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The Shaver Family

 


 

Genealogical Analysis of the Shaver Family: Paul Shaver and Mary Roy Lineage

Executive Summary

The genealogical reconstruction of the Shaver family in the Kanawha Valley reveals a complex history of Palatine migration, linguistic evolution, and frontier settlement. The central research focus—the placement of Sarah Shaver (born 1862) within the household of Paul Shaver (1818–1865) and Mary Roy (1825–1904)—is complicated by the administrative and social disruptions of the American Civil War and the creation of the state of West Virginia.

Analysis indicates that Sarah Shaver fits perfectly into the biological birth intervals of the Paul and Mary Shaver household. However, the loss of records between 1861 and 1865, the death of the patriarch in 1865, and the potential misidentification with contemporaneous relatives have created a "brick wall." The investigation highlights the utility of digital resources, specifically the Shaver Family Updated 2014 (frequently referenced as "LibGen.pdf"), and the necessity of utilizing autosomal DNA and maternal line triangulation to resolve this lineage.

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Etymological Evolution: From Schäffer to Shaver

The Shaver surname is a primary example of the linguistic Anglicization of Germanic names in North America. Derived from the German Schäffer or Schaefer (historically meaning a shepherd or household manager), the name underwent a gradual phonetic transformation influenced by English-speaking officials.

Surname Variations and Regional Concentration

Surname Variant

Typical Regional Concentration

Historical Record Types

Schaefer

Lancaster, PA; Early Rockingham, VA

German Church Books, Ship Manifests

Shaffer

Kanawha, WV; Roane, WV

Civil War Records, Post-1870 Census

Shafer

Braxton, WV; Rockingham, VA

Land Deeds, Marriage Bonds

Shaver

Kanawha, WV; Cabarrus, NC; Arkansas

Vital Statistics, Probate Inventories

This phonetic fluidity often masks familial connections. In Kanawha County, "Shaver" became the dominant spelling by the mid-19th century, though "Shaffer" remains a common variant in related branches.

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Migratory Corridors and Settlement Patterns

The Shaver lineage in West Virginia originated with Palatine immigrants in the early 18th century.

  • Progenitors: Peter Shaver and his wife Dorothy settled in the Ephrata region of Lancaster County, Pennsylvania.
  • The Great Wagon Road: The family moved south through the Shenandoah Valley, establishing clusters in Rockingham and Augusta Counties, Virginia.
  • The Kanawha Bridge: John David Shaver and Mary Parsons represent the generational bridge between the northern Shenandoah and the Kanawha Valley.
  • Drivers of Migration:
    1. Land Availability: Exhaustion of prime land in Pennsylvania and the Shenandoah forced expansion westward.
    2. Transportation: River navigation on the Kanawha and early turnpikes facilitated movement.
    3. The Salt Industry: The Kanawha Salines created economic demand for laborers and farmers.

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Biographical Profile: Paul Shaver and Mary Roy

Paul Shaver (1818–1865)

Paul Shaver was born in 1818 and reached maturity during the transition of the Kanawha Valley from wilderness to structured society. He married Mary Roy on June 18, 1846, in Kanawha County. His death in 1865 coincides with the end of the Civil War, a period of high mortality in the region due to combat, disease, and general privation.

Mary Roy (1825–1904)

The daughter of John Roy and Mary Townsend, Mary served as the stabilizer of the household during a long widowhood. She witnessed the reconstruction of the Kanawha Valley and the birth of West Virginia as a state. Research suggests her maternal line may offer clearer documentation (through probate or land transfers) where patriarchal records fail.

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Household Reconstruction and the "Sarah Shaver" Inquiry

The following table reconstructs the known children of Paul Shaver and Mary Roy. A birth in 1862 for Sarah Shaver fits the established two-to-three-year birth interval between 1856 and 1865.

Child Name

Birth Year (Approx.)

Spousal Connections

Key Biographical Notes

Delilah A. Shaver

1847

Unrecorded

Eldest child.

Catharine Shaver

1849

Shaffer

Illustrates variant spelling usage.

John August Shaver

1851

Unrecorded

Named after grandfather/great-grandfather.

Mary Melinda Shaver

1853

Unrecorded

Likely named after Mary Roy.

