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April 21 Pocahontas School Board

 




Protest Slogans for the Sunday Meeting at the Greenbank Firehall 5:00

 



On Incompetence & Backroom Deals

  • "Incompetence is not a Policy. Resign Now."

  • "Stop Playing Games with Our Lives: Transparency Over Backroom Deals!"

  • "We See the Strings: End the Shadow Governance."

  • "Public Office is a Public Trust—Not Your Private Playground."

  • "If You Can’t Do the Job, Let Someone Who Can."


On Unfair Taxation & Taxes on the Poor

  • "Tax the Greed, Not the Need."

  • "My Grocery Money is Not Your Slush Fund."

  • "Fair Taxes for All, Not Just the Small."

  • "Stop Nickeling and Diming the Working Class!"

  • "Empty Pockets Can’t Pay for Your Mistakes."


On Hurting Senior Citizens

  • "Respect Our Elders: Hands Off Their Security!"

  • "They Built the Future—Don't Rob Their Retirement."

  • "Dignity for Seniors, Not Poverty for Life."

  • "Grandparents Shouldn't Have to Choose Between Food and Medicine."


On Illegal Transfer of Public Lands

  • "Public Land is OUR Land—Not for Sale!"

  • "Stop the Steal: No Private Profit from Public Parks."

  • "Nature is a Right, Not a Real Estate Deal."

  • "Corporate Greed Off Our Green Space."


Short & Direct (The "Zingers")

  • "Losing the Land, Losing the Trust."

  • "Taxed Out, Tired Out, and Speaking Out."


Pro-Tip for Sign Making:

Use high-contrast colors (Black on Yellow or White on Red) and keep your handwriting thick. If people can't read it from 20 feet away, it’s just a piece of cardboard!

Incompetence?

 


 Compare the legal principles of West Virginia state law and the processes as applied by the county commission and the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority in terms of open meetings, fair representation, unfair taxation, creation of a monopoly in public service by collusion between private parties and government officials, failure to comply with mandated state law, and general government government actions to ensure that public officials act in the best interest of the community it serves. 

Open Meetings and Transparency West Virginia’s Open Governmental Proceedings Act (OGMA) mandates that public agencies conduct business openly, ensuring citizens retain control and oversight over governmental affairs and can participate in a meaningful manner. While the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (PCSWA) claimed full compliance by regularly posting agendas at the courthouse and in local papers, their applied processes severely restricted public oversight. Most notably, during a controversial December 17, 2025, executive session, the SWA excluded public officials like the County Commission President and Marlinton Mayor, yet explicitly allowed private contractors Jacob and Malinda Meck to attend closed-door negotiations. Furthermore, during a critical public hearing regarding fee hikes, the SWA restricted citizens to only discussing the fees, refusing to hear comments regarding the multi-million-dollar construction and hauling contracts that were driving those very increases.

Fair Representation and Local Autonomy The West Virginia Constitution declares that government power resides in all citizens and must be exercised in accordance with their "will and appointment". However, the statutory structure of the PCSWA effectively strips local citizens of representational control through a 3-2 state-appointed majority. With three members appointed by state entities (WV DEP, PSC, and Soil Conservation District) and only two by the local County Commission, state interests can consistently override local preferences. When angry residents protested the SWA's decisions, the elected County Commission was forced to admit they had no direct authority to overturn the independent board's actions, illustrating a profound "agency problem" where local taxpayers bear the financial burden of decisions made by unaccountable state appointees.

Unfair Taxation versus Regulatory Fees West Virginia's Constitution requires that taxes be "equal and uniform" and proportional to property value (ad valorem). Solid waste authorities do not possess general taxing power; they may only charge "service fees" that are reasonably related to the actual use or availability of waste disposal services. Facing insolvency, the SWA attempted to bypass this limitation by proposing that "Green Box" fees be assessed on every deeded parcel of land in the county, including vacant lots and farms that generate no waste. Applying a flat service fee to non-users functionally transforms it into an unconstitutional, regressive property tax, penalizing land ownership rather than waste generation.

Creation of a Monopoly by Collusion Under federal antitrust laws and the West Virginia Fairness in Competitive Bidding Act, public entities are mandated to foster competition and solicit bids for construction projects exceeding $50,000. In stark contrast, the PCSWA engaged in a "quiet privatization" by entering into a 15-year, $4.1 million lease-to-own transfer station agreement with JacMal, LLC (Jacob Meck) without any competitive bidding process. To guarantee JacMal’s profitability, the SWA enacted strict "flow control" regulations, making it illegal for residents or commercial haulers to transport waste out of the county. This functionally created a localized, government-enforced monopoly designed to capture all county waste revenue to fund a pre-selected private developer.

Failure to Comply with Mandated State Law The PCSWA's transition plan exhibited a pattern of systemic noncompliance with state statutes. For instance, West Virginia Code explicitly caps civil penalties for unpaid solid waste fees at $150 per year. However, the SWA drafted local regulations imposing a $150 per day penalty for violations, an ultra vires act that would illegally inflate a $150 annual fine to over $54,000 a year. Additionally, the SWA's plan to transfer public landfill property to an economic development corporation to facilitate the private lease circumvented mandatory state procedures requiring public auctions and fair consideration for the disposal of public real property.

Ensuring Officials Act in the Community's Best Interest State law ensures fiduciary fidelity through the mandatory constitutional oath of office, which serves as a jurisdictional prerequisite for exercising state power. Operating without this oath legally constitutes "usurpation". During the peak of the crisis, public records revealed that SWA Chairman Dave Henderson was allegedly serving under an expired oath from 2015, casting a shadow of legal illegitimacy over the board's binding votes. Moreover, the SWA board agreed to an "exclusivity clause" in their Letter of Intent with JacMal, explicitly forbidding the authority from seeking or discussing any other competitive proposals. By legally binding themselves to ignore potentially cheaper alternatives, the board abdicated its fiduciary duty to protect the economic interests of the county’s residents in favor of securing a lucrative deal for a private partner.

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Setup to Failure

 

 Severe Financial Consequences By prematurely "eating" the future airspace intended for the 2020s, the flood debris forced solid waste authorities to construct expensive new landfill cells years ahead of schedule. To fund these emergency multi-million-dollar expansions, facilities had to drastically increase their prices; for example, Greenbrier County's tipping fees surged by 30.5%. Ultimately, the disaster waste "stole" from the future capacity of the landfills, shifting the massive financial burden of the recovery directly onto local residents.

The Trash Divide: How One Rural County Built a Century of Stability While Its Neighbor Hit a Dead End

In the rugged highlands of Appalachia, an invisible border separates two starkly different futures. On one side, a county has secured its waste management infrastructure for the next 150 years, integrating it into a sophisticated long-term growth strategy. On the other, a neighboring jurisdiction is hurtling toward a "terminal point" for its landfill, facing a hard December 2026 deadline and a public outcry over a controversial private-public partnership.

The divergence between Greenbrier and Pocahontas Counties in West Virginia offers a masterclass in how geographical suitability, fiscal scale, and institutional foresight determine whether a community thrives or stagnates.

The Fragility of Infrastructure: The Land Deal that Failed a County

Infrastructure is often a permanent fixture in our minds, but its survival frequently hinges on fragile private negotiations. In Pocahontas County, the path to a terminal infrastructure crisis began with a single collapsed land negotiation in 2017.

The Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (PCSWA) attempted to purchase a 25-acre tract from local landowner Jody Fertig. Engineers identified 10 critical acres that would have provided 50 years of additional capacity and allowed for a cost-effective, gravity-fed leachate system. However, following Fertig’s death in October 2017, his heirs declined to sell.

The authority’s decision not to force the issue effectively sealed the landfill's fate:

"The authority publicly stated it lacked the ability or desire to utilize eminent domain to seize the property, effectively closing the only viable path for contiguous expansion at the current site."

Because much of the remaining county land is protected federal and state forest where waste facilities are legally prohibited, this single failed negotiation ended the possibility of a county-run landfill.

