding to know how their leadership let a basic public utility turn into a private monopoly. But when confronted by their constituents, the three-member Pocahontas County Commission offered a familiar refrain: Not our problem. Our hands are tied.

A deep dive by the Salt Shaker Press reveals that while the Commission may legally hide behind bureaucracy, their years of financial starvation, political deflection, and failure to act proactively directly fanned the flames of the solid waste crisis.

The Legal Shell Game: Commission vs. SWA

To understand how we got here, one must understand the bureaucratic shield the County Commission uses to deflect blame.

Legally, solid waste in West Virginia is governed by Solid Waste Authorities (SWAs). The Pocahontas County SWA is a separate five-member board. The County Commission only directly appoints two of those members; the other three are appointed by various state agencies (including the Conservation District and the modern-day Department of Environmental Protection).

When outraged citizens from Northern Pocahontas County flooded the March 17, 2026, Commission meeting to protest the Meck deal—objecting to the lack of open competitive bidding and a rule prohibiting citizens from hauling their own trash to cheaper out-of-county landfills—Commissioners deflected. They stated plainly that they have no legislative authority over the SWA's decisions.

But public policy experts and historical data suggest otherwise: the Commission has always held the keys to the kingdom via the county purse strings.

How the Commission Contributed to the Crisis

The SWA’s landfill failure was entirely predictable. The local market only generates about 8,000 tons of municipal waste per year. In the modern waste management industry, that volume is microscopically low—it simply does not generate enough cash flow ("tipping fees") to fund the massive $10 million capital expenditure required to dig a new landfill cell or build a state-regulated leachate treatment facility.

Furthermore, adjacent land expansion evaporated years ago when a neighboring property owner passed away, and the remaining family refused to sell to the county. Faced with an impending shutdown, the SWA turned to the Commission for a lifeline. The Commission let the call go to voicemail.

1. Financial Starvation

In late 2025, the SWA approached the County Commission with a detailed plan to build and equip its own public transfer station for $1.3 million, utilizing a low-interest state loan. To make the debt service manageable and keep resident Green Box fees low, the SWA begged the Commission for an annual operational contribution of $300,000.

Commission President Rebinski promptly denied the request, stating the county was already "loaded" with other commitments—citing a $1.5 million shortfall on a 911 building and ongoing ambulance service costs. By withholding local tax funding, the Commission effectively backed the SWA into a corner, forcing them into the arms of a private developer lease that will cost taxpayers over $4.1 million across 15 years.

2. Regulatory and Enforcement Neglect

For over a decade, the Commission has failed to fund proper litter control infrastructure. The SWA has long complained that its rural, unmonitored "Green Box" dumpsters are routinely abused by out-of-state contractors and commercial entities who dump illegally to avoid paying commercial tipping fees.

The SWA requested that the county create and fund a dedicated Litter Control Officer to police these sites. The Commission’s historic inaction on enforcement allowed tens of thousands of pounds of unpaid, illegal waste to accelerate the filling of the county landfill, robbing the system of critical revenue.

3. Reactive, "Last-Minute" Governance

The landfill did not fill up overnight. The SWA and the West Virginia Solid Waste Management Board formed a stakeholder group back in May 2023 because they knew the clock was ticking. Despite knowing the deadline, the County Commission treated the issue as an isolated utility problem rather than a looming county-wide economic disaster, opting to address it only when angry mobs arrived at the courthouse doors in early 2026.

Paths to Resolution: What the Commission Could Have Done

The tragedy of the Pocahontas County trash crisis is that it was entirely preventable. Had the Commission operated with a sense of proactive governance, the county could have secured a stable, publicly controlled future for its waste management.

+-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
|                 WHAT A PROACTIVE COMMISSION COULD HAVE DONE           |
+-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
|                                                                       |
|  [ARPA & Capital Allocation] -> Funded the $1.3M Public Station       |
|                                                                       |
|  [Intergovernmental Pact]    -> Partnered with Greenbrier/Randolph    |
|                                                                       |
|  [Enforcement Funding]       -> Hired a Litter Control Officer        |
|                                                                       |
+-----------------------------------------------------------------------+

Route 1: Smart Capital Infrastructure Investment

Instead of declaring poverty over a $300,000 annual funding request, the Commission could have utilized federal pass-through monies, such as American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) funds or regional economic grants, to absorb the SWA’s initial $1.3 million capital cost to build a publicly owned transfer station.

By owning the building and the trailers outright, the county would have avoided paying millions in long-term lease premiums to a private entity. This would have kept the annual Green Box fee close to its historical $135 mark, rather than punishing fixed-income mountain residents with a massive $260 annual bill.

Route 2: Intergovernmental Regionalization

Pocahontas County’s core issue is scale—8,000 tons of trash isn't enough to leverage competitive pricing. A forward-thinking Commission could have used its political weight to negotiate an intergovernmental regional agreement with neighboring Randolph or Greenbrier counties.

By forming a multi-county waste district, Pocahontas could have pooled its hauling resources, shared the capital costs of a regional transfer network, and secured deeply discounted tipping rates at larger, high-volume regional landfills.

Route 3: Implementing a "Sticker" and Enforcement System

Instead of waiting for the SWA to pass sweeping, Draconian regulations that restrict citizens' freedom to transport their own waste, the Commission could have used its ordinance-making power to establish a strict vehicle sticker system for Green Box sites, backed by a county-funded Litter Control Officer. Eliminating commercial fraud at the public dumpsters would have saved the county thousands of tons of landfill space, pushing the crisis date down the road and buying years of planning time.