Joseph Shaver

1854

Unrecorded

Born during land expansion.

Louisa Eliza Shaver

1855

Smith

Recorded as Louisa Eliza (Shaver) Smith.

Martha Jane Shaver

1855

Cart

Born in Roane/Kanawha; died 1936.

William Henry Shaver

1856

Shaffer

Died April 25, 1918.

Nancy Jane Shaver

1858–1860

Fisher

Recorded as Nancy Jane (Shaver) Fisher.

Sarah Shaver

1862

Unknown

The subject of the "brick wall" inquiry.

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Challenges in Validating Sarah Shaver (1862)

Sarah Shaver’s visibility in the historical record was compromised by several factors:

  • Age at Patriarch's Death: She was approximately three years old when Paul Shaver died in 1865, making her vulnerable to exclusion in subsequent household shifts.
  • The 1870 Census Anomaly: In 1870, a "Rachel Shaver" appears as a head of household. It is unclear if this is a middle name for Mary Roy or a different relative.
  • Potential Conflation: Sarah Shaver (1862) is often confused with:
    • Sarah Jane Shaver (Vineyard): Paul’s sister (born 1830), who had a daughter, Martha Mae, in 1860.
    • Regional Sarahs: Individuals with the same name in Braxton County (born 1824) or unrelated lines in Indiana/Tennessee (born 1862).
  • Record Loss: Vital records were inconsistently maintained during the "transitional" years of West Virginia's statehood (1861–1865).

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Key Resources and DNA Evidence

Digital Documentation ("LibGen.pdf")

The inquiry into "LibGen.pdf" likely refers to The Shaver Family Updated 2014, a comprehensive resource that traces descendants into the 20th century. This document is critical because it synthesizes family Bibles and military records that are not available in standard census databases.

DNA and Autosomal Connections

DNA evidence currently provides the strongest path forward. Matches have been confirmed between descendants of William Henry Shaver (1856–1918) and other branches, with shared DNA percentages between 1.56% and 6.25%. Descendants of the hypothesized Sarah Shaver (1862) should show significant DNA matches with descendants of William Henry, Martha Jane (Cart), and Nancy Jane (Fisher).

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Methodological Recommendations

To resolve the Sarah Shaver "brick wall," the following steps are prioritized:

  1. Examine Roane County Records: Because siblings were recorded in Roane County (formed in 1856), Sarah’s birth may be documented there rather than in Kanawha.
  2. Targeted 1870 Census Search: Identify all children under age 10 in households headed by "Mary Shaver" or "Rachel Shaver" in Kanawha and Roane.
  3. DNA Baseline Comparison: Use the known descendants of William Henry Shaver as a baseline for autosomal DNA matching.
  4. Review the 2014 Update: Meticulously compare the children listed in the Shaver Family Updated 2014 against census records to find entries for children who may have died young or relocated.

Outside County Garbage?

 


Info from Nancy H

 
It has been brought to my attention that Alleghany Disposal is requiring all municipalities to transition to its services under the proposed contract. This would directly impact the towns of Durbin, Marlinton, and Hillsboro, resulting in significant cost increases, as the company’s service fees are reportedly higher than green box rates.

Additionally, earlier claims suggested that this project would be financially sustainable due to a projected increase in waste volume. However, current census data indicates that Pocahontas County is experiencing a population decline, not growth, raising serious questions about those projections.

These factors strongly suggest that Alleghany Disposal, owned by Mr. Meck, may intend to transport and process waste from outside counties, including Highland County and Alleghany County, at the proposed transfer station. If so, Pocahontas County residents would effectively subsidize the processing of waste from higher-income neighboring counties, while also paying approximately $69 per ton for hauling services. In this scenario, the company could receive compensation from multiple counties, including ours for waste that does not originate here.

The financial disparity between these counties highlights the seriousness of this issue. In Alleghany County, the average income is approximately $65,000, with 91% of residents above the poverty line. In Highland County, the average income is about $60,000, with 83% above the poverty line. By contrast, Pocahontas County has an average income of roughly $42,000, and approximately 25% of our population lives below the poverty line. This stark difference underscores a critical concern: our community is being asked to bear costs that are disproportionately burdensome, effectively subsidizing waste disposal for counties with significantly greater financial resources.