The "Death Spiral" of Low-Volume Waste

The economic reality of modern waste management is dictated by scale. Greenbrier County has successfully leveraged its position as a "regional hub," accepting waste from multiple counties to maintain a high-volume stream. Pocahontas County, conversely, is trapped in an infrastructure "death spiral."

For a county where 20% of the population lives below the poverty line, a $10 million debt for a new facility is a fiscal impossibility. Even after the landfill reaches its hard closure in 2026, the county remains tethered to a $75,000 annual post-closure liability for the next 30 years—paying for a "dead" asset while simultaneously funding its successor.

The following table illustrates the insurmountable fiscal gap between a high-volume hub and a stagnant, low-volume market:

Metric

Greenbrier County (Hub)

Pocahontas County (Stagnant)

Annual Waste Volume

66,000 Tons

8,000 Tons

Current Tipping/Service Fee

$61.00 per ton

$120.00 (Green Box Fee)

Projected Resident Cost

Stable

$310.00 per year

Expansion Status

Constructing Cell 7

Hard Closure (Dec 2026)

Facility Life Expectancy

150+ Years

0 Years (Post-2026)

The Privatization Pivot: Analyzing the Fiscal Risks of "Option 4"

With the 2026 deadline looming, the PCSWA pivoted to a controversial private-public partnership known as "Option 4." Under this deal, the county will sell public land in Green Bank to the Greenbrier Valley Economic Development Corporation (GVEDC) to avoid property taxes, while JacMal LLC—a private entity owned by Jacob Meck—constructs a transfer station.

The "Consultant Logic" behind this move is sobering: the SWA lacked the creditworthiness to secure traditional public bonds because it has no "guaranteed source of annual funding" from the County Commission. They were forced into a private deal they couldn't afford to build themselves.

The SWA will lease the facility back for $16,759 monthly over 15 years. This includes a massive $1,103,495.24 balloon payment at the end of the term. This "privatization of public assets" triggered a visceral reaction in the Pocahontas County Circuit Courtroom in early 2026.

"Nearly 60 residents, led by local voices like Nancy Harris and Mike Murphy, shouted questions and complaints, in some cases threatening SWA members with criminal prosecution... viewing the deal as an improper transfer of public property to a private developer."

"Flow Control"—The Legal Mandate for Your Trash

To ensure the new transfer station remains solvent, the PCSWA and attorney David Sims are implementing "Flow Control." This mandate requires every ounce of solid waste generated within the county to pass through the Green Bank station to ensure tipping fees cover the monthly lease.

This policy creates the "Durbin Problem." Durbin Mayor Kenneth Lehman and council member Paula Bennett noted that it is significantly cheaper for the town to haul its waste to a nearby facility in Dailey. However, Flow Control legally prohibits this, essentially forcing a municipal subsidy from the town's small budget to keep the private JacMal lease afloat.

The 150-Year Hub vs. The 2026 Deadline

The long-term outlooks for these neighbors are defined by geography. Greenbrier County is currently excavating its "Cell 7" expansion, which will provide 360,000 cubic yards of airspace. This project succeeds because Greenbrier invested in rigorous karst topography mitigation, turning a geologically sensitive area into a "sustainable industrial asset" integrated into its Comprehensive Plan.

In contrast, Pocahontas was stifled by the federal forest prohibition and a lack of long-term planning that state regulators described as "considerable concerns." While Greenbrier’s facility is prepared for the next century, Pocahontas is operating in a reactive posture, forced into a hurried transition as its capacity window slams shut.

Conclusion: The "Stop Gap" and the Road Ahead

As the clock ticks toward December 2026, the "Option 4" deal serves as a desperate stop-gap. Developer Jacob Meck has been blunt with the public: without this partnership, there would be no trash collection at all by late 2026, as any alternative would require years of state permitting the county simply does not have.

The regional disparity is now a permanent fixture of the landscape. Greenbrier will serve as the destination for the region’s waste for the next hundred years, while the citizens of Pocahontas face a potential $310 annual fee and a 15-year lease that tests their financial endurance.

This divide raises a critical question for rural policy: Can small-scale, low-volume infrastructure ever truly be sustainable, or is regional consolidation the only way to avoid a fiscal dead end?

 A Comparative Analysis of Regional Waste Infrastructure Sustainability: Greenbrier and Pocahontas Counties

Executive Summary

The management of municipal solid waste (MSW) in rural Appalachia has reached a historical divergence in the neighboring jurisdictions of Greenbrier and Pocahontas Counties, West Virginia. Greenbrier County has successfully positioned itself as a regional waste management hub, leveraging fiscal stability and strategic planning to initiate a major expansion of its sanitary landfill (Cell 7). This facility maintains a projected life expectancy of over 150 years.

Conversely, Pocahontas County has experienced a systemic failure to achieve infrastructure expansion, primarily due to a 2017 land acquisition impasse and the economic constraints of a low-volume waste market. With its current landfill projected to reach capacity by December 2026, the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (PCSWA) has pivoted toward a controversial private-public transfer station model. This transition has triggered a crisis of public trust, characterized by concerns over "Flow Control" mandates, a lack of competitive bidding, and significant fee increases for an economically vulnerable population.

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The Greenbrier County Model: Strategic Regional Expansion

Greenbrier County utilizes its landfill as a regional utility, processing waste from Greenbrier, Summers, and Monroe counties. This consolidation ensures the high-volume waste stream necessary for financial viability and infrastructure investment.

Infrastructure and Operational Metrics

The current focus of the Greenbrier County Solid Waste Authority (GCSWA) is the construction of Cell 7. This expansion is managed by Alliance Consulting, Inc., and involves complex engineering, including multi-layered geosynthetic liner systems and mass excavation.

Specification

Metric

Permitted Monthly Tonnage Cap

5,500 Tons

Annual Waste Processing Capacity

66,000 Tons

Current Tipping Fee (2025)

$61.00 per ton

Cell 7 Projected Footprint

5.0 Acres

Cell 7 Airspace Utilization

360,000 Cubic Yards

Cell 7 Estimated Operational Life

6.0 Years

Overall Facility Life Expectancy

150+ Years

Fiscal Robustness and Planning

The GCSWA maintains a strong fiscal record, remaining current on all loan payments to the West Virginia Solid Waste Management Board (SWMB). In fiscal year 2025, the SWMB awarded the authority $12,000 for equipment modernization. The landfill is also a cornerstone of the Greenbrier County Comprehensive Plan, identifying it as a core asset for supporting growth along the Route 219 corridor.

Environmental Stewardship

Despite the challenges posed by karst topography—which is highly susceptible to groundwater contamination—the GCSWA adheres to strict state (33CSR1) and federal standards. This includes rigorous leachate management and air permitting. Additionally, the county’s recycling center in Ronceverte processed over 14,000 tons of material between 2010 and 2019.

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The Pocahontas County Crisis: Structural Stagnation

Pocahontas County faces a terminal point in its landfill operations. The failure to expand is the result of a multifaceted crisis involving land acquisition, geography, and insufficient waste volume.

The Land Acquisition Impasse

In 2017, negotiations to purchase 25 acres adjacent to the existing landfill from landowner Jody Fertig collapsed following his death. His heirs declined to sell, and the PCSWA opted not to use eminent domain. Given that a substantial portion of the county consists of protected federal and state forest lands where waste facilities are prohibited, no other viable contiguous expansion sites exist.

Economic and Demographic Barriers

Developing a new, non-contiguous landfill is cost-prohibitive for Pocahontas County. Construction costs exceed $2 million per acre, and the total debt for a new facility is estimated at over $10 million.

Data Point

Metric

Annual MSW Volume

8,000 Tons

Permitted Monthly Tonnage Capacity

1,400 Tons

Estimated New Landfill Construction Cost

>$10 Million

Current Site Closure Cost Estimates

$2.4M – $3.2M

Post-Closure Annual Liability

$75,000 (for 30 years)

Population Below Poverty Line

20%

The county's low annual waste volume (8,000 tons) cannot generate sufficient tipping fee revenue to service the debt of a new facility without imposing unaffordable fees on a population where 20% live in poverty.