The Editorial View From the Salt Shaker

It is easy for politicians to hide behind the opaque wording of West Virginia Code Chapter 22C. It is easy to say, "The Solid Waste Authority made the deal, not us."

But leadership isn't about finding the nearest exit when a problem gets heavy. The Pocahontas County Commission knew for years that the landfill was dying. By starving the SWA of financial backing and ignoring the creeping institutional rot of illegal dumping, they allowed a vital public service to be effectively privatized on the backs of local taxpayers.

As residents prepare to shell out an extra $125 a year just to throw away their kitchen trash—while losing their monthly Free Day—they should remember that the trash crisis wasn't a natural disaster. It was a failure of political courage right inside the Marlinton courthouse.

Did the Solid Waste Crisis Dictate the Primary Election Outcomes?

 


 THE TRASH BALLOT: Did the Solid Waste Crisis Dictate the Primary Election Outcomes?

Salt Shaker Press: MARLINTON, WV — Following the May 12, 2026, primary election, local political analysts and disgruntled voters are locked in a heated debate: Did the brewing Pocahontas County solid waste crisis single-handedly reshape the county leadership, or was it merely one variable in a broader shifting political tide?

The stunning defeat of incumbent County Commissioner John Rebinski—who secured only 90 votes against newcomer Matthew Barkley’s commanding 612 votes in the Republican primary—has forced a community-wide reckoning. Because no Democratic candidate filed for the seat, Barkley is effectively on a clear path to the commission post this fall, barring an unprecedented write-in or petition campaign.

The epicenter of the political fallout centers heavily on the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority’s (SWA) upcoming operational transition and a slate of highly controversial regulatory proposals.

The Pro-Impact Argument: A Mandate Against Fees and "Flow Control"

To many local organizers and political watchdogs, the election results represent an absolute referendum on municipal mismanagement. For months, residents have packed local meetings, expressing deep anxiety over the impending closure of the county landfill and its replacement by a new transfer station slated to become operational within the year.

The real lightning rod, however, has been a series of draft updates to the SWA’s mandatory regulations proposed this spring. The flashpoints include:

  • The "Green Box" Fee Expansion: A proposal to extend the annual green box trash collection fee to all county properties—including vacant land, unimproved residential lots, and farms—regardless of whether they possess structures or occupy the land.

  • "Flow Control" Mandates: A strict rule requiring every ounce of solid waste generated or hauled within county lines to pass exclusively through the county transfer station to capture mandatory tipping fees.

  • Termination of "Free Day": The proposed July 1st elimination of the popular free-disposal days at the landfill to help balance the authority's tightening budget.

"The numbers speak for themselves," says one local advocate who helped organize a formal petition against the regulations. "The proposal to tax multi-deeded family farms and empty timber lots for garbage they don't produce sparked a massive backlash. Commissioner Rebinski's defeat wasn't just a loss; it was a clear message that the public will not accept heavy-handed flow control enforcement and unfair fee structures rolled into their property tax notices."

Advocates of this view argue that the sheer scale of Barkley’s victory in a low-turnout primary proves that a single, highly organized voting bloc—mobilized entirely by the threat of skyrocketing waste disposal costs—marched to the polls to oust the establishment.

The Nuanced Counter-Argument: A Convergence of Factors

Conversely, long-time observers of West Virginia politics caution against attributing the entire election outcome to a single contentious issue, no matter how loud the public outcry.

They point out that local elections in rural counties are intensely personal and subject to multiple overlapping dynamics:

Contributing FactorImpact on Voter Behavior
Closed Primary SystemThe West Virginia Republican Party's decision to close its 2026 primary excluded all unaffiliated voters, completely altering the traditional primary voting pool and favoring concentrated partisan movements.
Broader Economic ConcernsVoters are feeling the pinch of inflation across the board. Rising utility costs, infrastructure strain, and local tax anxieties coalesced into general anti-incumbent sentiment.
Grassroots CampaigningMatthew Barkley's campaign struck a chord by promising greater administrative transparency and strict oversight of county procurement processes, appealing to voters beyond the waste issue.

Skepticism also exists as to whether the Solid Waste Authority's actions can be fairly laid at the feet of the County Commission. While the commission appoints members to the SWA board, the authority operates as an independent body guided by legal counsel and statutory environmental obligations. SWA board members have publicly expressed their own hesitations regarding the vacant land fees, noting that the regulations are still draft proposals aimed at finding a way to fund the mandatory transfer station transition while keeping baseline tipping fees manageable.

"To say this was only about trash ignores the structural changes in how we vote," notes a retired county official. "With the closed primary and new photo ID requirements implemented this year, voter turnout dynamics changed fundamentally. The waste issue was a convenient lightning rod, but general economic fatigue and a desire for a fresh face played massive roles."

The Road Ahead

Whether the primary results were a pure single-issue mandate or a perfect storm of political shifts, the message to incoming leadership is unmistakable. The public demand for meticulous financial transparency, legal compliance, and a fair resolution to the solid waste infrastructure crisis remains a top priority.

As the July 1 deadline for the proposed regulatory changes approaches, all eyes remain fixed on the courthouse and the SWA chambers.


Analysis of the May 12, 2026 BOE Election Results

  The intersection of state intervention and local electoral accountability in Pocahontas County reached a major turning point in the first ...

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