There are also concerns that the cost of essential equipment; such as trucks, trailers, and related infrastructure, may be included in this arrangement. If true, county residents would be funding the purchase of private equipment, only to be charged additional fees for its use. This raises serious questions about fairness, transparency, and fiscal responsibility.

This proposal presents a substantial financial burden for our community; one that many residents simply cannot afford. We cannot afford to pay for the disposal of waste generated outside our county.

Now is the time for engagement and accountability. Residents are strongly encouraged to contact officials, ask direct and informed questions, and attend the upcoming meeting on Wednesday. It is critical that concerns are raised and that any effort to fast-track this proposal is carefully examined and, if necessary, halted.

Media presence is also anticipated, making it all the more important that the voices of Pocahontas County residents are heard clearly and respectfully.

A Tax on Poor People


The "Trash Tax" Trap: How a Tiny West Virginia County Sued Its Way Into a Legal Quagmire

Introduction: The High Cost of Cleanliness

Pocahontas County, West Virginia, is a place of rugged beauty and even more rugged bureaucratic friction. Home to the state’s smallest landfill in Dunmore, the county is currently the stage for a desperate experiment in public policy: "mandatory disposal." For the residents of this rural stretch, trash isn't just a chore—it’s a legal mandate that you pay for, whether you produce a single scrap of waste or not.

The central conflict pits the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (PCSWA)—a cash-strapped agency teetering on the edge of insolvency—against a populace that views the "Green Box" fee as an unjust "trash tax." The Green Box system, a network of communal containers, was intended to solve the logistical nightmare of rural collection. Instead, it has become the flashpoint for a series of aggressive lawsuits that illustrate exactly how high-stakes litigation can backfire when a local government prioritizes collection over procedural competence.

The "Mere Availability" Mandate: Why You Pay Even if You Compost

In 2013, the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals handed the PCSWA a massive legal victory in John Leyzorek, et al. v. Pocahontas Co. Solid Waste Authority. The court solidified a counter-intuitive principle: the "mere availability" of a trash bin is a public health benefit that you must pay for, even if you never use it.

The ruling effectively crushed the arguments of self-sufficient residents who recycled, composted, or hauled their own waste to the landfill on "free days." To make matters worse, the PCSWA enforced a bureaucratic trap: to receive a waiver, residents were required to provide rigid proof of landfill usage for every single month of a fee period. This high bar for compliance turned the "opt-out" into a functional impossibility for most.

"Regulations concerning waste disposal are viewed as economic regulations and are thus accorded 'considerable deference' by the courts... a mandatory service fee for refuse collection is a valid exercise of the state's police power."

While the court’s "economic deference" gave the PCSWA the teeth it wanted, it also fueled a fire of community resentment that would eventually burn the authority’s collection efforts to the ground.

The Math of a Failing Landfill: 41% Utilization and $100,000 Deficits

The PCSWA’s aggression wasn't born of malice, but of mathematical desperation. The Dunmore landfill is a high-fixed-cost operation trapped in a low-volume reality.

Metric

2013 Data

2021 Data

Monthly Tonnage (Avg)

582 tons

642 tons

Capacity Utilization

41%

46%

Annual Green Box Fee

~$107

$115

Tipping Fee (Per Ton)

$72.75

$72.75

The facility is permitted for 1,400 tons a month but only sees a fraction of that. This underutilization is "financially catastrophic." By 2013, the authority was bleeding roughly $100,000 a year. Compounding this is a state-mandated ticking clock: an escrow account for closure and remediation that must reach 1.8 million. Currently, that account is funded by a **5.95 per ton surcharge from tipping fees**. Without more trash or more collected fees, the authority simply cannot meet its environmental obligations.