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The Transfer Station Pivot: The "Option 4" Model

To avoid a total cessation of trash services after the December 2026 closure, the PCSWA entered a private-public partnership with Allegheny Disposal Company (owned by Jacob Meck) to develop a transfer station.

Mechanics of the Partnership

Under "Option 4," the PCSWA will sell land to the Greenbrier Valley Economic Development Corporation (GVEDC) to avoid property taxes. A private entity, JacMal, LLC, will construct the station and lease it back to the SWA for operational use.

Lease and Buyout Terms:

  • Monthly Lease Payment: $16,759
  • Lease Duration: 15 Years
  • Total Lease Obligation: $3,016,620
  • Year 15 Buyout Amount: $1,103,495.24
  • Total Project Value: >$4.1 Million

The PCSWA pursued this model because it lacked the creditworthiness to secure a traditional loan, largely due to the absence of guaranteed annual funding from the County Commission.

Regulatory Mandates: Flow Control and Fees

To ensure the transfer station's solvency, the PCSWA is implementing "Flow Control" regulations. This legal mandate requires all solid waste generated within the county to be processed exclusively through the county transfer station, ensuring tipping fees are collected on all waste to cover the monthly lease.

Furthermore, the authority has debated expanding the annual "Green Box" fee to every deeded parcel of land, though this met with significant opposition from agricultural interests and has been clarified to exclude unoccupied farms.

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Public Discord and Governance Challenges

The transition to the transfer station has triggered intense public volatility, peaking in early 2026. Residents have raised several core objections:

  • Lack of Competitive Bidding: The JacMal agreement and hauling contracts were not put out for public bid.
  • Economic Exclusion of Municipalities: Towns like Durbin find it cheaper to haul waste to external facilities (e.g., Dailey), but "Flow Control" would prohibit this, forcing a municipal subsidy of the county station.
  • Privatization of Assets: The transfer of public land to a private entity is viewed by critics as an improper privatization of public resources.
  • Board Vacancies: At the time of critical decision-making, the SWA board was operating with only three of its five members, eroding public confidence.

The "Stop Gap" Warning

Proponents of the deal, including Jacob Meck and landfill manager Chris McComb, argue that alternatives—such as the county purchasing its own trucks to haul waste to Greenbrier—are even more expensive. Meck warned of a "Stop Gap" in service where no collection would be possible if a solution were not implemented before the 2026 closure, noting that any other plan would require years of new permitting.

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Regional Context and State Oversight

Both counties operate within Wasteshed F, a region where populations and waste tonnages are projected to decline. Pocahontas County faces a sharper population decline (18.3%) compared to Greenbrier (10.5%), creating a "death spiral" for fixed-cost infrastructure.

The Role of State Agencies

  • Solid Waste Management Board (SWMB): Acts as both regulator and facilitator. It provided expansion loans to Greenbrier and brokered the stakeholder group in Pocahontas that led to the transfer station deal.
  • Department of Environmental Protection (WVDEP): Manages the comprehensive permitting framework, including the Groundwater Protection Act and the WV Stream Condition Index. The closure of the Pocahontas landfill will trigger a mandatory 30-year monitoring period for groundwater pollution.

Summary of Regulatory Requirements

Compliance Requirement

Purpose

Pre-Siting Notice (§22-15-13)

Mandatory before facility establishment.

Certificate of Need (PSC)

Required for all commercial facilities.

Groundwater Protection Act

Regulates leachate and karst impact.

Post-Closure Monitoring

30-year liability for closed landfills.

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Conclusion: A Divergence of Scalability

The contrast between Greenbrier and Pocahontas Counties illustrates the scalability challenges of rural infrastructure. Greenbrier County has leveraged its status as a regional hub to create a sustainable, 150-year industrial asset. Pocahontas County, burdened by low waste volumes and geographical limitations, has been forced into a controversial private lease model to avoid total service failure. As the Greenbrier expansion proceeds, the regional disparity will likely deepen, with the Greenbrier facility increasingly serving as the primary destination for the highlands' waste.

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The Work Around

 

The "Local Workaround" implemented by the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (SWA) did not actually cause the landfill to fill up. Rather, it was a pragmatic policy response to the fact that a specific section of the landfill had already run out of space.

The Exhausted C&D Cell By June 2022, the landfill's dedicated Construction and Demolition (C&D) waste cell had completely exhausted its physical airspace and officially stopped accepting C&D materials. Under West Virginia regulations, C&D waste cannot simply be dumped into the standard Municipal Solid Waste (MSW) cells, which created a disposal crisis for local residents doing minor home repairs.

The Workaround To prevent illegal roadside dumping and maintain essential services, the SWA implemented an administrative "Local Workaround".
The authority began reclassifying "minor residential renovation debris"—such as a single door, a few boards, or a few bundles of shingles—as "Bulky Residential Waste"
. This paperwork reclassification allowed these small quantities of materials to be legally absorbed into the main MSW cells. Crucially, the SWA maintained a strict ban on large bulk loads and commercial C&D waste, which were diverted to specialized out-of-county facilities.

Did the workaround fill the landfill? No. Analysis of the SWA's intake data proves that the workaround did not abuse the landfill's capacity. Even with the workaround in place, the landfill operated at less than half of its permitted capacity throughout 2023 and 2024, taking in an average of only 673 tons per month against a legal limit of 1,400 tons. The reclassification policy only increased the landfill's monthly intake by approximately 31 tons.

Instead, the landfill's impending closure was driven by three primary factors:

  • Strict Regulatory Height Limits: The C&D cell filled up prematurely because state regulations dictate that Class D (C&D) cells cannot be built higher than the adjoining ground elevation. This prohibited the SWA from using the vertical "mounding" techniques that extend the life of standard trash cells.
  • Disaster Debris: A massive influx of saturated, bulky, and hard-to-compact debris from the catastrophic 2016 West Virginia floods consumed a disproportionate amount of the landfill's available airspace, accelerating the facility's overall depletion by several years.
  • Failed Expansion: In 2017, the SWA attempted to purchase 25 acres of adjacent land from the Fertig family to build new cells that would have extended the landfill's life by 50 years. When the landowner passed away and the heirs refused to sell, the landfill was permanently landlocked, making its eventual closure inevitable.

Plowing through the records

 


Here are the references to the granting of waivers found within the sources, categorized by their context:

Waivers for Green Box Fees

  • Use of Private Haulers: According to Section 6.1 of the PCSWA's policies, the Green Box fee will be waived if the billed individual provides monthly receipts proving their garbage is picked up by a private hauler operating in Pocahontas County.
  • Use of the "Free Day": The PCSWA permitted the waiver of the Green Box fee for residents who provided receipts proving they utilized the landfill's "free day" every single month in a fee period. If a resident skipped even one month, the waiver would be denied, which was the justification used to deny Petitioner Bernier a waiver for a six-month period in 2006. This strict requirement was reiterated to a citizen at a 2011 board meeting, emphasizing that one "cannot skip, to have the Green Box fee waived".
  • Low-Income Waivers: A 2014 Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request filed by Jerome Heinemann sought all documents and minutes regarding instances where the PCSWA granted a reduction, exemption, or "waiver of fees" for individuals on a fixed-income or low-income.
  • General Mitigation Strategy: An analysis of public finance notes that "Full Waivers" can be used as a mitigation strategy to eliminate fees for certain groups to maximize social equity, though it requires subsidies from other sources.

Denied Requests to Waive Penalties and Judgments

  • Illness/Late Penalty: In July 2025, a resident named Tara Faler requested that the SWA waive her $150 penalty for a late 2024 Green Box fee because she had been ill and out of town. Chairman David Henderson explained that while sympathetic, the board "cannot waive the penalty due to an illness" because it would set a poor policy.
  • Past Due Judgments: In March 2021, Billy Joe Brock requested that the SWA waive $5,869.98 in legal judgments and balances owed for Green Box fees spanning from 2001 to 2013. The board declined to take action, stating their policy has always required individuals to pay their judgments in order to get property liens released.

Waivers of State Authority

  • The 2014 FOIA request from Jerome Heinemann also demanded copies of documents showing instances where the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection (WVDEP) and the Public Service Commission (WVPSC) "waived their respected authorized powers," and where the Office of the Attorney General "waived its authority" to allow the PCSWA to bypass administrative procedures.

Legal and Administrative Waivers

  • Injunction Bonds: In West Virginia environmental litigation, the requirement for a private plaintiff to post a bond for an injunction "may sometimes be waived or reduced if the injunction serves a significant public interest".
  • Employee Health: The SWA's Personnel Policy includes an appendix containing a "Hepatitis Vaccination Waiver" for employees.

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Based on the provided sources, there is no record of a 2-2 tie vote occurring during the Solid Waste Authority (SWA) meeting on December 4, 2013.

While only four board members were present at that meeting (Ed Riley, David Henderson, Morgan McComb, and Douglas Bernier), all recorded votes passed either unanimously (4-0) or by a 3-0 margin with one abstention. The approved motions that day included passing meeting minutes, paying November and December bills, and authorizing a recycling advertisement.

If you are looking for a 2-2 tie vote from the SWA records, there are only two such deadlocks documented in the sources:

  • February 18, 2026: As we discussed previously, the board deadlocked 2-2 on whether to accept the multi-million dollar "Option 4" transfer station lease with Jacob Meck's company, JacMal, LLC.
  • April 27, 2011: The board had a 2-2 tie vote that resulted in a failed motion to pay the SWA's bills. Board members Jim Burks and Doug Bernier voted against the motion specifically to protest the billing practices of the SWA's attorney, David Sims. They argued that Sims was excessively charging the SWA to review old lawsuits regarding unpaid Green Box fees that were ultimately going to be dismissed.

Please let me know if you would like to explore either of these specific meetings or topics further!

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During the April 27, 2011, Solid Waste Authority (SWA) meeting, a 2-2 tie occurred during a routine motion to pay the SWA's monthly bills. The deadlock was the result of a protest against the billing practices of the SWA’s attorney, David Sims.

Here are the specific details of how the tie unfolded and the heated debate that followed:

The Grievance Over "Nickel-and-Diming" The conflict began when board member Jim Burks questioned Sims's bill. Sims had charged the SWA additional fees to review emails and draft paperwork to formally dismiss several defendants from long-standing lawsuits over unpaid Green Box fees. Because these specific defendants were either bankrupt, deceased, or in nursing homes, Burks argued it was a waste of money to pay the attorney to pursue or formally dismiss cases where the SWA had no hope of ever collecting the debt.

When board member Kenneth "Buster" Varner made a motion to pay the bills, it resulted in a 2-2 tie, with Burks and Doug Bernier voting against it.

A Heated Confrontation Following the failed vote, Chairman Ed Riley asked for a discussion, which quickly became contentious:

  • The Accusation: Doug Bernier defended his "no" vote by stating that Sims's fees were "excessive and unreasonable," and that the attorney was "nickel-and-diming us to death". He suggested the board look into hiring a different attorney.
  • The Counter-Attack: Chairman Riley fired back at Bernier, stating, "you are the man costing us the money". Riley also suggested that Bernier had a severe conflict of interest and legally should not be allowed to vote on the attorney's payment, because the SWA and Sims were actively suing Bernier at that time for his own unpaid Green Box fees.

The Financial Reality The debate prompted the board to review their actual return on investment regarding the attorney's aggressive collection lawsuits. The SWA's Office Administrator presented a report showing that since July 2007, the SWA had successfully collected $165,452.76 in past-due Green Box fees. However, over that exact same period, they had paid David Sims's law firm $113,479.16 (which included his fees, court filing fees, and postage).

While they were technically making a profit, the tight margins frustrated the board members. Burks noted that they were paying out over $30,000 a year to collect $60,000, and stated, "we are not making a whole lot of money".

The Resolution After debating the ethics and necessity of pursuing old debts, Burks acknowledged that if someone owes the SWA money, they couldn't just drop it, noting "we are between a rock and a hard place and it just continues and continues". Burks then made a new motion to pay the bills, which passed unanimously (4-0).

However, the frustration lingered. Later in that same meeting, the board actively discussed the process of requesting bids from other law firms or utilizing the State Attorney General's office to find cheaper legal representation moving forward.

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 As it turns out, this is the exact context of the 2-2 tie vote on December 4, 2013, that you asked about earlier! My apologies for missing it in the previous search.

During that meeting, the SWA board debated sending a formal letter of complaint to the West Virginia Public Service Commission (PSC). The drafted letter expressed deep concern over the PSC delaying permission for the SWA to withdraw $340,000 from its construction escrow account to pay a contractor. The letter warned the PSC that these delays could cause the SWA to default on its contractual obligations, face penalties from the contractor, and lose credibility for future projects.

However, the motion to send the letter failed in a 2-2 tie because Chairman Ed Riley and David Henderson voted against it. They refused to send the complaint for two main reasons:

  • Fear of Retaliation: David Henderson acknowledged that the PSC was at fault and "did not do what they should have," but he argued that the board needed to "be careful about writing letters because they may cause future problems" with the powerful state agency.
  • Timing: Ed Riley argued that instead of sending a standalone complaint now, the SWA should wait and include the letter's complaints the next time they officially submitted a request to withdraw funds.

In contrast, the proponents of the letter (Doug Bernier and Morgan McComb) argued that the PSC needed to be explicitly told that their delays were causing severe operational problems. Bernier expressed profound frustration over the situation, noting that the delayed money actually belonged to the SWA, not the PSC.

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The 2-2 tie on February 18, 2026, and the evenly split decision on December 4, 2013, differed fundamentally in their financial stakes, how the deadlock mechanically occurred, and their ultimate consequences for the county.

1. Subject Matter and Financial Stakes

  • 2026: The deadlock involved a highly consequential $4.1 million, 15-year public-private partnership ("Option 4") with JacMal, LLC to construct a new solid waste transfer station.
  • 2013: The split centered on a minor administrative dispute: whether to send a drafted letter of concern to the Public Service Commission (PSC) after the state agency delayed the release of escrow funds, which resulted in the SWA suffering a $500 withdrawal penalty.

2. A Formal Vote vs. A Deadlocked Debate

  • 2026: This was an officially recorded vote that required legal intervention. During the meeting, two members voted in favor of the multi-million-dollar lease, one voted against, and board member Ed Riley abstained. The SWA contacted the West Virginia Ethics Commission, which ruled that because only four members were present, the abstention legally functioned as a "no" vote. This ruling officially created the 2-2 tie that failed the motion.
  • 2013: Although our previous conversation labeled this a "tie vote," a review of the official meeting minutes reveals that no formal motion was made and no official vote was ever taken. The four members present were simply deadlocked in a 2-2 debate. Morgan McComb and Doug Bernier strongly supported sending the complaint letter, but David Henderson and Ed Riley opposed it out of fear that angering the PSC would hurt the SWA's chances in future rate cases.

3. Resolution and Aftermath

  • 2026: The tie triggered an administrative crisis that was aggressively reversed one week later. Proponents weaponized the threat of a disastrous "stop-gap" in waste services to pressure the dissenters into a reluctant, unanimous approval of the contract. This controversial reversal sparked severe public protests, anger over the lack of competitive bidding, and led directly to Ed Riley resigning from the board.
  • 2013: The debate ended quietly. With the board split in opinion and no member putting forward a motion to force a vote, the SWA simply dropped the issue and the drafted complaint letter was never sent.

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During the December 4, 2013 meeting, Solid Waste Authority (SWA) board members David Henderson and Ed Riley refused to send the complaint letter because they feared that antagonizing the Public Service Commission (PSC) would jeopardize the SWA's future financial and operational requests.

Because the SWA operates as a regulated utility provider, it is highly dependent on the PSC for its financial survival. The board's fear of retaliation was rooted in several specific vulnerabilities:

  • Future Escrow Withdrawals: Chairman Ed Riley explicitly warned that the SWA might soon need to ask the PSC for permission to withdraw funds from their construction escrow account to purchase a new garbage truck. Riley noted that while PSC staff had verbally indicated they might allow this, it was not guaranteed in writing. He cautioned the board that if they decided to "get onto them, they may not be willing to assist us later".
  • Future Rate Cases: David Henderson argued that sending the complaint could "cause problems with future PSC cases". The PSC holds the power to approve or deny the SWA's requests to increase its tipping fees, and it subjects the SWA to thorough financial reviews by PSC analysts during every rate case.
  • Broad Regulatory Power: The PSC holds extensive authority over local solid waste management systems, including the power to grant certificates of need for new facilities and the authority to approve or deny mandatory "flow control" regulations.

Ultimately, Henderson and Riley concluded that formally scolding the powerful state agency over a $500 early withdrawal penalty was a short-sighted gamble that could severely harm the SWA if the PSC decided to withhold its cooperation on major future approvals.

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During the December 17, 2025, special meeting, the Solid Waste Authority (SWA) board went into a closed executive session and controversially allowed private contractors Jacob and Malinda Meck (the owners of Allegheny Disposal LLC) to attend.

The SWA board members present for this meeting were David Henderson, David McLaughlin, Ed Riley, Phillip Cobb, and Greg Hamons (who attended via teleconference). Additionally, the SWA's attorney, David Sims, attended the meeting via Zoom, alongside SWA employees Chris McComb, Zed Weatherholt, and Mary Clendenen.

Notably, the sources highlight who was explicitly excluded from this executive session: public officials including Pocahontas County Commission President John Rebinski and Marlinton Mayor Sam Felton were not allowed to attend the closed-door discussions. Both officials were reportedly upset about being shut out of the important executive session and left the courthouse before the SWA returned to the open public meeting.

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The records of the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (SWA) indicate that the board has explicitly cited four specific statutory exceptions to enter into closed executive sessions:

  • Exception 2A (Personnel Matters): This exception is frequently used to protect the privacy of individuals during discussions related to SWA staff. It has been cited for general personnel matters, discussing specific employee issues, and conducting interviews with prospective employees.
  • Exception 8 (Security Devices): The board has utilized this exception to discuss the development and implementation of security measures, specifically regarding the installation of surveillance systems for the Green Box sites.
  • Exception 9 (Property and Commercial Competition): This is the most frequently cited exception in the provided records and is used for two distinct purposes:
    • Property Lease or Purchase: To protect the SWA's negotiating position when discussing the lease or purchase of real estate, such as the landfill property.
    • Commercial Competition: To protect sensitive strategic information when discussing matters that involve commercial competition, such as the public-private partnership negotiations for the transfer station.
  • Exception 12 (Attorney-Client Privilege): This exception is used to hold confidential discussions with legal counsel. For example, during an October 2023 meeting, the board cited Exception 12 to discuss a new downgradient groundwater monitoring well under attorney-client privilege.

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Because the Solid Waste Authority (SWA) is tightly regulated by the West Virginia Public Service Commission (PSC), it cannot access its escrow funds without explicit permission. While the closure and post-closure escrow account is strictly reserved for the eventual capping and monitoring of the landfill, the PSC has indicated that the "construction escrow" account is somewhat more flexible.

Beyond the $340,000 withdrawal for cell construction in 2013, the SWA considered and requested escrow withdrawals for several other major expenses:

1. Replacing a Destroyed Compactor (2014) In July 2014, the SWA's 1990 Caterpillar compactor was severely damaged by a fire. Faced with a massive financial hurdle to replace it, the board voted to file a request with the PSC to withdraw "all available funds" from their limited-access construction escrow account. By October 2014, a PSC Utilities Analyst recommended allowing the SWA to withdraw $77,000 immediately and another $18,000 in early 2015 to combine with insurance payouts and emergency grants to buy the replacement compactor.

2. Closure Turf, Topsoil, and Leachate Maintenance (2025) As the landfill neared capacity in 2025, the SWA's operating funds were being heavily depleted by the engineering costs associated with getting their new "ClosureTurf" capping method approved. In April and May 2025, the board consulted with the PSC about requesting a withdrawal from the construction escrow account to reimburse the SWA for these turf engineering costs, the purchase of topsoil, and expensive upcoming maintenance required for the leachate treatment plant. The board agreed to proceed with this request once they compiled an itemized list of the costs.

3. Purchasing a New Garbage Truck (Future Consideration) Looking toward the future transition to a transfer station model, board member David McLaughlin suggested that if any funds were left in the construction escrow account after the landfill officially closed, the SWA might ask the PSC to let them use the money to purchase a new garbage truck. However, Chairman Ed Riley cautioned the board against relying on this plan, noting that the PSC alone decides what escrow funds can be used for and he "would not count on being able to use any of that money".

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In West Virginia law, a "usurper" or "intruder" is an individual who takes possession of a public office without any legal right, title, or color of authority, such as failing to take the mandatory constitutional oath of office. Because they lack legal authorization, the official acts of a usurper are generally void and cannot be legally saved or validated by the "de facto officer doctrine".

If an individual is deemed a usurper, they face severe legal, financial, and criminal consequences:

  • Ouster via Quo Warranto: The Attorney General, a prosecuting attorney, or an "interested person" can bring a direct legal challenge against the usurper through a writ of quo warranto. If the court determines the individual failed to properly qualify, it will issue a "judgment of ouster," which immediately removes them from office and legally bars them from exercising any further authority.
  • Clawbacks and Salary Forfeiture: Usurpers are strictly prohibited from receiving public compensation. If a usurper has already been paid a salary or received benefits, the state or municipality can initiate "clawback actions" to recover those public funds. Additionally, if there is a rightful (de jure) officeholder who was kept out of the seat by the usurper, that rightful official can personally sue the usurper to recover the salary paid during the period of intrusion.
  • Loss of Qualified Immunity: Public officials are normally shielded from personal civil lawsuits by "qualified immunity." However, because a usurper's actions are ultra vires (beyond their legal power), they are stripped of this state-funded legal defense. This exposes the usurper to personal liability for civil rights violations, torts, and financial defaults caused by their unauthorized decisions.
  • Criminal Charges for Impersonation: Knowingly exercising the functions of a public official without legal authority is a misdemeanor offense for impersonating an official.
  • Permanent Disqualification for False Swearing: If a usurper signs documents claiming to have taken the oath when they have not, they can be charged with the misdemeanor of "false swearing". A conviction for this offense carries a fine, potential jail time, and makes the individual "forever incapable of holding any office of honor, trust or profit in this state," effectively ending their career in public service permanently.

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A de facto officer is an individual who operates under a "show of right" or "color of title". They have been ostensibly chosen for a public office but possess a technical defect in their qualification, such as missing a required filing deadline. To protect the public and maintain the stability of government operations, the official acts of a de facto officer are generally considered valid as to the public.

In contrast, a usurper (or intruder) is someone who takes possession of a public office without any color of right or title. For example, an individual who is elected or appointed but fails to fulfill the mandatory constitutional and statutory obligation to take the oath of office has not completed the steps to acquire legal (de jure) status, and is legally considered a usurper. Because they completely lack legal authorization, the actions of a usurper are generally void and cannot be saved or validated by the protections of the de facto officer doctrine.

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The deadlock on February 18, 2026, occurred during a special meeting of the Solid Waste Authority (SWA) board, which was called to address the looming closure of the county landfill and review lease options for a new transfer station presented by private developer Jacob Meck. Because the board was operating with only four members due to a recent vacancy, the stage was set for a stalemate.

The Proposal (Option #4) During the meeting, board members expressed deep concern over the unpredictability of the Consumer Price Index (CPI) increases attached to Meck's initial lease proposals. In response, Meck presented a new, fixed-rate proposal known as "Option #4". This 15-year lease-to-own agreement required a fixed monthly payment of $16,759 and a final buyout of $1,103,495.24. The deal also included maintenance of the transfer station structure and crane by Meck's company, JacMal, LLC.

The First Vote and the Dissent Board member David McLaughlin made a motion to accept Option #4, which was seconded by Phillip Cobb.

  • The Proponents: Chairman Dave Henderson and Vice-Chairman David McLaughlin strongly supported the plan, arguing that the lengthy permitting and construction timeline for a transfer station left the county with no other viable path to avoid a total cessation of waste services once the landfill reached capacity.
  • The Opposition: The vote resulted in two members in favor, one against, and one abstention. Cobb explicitly voted "no," stating he could not support Option #4 because the $4 million total cost would lead to rate increases that would "hurt everyone". Ed Riley abstained because he felt he did not have enough information on the newly presented proposal. Riley also expressed serious concerns about the SWA's ability to actually collect the projected $310 annual Green Box fees through Magistrate Court, asking what would happen if the SWA couldn't pay the lease because residents failed to pay their bills on time.

The Ethics Commission Ruling Because the vote was split 2 in favor, 1 against, and 1 abstention, Office Administrator Mary Clendenen called John Roush at the West Virginia State Ethics Commission to verify if the motion had legally passed. Roush ruled that because only four members were present, the abstention effectively counted against the motion, meaning it lacked majority approval and officially failed as a 2-2 tie.

The Second Attempt Refusing to let the project die, McLaughlin made a second motion to accept Option #4 later in the exact same meeting, this time seconded by Chairman Henderson. However, this second attempt yielded the identical result: the motion failed again with Cobb voting against and Riley abstaining.

This administrative paralysis halted the transfer station project for a week until the February 25 regular meeting. At that subsequent meeting, Henderson and McLaughlin successfully pressured Cobb and Riley into a reluctant, unanimous approval by stressing the severe threat of a "stop-gap" period where the county would have absolutely nowhere to dump its trash.

 

 

 

 

 

Alternate Solution?

 

 Strategic Transition Plan: Regionalizing Solid Waste Operations for Pocahontas County

1. The Terminal Status of Localized Disposal: A Case for Transition

The Pocahontas County Landfill is entering the final stage of its operational lifecycle, transitioning from a localized asset to a terminal liability. Since 1986, this facility has managed the county’s municipal solid waste (MSW) within the challenging topography of the Allegheny Front. However, with volumetric capacity projected to be exhausted by December 2026, the county faces a mandatory shift in its operational philosophy. Transitioning to a regionalized model is no longer a matter of discretionary policy; it is a strategic requirement necessitated by physical limits and the prohibitive economics of modern landfilling.

Metric

Value

Annual Tonnage Accepted

8,083 tons

Permitted Monthly Tonnage Limit

1,400 tons

Actual Monthly Tonnage (Average)

674 tons

Current Facility Utilization Rate

48%

Projected Closure Date

December 2026

The Financial Density Paradox Localized disposal in a low-volume waste-shed is victim to a "financial density" paradox. Sustainable landfill operations require high tonnage to amortize the fixed costs of regulatory compliance and specialized equipment, such as 826 trash compactors and sophisticated liner systems. With an annual throughput of only ~8,000 tons, Pocahontas County cannot achieve the economies of scale necessary to fund new cell construction, which is estimated at $10 million over 15 years. This creates a debt-service requirement that would necessitate astronomical tipping fees, effectively bankrupting the local waste-shed.

The Post-Closure Liability Burden The cessation of burial operations in 2026 triggers immediate and long-term financial obligations under West Virginia legislative rule 33CSR1. The Solid Waste Authority (SWA) faces a $2.4 million capital requirement for "closure turf" (final capping) and a mandated 30-year maintenance cycle costing approximately $75,000 annually for leachate treatment and groundwater monitoring. Currently, the SWA holds only $300,000 in unrestricted funds—covering a mere 12.5% of the immediate capital requirement. This $2.1 million liquidity gap confirms that the status quo is insolvent, necessitating a rapid transition to a hub-and-spoke transport infrastructure.

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2. Infrastructure Necessity: The Transfer Station Logistical Model

In a rural, mountainous geography, a centralized transfer station is the only mechanism capable of preventing a total collapse of municipal sanitation budgets. Consolidation of waste is required to mitigate the extreme inefficiencies inherent in long-haul transport from remote collection points.

Destination

Approx. Distance from Marlinton

Approx. Round-Trip Transit Time

Greenbrier County Landfill

71.5 - 78 miles

3.5 - 4 hours

Tygarts Valley (Dailey)

45 - 55 miles

2.5 - 3 hours

Tucker County Landfill

~110 miles

5 - 6 hours

Efficiency Transformation: Direct Haul vs. Transfer The logistical penalty of direct hauling is profound. A standard municipal packer truck carries only 8 to 10 tons. Transporting the county’s 154 weekly tons to Lewisburg would require 20 weekly trips, consuming 80 hours of driver labor and accelerating the mechanical degradation of the fleet. A transfer station allows for compaction into "walking-floor" trailers with 20 to 25-ton capacities. This consolidates the weekly output into just 7 or 8 trips, drastically reducing fuel, labor, and maintenance overhead.

Operational Rationale Landfill Manager Chris McComb’s advocacy for the transfer station is rooted in a pragmatic cost-benefit analysis:

  • Fleet Longevity: Prevents the rapid mechanical failure of collection vehicles on long-haul mountain routes.
  • Labor Optimization: Eliminates excessive "windshield time," keeping drivers focused on local collection efficiency.
  • Cost Predictability: Fixed facility lease payments are more fiscally manageable than the volatile maintenance and insurance costs of a direct-haul fleet.

The technical necessity of this facility is undisputed; however, the procurement process currently governing its development introduces significant governance and fiscal risks.

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3. Procurement Integrity and the "Option #4" Fiscal Framework

Public-private partnerships for essential infrastructure require rigorous competitive bidding to ensure price discovery and public trust. The current trajectory, centered on the JacMal/Meck proposal, bypasses these safeguards, creating substantial long-term fiscal exposure.

Governance Risk and Financial Terms The SWA is navigating this 15-year agreement while facing a significant governance crisis; the board currently operates with only three of its five authorized members following the resignations of members such as Riley and Hamons. Under the "Option #4" framework, the SWA commits to:

  • Fixed Monthly Lease: $16,759.
  • Tax Strategy: Deeding or leasing land to the Greenbrier Valley Economic Development Corporation (GVEDC) to exempt the private developer from property taxes, a move intended to lower the lease rate but one that involves the transfer of public land control.
  • Buyout Clause: A final payment of $1,103,495.24 at Year 15.

The Competitive Bidding Void By negotiating exclusively with JacMal/Meck, the SWA has failed to establish a market benchmark. Excluding regional players like Greenbrier Valley Disposal (GVD) prevents the county from exploring alternative logistical models that could yield significant savings.

Aspect of Bid

JacMal/Meck Proposal

Potential GVD Competitive Bid (Simulated)

Experience

Local; focus on Allegheny Disposal.

Regional; broad multi-county footprint.

Model 1: Integrated Contract

New construction on public land.

Use of existing GVD hubs to reduce station scale.

Model 2: Private Capital

High fixed-rate lease-to-own.

Lower cost-of-capital via existing large-scale fleet.

Model 3: O&M Efficiency

SWA operates and maintains.

SWA owns building; GVD provides machinery/labor.

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4. Regulatory Roadmap: DEP Permitting and PSC Flow Control

The transition is overseen by the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) and the Public Service Commission (PSC), whose roles are critical for environmental compliance and financial solvency.

Strategic Risk: Compressed Procurement Timeline The SWA is currently utilizing a "time-pressure defense" to justify its non-competitive procurement. Because a new transfer station requires a complex DEP permit involving quality control and financial assurance, proponents argue that any change in the current plan would miss the December 2026 deadline. This compressed timeline is a direct result of a lack of long-term planning, as the landfill’s terminal status has been known for years.

The Flow Control Mandate To fund the $201,108 annual lease, the SWA is pursuing a "Flow Control" ordinance. Attorney David Sims identifies this as an essential tool to prevent "waste leakage." Without a mandate that all county waste pass through the Marlinton hub, the SWA would lose the tonnage needed to spread fixed costs, potentially causing Green Box Fees to spike from $135 to over $300.

PSC Jurisdictional Factors The PSC evaluates flow control based on waste composition, environmental impact, financial feasibility, and "efficiency of disposal." The lack of competitive bidding and the geographic inefficiencies for northern residents provide a legal lever for a PSC challenge, which could stall the entire transition.

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5. Addressing Geographic Conflicts and the Northern District Disconnect

A "one-size-fits-all" centralized model creates strategic friction in the northern regions, where the logistical realities of residents do not align with a Marlinton-based hub.

The Durbin-Dailey Inefficiency For Durbin residents, the Tygarts Valley station in Dailey is significantly closer. Flow control would mandate a "logistical loop": waste is hauled south to Marlinton, a tipping fee is paid, and then the waste is hauled back north or further south to Lewisburg. This redundancy is viewed by northern residents as a direct infringement on their rights and an economic inefficiency.

Socio-Economic Impact and Resistance Opposition is exacerbated by the SWA's exploration of new revenue streams.

Resident Group

Primary Concerns

Elderly / Fixed Income

Unaffordable Green Box Fees (projected $300+).

Farmers / Timber Cos.

Resistance to fees on unimproved deeded tracts.

Northern Residents

Logistical redundancy; lack of access to Dailey hub.

Local Businesses

Increased tipping fees impacting operational overhead.

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6. Strategic Recommendations for a Sustainable Transition

Pocahontas County is caught in a "rural infrastructure trap." To escape this without creating a permanent financial anchor, the SWA must inject transparency and competitive rigor into its final planning phases.

Actionable Policy Steps

  1. Fast-Track Hauling RFP: Separate the hauling contract from the facility lease immediately. Issuing a competitive bid for transport allows regional players like GVD to compete, potentially reducing the total system cost even if the JacMal facility moves forward.
  2. Geographic Flow Control Exemptions: Adopt an "administrative fee" model for the northern district. This allows waste from Durbin to go to Dailey, provided a reduced fee is paid to the SWA to support county-wide infrastructure. This achieves logistical optimization while preventing revenue leakage.
  3. Inter-County Collaboration: Formalize a long-term partnership with the Greenbrier County Landfill. As a "captive customer" for the next 30 years, Pocahontas County should negotiate discounted regional tipping rates based on guaranteed volume.
  4. State-Level Closure Funding: Pursue emergency state assistance to bridge the $2.1 million liquidity gap in landfill capping costs. Offloading this immediate capital burden is the only viable way to mitigate the projected 122% spike in resident Green Box Fees.

Final Synthesis While the shift to a transfer station is a logistical necessity, the current non-competitive procurement and the 3-of-5 member board vacancy represent significant governance risks. Implementing competitive checks and geographic flexibility is the only path to transforming this infrastructure from a point of public contention into a sustainable foundation for the county's future.

Thinking Outside the Box!


Strategic Briefing: Pocahontas County Solid Waste Management Transition

Executive Summary

Pocahontas County, West Virginia, is currently at a critical infrastructure crossroads as its primary Class B municipal solid waste landfill approaches its terminal capacity, estimated to occur between October and December 2026. The county faces a multifaceted crisis characterized by the economic unfeasibility of new landfill construction, significant funding gaps for mandatory closure and post-closure care, and intense public controversy regarding the procurement of replacement infrastructure.

The Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (SWA) has moved toward a regionalized "hub-and-spoke" transport model centered on a proposed transfer station. However, the selection of a private partner (JacMal Properties LLC) through a non-competitive process has sparked significant public distrust. Key stakeholders are concerned about the fiscal impact—including a projected increase in annual "Green Box Fees" from $135 to over $300—and the logistical inefficiencies imposed by "Flow Control" ordinances on northern county residents.

The Terminal Status of Local Landfill Operations

The Pocahontas County Landfill has served the region since 1986, but it is no longer a viable long-term disposal solution due to physical capacity and economic constraints.

  • Capacity Deadlines: Engineering assessments indicate the facility will reach absolute volumetric capacity by late 2026.
  • The Economic Paradox: To be sustainable, modern landfills require "financial density." Pocahontas County generates only 8,000 to 8,100 tons of waste annually. The fixed costs of regulatory compliance and specialized equipment (e.g., 826 compactors, liner systems) cannot be amortized effectively across such low volumes.
  • Expansion Costs: Constructing a new landfill cell or facility is estimated to cost over $10 million over 15 years, a debt burden the county's small waste-shed cannot support.

Landfill Operational Metrics (CY 2023-2025)

Metric

Value

Annual Tonnage Accepted

~8,083 tons

Permitted Monthly Limit

1,400 tons

Actual Monthly Average

674 tons

Facility Utilization Rate

48%

Estimated Final Closure

December 2026

Financial Liabilities and Post-Closure Obligations

The cessation of landfilling operations initiates a mandatory, expensive regulatory process governed by West Virginia legislative rule 33CSR1.

  • Immediate Closure Costs: Initial estimates for capping and installing gas/leachate controls were $3.2 million. The SWA is attempting to reduce this to $2.4 million through "closure turf" technology.
  • Post-Closure Maintenance: The SWA is legally mandated to monitor the site for 30 years post-closure. This includes operating a leachate treatment plant at an estimated cost of $75,000 per year.
  • Funding Shortfall: The SWA currently holds only $300,000 in unrestricted funds, leaving a massive gap in meeting its environmental liabilities.

Logistical Necessity of the Transfer Station Model

Upon the landfill's closure, waste must be transported to regional facilities such as the Greenbrier County Landfill in Lewisburg or the Tucker County Landfill.

  • Inefficiency of Direct Hauling: Standard packer trucks carry only 8 to 10 tons. A round trip to Lewisburg takes 3.5 to 4 hours. Direct hauling the county's weekly 154 tons would require 20 round trips and 80 hours of driver time.
  • The Hub-and-Spoke Solution: A transfer station allows small trucks to unload locally. Waste is then compacted into high-capacity "walking-floor" trailers (20–25 tons). This reduces the weekly requirement to only 7 or 8 trips, significantly lowering fuel, labor, and maintenance costs.

Regional Transport Distances from Marlinton

Destination

Approximate Round-Trip Time

Greenbrier County Landfill

3.5 - 4 hours

Dailey (Tygarts Valley)

2.5 - 3 hours

Tucker County Landfill

5 - 6 hours

Procurement Controversy: Option #4 and JacMal Properties

The SWA has pursued "Option #4," a 15-year lease-to-own agreement with JacMal Properties LLC (owned by Jacob Meck). This proposal has become a focal point of public dissent due to its non-competitive nature.

Financial Structure of Option #4

  • Monthly Lease Payment: $16,759 (fixed).
  • Annual Obligation: $201,108.
  • Duration: 15 years.
  • Final Buyout (Year 15): $1,103,495.24.
  • Total Contract Value: Approximately $4.12 million.

Primary Criticisms

  • Lack of Competitive Bidding: The SWA negotiated exclusively with a single provider, preventing market-based price discovery.
  • Public Land Use: Public land is being deeded or leased to a private entity to exempt the developer from property taxes.
  • Funding Stability: The SWA is committing to millions in debt without a stable revenue source, necessitating drastic fee hikes for residents.

Evaluation of Competitive Alternatives: Greenbrier Valley Disposal (GVD)

The exclusion of regional competitors like Greenbrier Valley Disposal (GVD) has raised questions about potential missed savings. GVD is an established entity with an A+ BBB rating and existing infrastructure.

  • Integrated Contracts: GVD already hauls waste to Lewisburg and could have proposed a comprehensive hauling contract using existing hubs.
  • Financing Advantages: As a larger regional entity, GVD might have secured lower cost-of-capital for construction, potentially reducing lease payments below the $16,759 mark.
  • Operational Efficiency: GVD could have offered an Operation and Maintenance (O&M) contract, leveraging their existing fleet and secondary units to reduce overhead.

Geographic Conflict and the Flow Control Ordinance

To ensure the transfer station's financial viability, the SWA is implementing a "Flow Control" ordinance, requiring all county waste to pass through the new facility.

  • The Durbin/Dailey Disconnect: Residents in northern Pocahontas County (Durbin) are geographically closer to the Tygarts Valley Transfer Station in Dailey. Flow control forces these residents to drive south to Marlinton, only for the waste to potentially be hauled back north or further south to Lewisburg.
  • Economic Rationale: SWA counsel argues flow control is "financially necessary" to ensure enough tonnage passes through the station to cover the $201,108 annual lease. Without mandatory participation, "leakage" to other counties would force even higher fees on the remaining residents.

Socio-Political Implications

The crisis has led to a breakdown in local governance and public trust.

  • Green Box Fee Increases: Residents on fixed incomes face an increase from $135 to potentially over $300, which many view as unaffordable.
  • Board Instability: Several SWA board members have resigned, and the authority currently operates with only three of its five authorized members.
  • Regulatory Oversight: Any flow control challenges or permitting delays will involve the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) and the Public Service Commission (PSC). The PSC must determine if the SWA's plan truly serves "public convenience and necessity."

Synthesis and Future Outlook

The transition to a transfer station is a logistical requirement for Pocahontas County, but the current path is fraught with procurement and geographic inequities.

  1. Procurement Flaw: By bypassing competitive bidding, the SWA lacks a benchmark to prove the JacMal deal is the best value for taxpayers.
  2. Geographic Inequity: Flow control creates a "zero-sum game" where northern residents are forced into inefficient logistics to subsidize county-wide debt.
  3. Fiscal Risk: Without state assistance for the $2.4 million closure cost, the financial burden on residents will remain extreme.

The upcoming 2026 deadline leaves a narrow window for the SWA to restore public trust, finalize DEP permitting, and potentially seek more efficient, competitive hauling solutions to mitigate the looming fee increases.

 

Why a Tiny West Virginia County’s Trash Crisis is a $4 Million Warning for Rural America

The 2026 Ticking Clock

Pocahontas County is currently in the grip of a "terminal transition." For decades, the county relied on its own landfill to bury the waste of its 8,000 residents, but that era has reached its expiration date. The county’s only public disposal facility is projected to reach its absolute volumetric capacity by December 2026.

This is more than a local logistical hurdle; it is a "rural infrastructure trap." A small population with a limited tax base is now forced to solve a multi-million dollar environmental and fiscal crisis with dwindling resources. With the clock ticking toward a mandatory shutdown, the county must pivot from local burial to a complex, regionalized transport model—a shift that has exposed a breakdown in procurement transparency and public trust.

The Economic Paradox: Why Having Less Trash is a Financial Disaster

In modern waste management, low volume is a catastrophic economic liability. Sustainable landfills require "financial density"—a high ratio of annual tonnage to the fixed overhead costs of regulatory compliance and equipment. Pocahontas County simply lacks the volume to amortize the costs of modern facility standards.

The construction of a single new landfill cell is estimated to cost upwards of $10 million over 15 years. For a waste-shed supporting only 8,000 people, the debt service required for such a project is a financial impossibility.

Metric

Value

Permitted Monthly Tonnage

1,400 tons

Actual Monthly Average

674 tons

With a utilization rate of only 48%, the facility cannot generate the revenue necessary to fund its own replacement. This paradox has forced the Solid Waste Authority (SWA) to abandon local disposal in favor of a transfer station model, where waste is consolidated and hauled to larger regional facilities.

The $2.4 Million "Closure Turf" Gamble

The cessation of waste acceptance in 2026 does not end the county's financial liability; it merely shifts it into a decades-long phase of environmental stewardship. Under state regulations, the SWA must cap the facility and monitor it for 30 years. While initial closure estimates reached $3.2 million, the SWA is pursuing a $2.4 million "closure turf" technology to reduce immediate capital requirements.

However, the SWA currently has only $300,000 in unrestricted funds—a massive shortfall for a project of this scale. Beyond the cap itself, the county faces an enduring mechanical burden.

"Following the successful capping of the landfill, the SWA is mandated by law to maintain and monitor the site for 30 years. The projected cost for this ongoing maintenance is approximately $75,000 per year, covering expenses such as leachate treatment, which requires a dedicated system and plant."

The 80-Hour Logistics Nightmare

Once the landfill closes, waste must be transported to regional facilities such as the Greenbrier County Landfill. Without a central transfer station, the county would be forced into a "direct haul" model that is logistically ruinous.

A standard municipal packer truck carries 8 to 10 tons. For the county’s weekly output of 154 tons, direct hauling would require roughly 20 round trips per week. At four hours per trip, this translates to 80 hours of driver time every week. Landfill Manager Chris McComb has argued that the costs of purchasing, insuring, and maintaining a direct-haul fleet would far exceed the lease payments for a dedicated transfer station facility.

The transfer station acts as a "hub-and-spoke" necessity, consolidating waste into "walking-floor" trailers that carry 25 tons. This reduces the logistics burden to just seven or eight trips per week, protecting the primary collection fleet from mechanical degradation.

Option #4: The Controversy of the Non-Competitive Bid

To secure this infrastructure, the SWA entered into a "lease-to-own" agreement known as "Option #4" with JacMal Properties LLC, owned by Jacob Meck. The terms involve a fixed monthly lease of $16,759 over 15 years, concluding with a $1.1 million buyout.

As an investigative analyst, the most glaring procedural red flag is the total absence of competitive bidding. The SWA negotiated exclusively with Meck, using a "time-pressure" defense—arguing that any alternative would fail due to DEP permitting timelines. This "strategic bottleneck" allowed the SWA to bypass price discovery. Furthermore, the deal includes a maneuver to deed the land to the Greenbrier Valley Economic Development Corporation (GVEDC) specifically to exempt the private developer from property taxes.

This lack of transparency is occurring while the SWA board is "limping," currently operating with only three of its five authorized members following the resignations of Ed Riley and Greg Hamons.

The "What-Ifs" of a Competitive Bid:

  • Market Benchmarking: A bid from Greenbrier Valley Disposal (GVD)—an entity with an A+ BBB rating and existing regional infrastructure—could have provided a "second look" at the $16,759 monthly rate.
  • Lower Cost-of-Capital: A regional player like GVD might have secured better financing terms than a localized startup, potentially saving taxpayers hundreds of thousands over the 15-year term.
  • Zonal Efficiency: A competitor might have proposed utilizing existing regional hubs to reduce the $4 million construction footprint.

The Geography of Inefficiency: The Durbin-Dailey Loop

To ensure the transfer station remains solvent, the SWA has implemented a "Flow Control" ordinance, mandating that all waste generated in the county pass through their facility. This is a "financial necessity" to cover the $201,108 annual lease cost, but it creates a logistical absurdity for northern residents in Durbin.

Durbin residents are geographically closer to the Tygarts Valley facility in Dailey. Under Flow Control, a hauler in Durbin must drive south to the Marlinton transfer station to pay a tipping fee, only for that same waste to be hauled back north toward its final destination. This creates a zero-sum game: geographic efficiency is sacrificed to keep the SWA’s high-cost lease from collapsing. This ordinance must still face the Public Service Commission (PSC), which evaluates such mandates based on "public convenience and necessity."

Conclusion: The Real Cost of the "Rural Infrastructure Trap"

The Pocahontas County crisis is a case study in the thinning margin for error in rural governance. The most immediate "smoking gun" for the public is the fiscal fallout: the annual "Green Box Fee" for residents is projected to skyrocket from $135 to over $300 to fund this non-competitive deal.

The transition from local burial to regional transport is permanent. As environmental regulations tighten, the "infrastructure independence" once enjoyed by small counties is being replaced by high-cost, private-public partnerships that often lack the rigor of the open market.

The ultimate question for rural America remains: Can small counties survive these transitions without becoming tethered to non-competitive monopolies, or is the "rural infrastructure trap" the new permanent reality for the heartland?

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April 21 Pocahontas School Board

 

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