Procedural Meltdown: When Mass Litigation Hits a Wall

In 2012 and 2013, the PCSWA attempted a legal "shortcut" to solvency by filing mass lawsuits against hundreds of residents. This strategy suffered a devastating setback in 2015 when the Circuit Court dismissed the claims in what can only be described as a process failure of the highest order. The court’s rejection was based on three distinct embarrassments:

  • Improper Joinder: The authority tried to sue hundreds of residents in a single action to save time. The court ruled this "unworkable," as each resident had unique property and disposal circumstances.
  • Jurisdictional Errors: The PCSWA filed in Circuit Court to consolidate cases, but the individual debts—ranging from $49 to $1,546.80—fell well below the court’s $2,500 threshold. Once the cases were severed, the court lost jurisdiction.
  • Service of Process Failures: In a failure of the most basic administrative tasks, the authority sent 80 certified letters without "restricted delivery." Return receipts were signed by random people, and dozens more were returned as undeliverable.

The court noted this incompetence "obscured the Plaintiff’s failure to properly handle the most basic of tasks." This administrative meltdown didn't just stall the revenue; it wasted years of resources and forced the authority back to square one in Magistrate Court.

The "Tax on Being Poor": David Gutman’s Journalistic Lens

Journalist David Gutman, reporting for the Charleston Gazette, reframed this legal battle as a socio-economic crisis. Gutman’s reporting highlighted that for elderly residents on fixed incomes, these fees aren't just an annoyance—they are a "tax on being poor."

This burden is exacerbated by West Virginia’s "brain drain." As the population shrinks, the cost of maintaining the landfill is spread across fewer and fewer shoulders. This creates a vicious cycle: higher fees drive out more residents, which necessitates even higher fees for those who remain. Even Commission President Rebinski has acknowledged the strain, suggesting the county might need to assist the needy to satisfy the law while maintaining a semblance of community stability.

The Net Result: A Zero-Sum Game

When you look at the "Math of Litigation," the PCSWA’s aggressive strategy reveals itself as a financial wash, if not a total loss.

Litigation Component

Estimated Value/Cost

Potential Recovery per Resident

~$260 (Fee + $150 Penalty)

Attorney Fees (Small Project Benchmark)

$3,150

Engineer Fees (Small Project Benchmark)

$4,000

Administrative Outcome

Low Recovery / High Risk

Using benchmarks from other local projects, the PCSWA was likely spending thousands on attorneys and engineers for a mass litigation effort that resulted in a "low recovery" due to the 2015 dismissal. By 2024, the authority shifted to Magistrate Court, where individuals are assessed $215.25. It is a slower, more procedurally correct trickle of income that fails to address the underlying $100,000 annual deficit.

Conclusion: Moving Toward the Transfer Station

The lesson of Pocahontas County is a stark one for rural governance: legal victories are meaningless without procedural rigor. While the Supreme Court gave the PCSWA the right to collect, the authority’s own administrative failures turned that right into a resource-draining quagmire.

With the Dunmore landfill’s lifespan estimated at only five years as of 2021, the county is finally looking toward transfer stations to consolidate and ship waste elsewhere. But the fundamental question remains: as the population continues to decline and infrastructure costs continue to climb, how can rural America fund the essential services required to keep its environment clean without suing its most vulnerable citizens into poverty?


Mass Litigation in Pocahontas County

 

                       A Tax on Poor People

Judicial and Administrative Dimensions of Municipal Solid Waste Governance: A Case Study of the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority Litigation (2012–2015)

The Macro-Economic Context of Rural Waste Management in Appalachia

The management of solid waste in rural West Virginia represents a persistent challenge for local governments, balanced precariously between the mandates of public health and the fiscal limitations of a declining population base. In the early 21st century, the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (PCSWA) emerged as a focal point for a broader statewide debate regarding the limits of municipal authority and the enforcement of mandatory service fees. The litigation initiated by the PCSWA against residents in 2012 and 2013, extensively documented by David Gutman for the Charleston Gazette, serves as a landmark case study in the intersection of Appalachian socio-economics and administrative law.

To understand the friction that occurred in Pocahontas County, one must first examine the legislative framework provided by West Virginia Code Chapter 22C, Article 4. This statute established county and regional solid waste authorities, granting them broad police powers to regulate the collection and disposal of refuse. These authorities were not merely created to manage landfills but to serve as environmental stewards in a region where illegal open-air dumping and "wildcat" dumps historically threatened water quality and public safety. The PCSWA, overseeing a county characterized by vast national forest land and dispersed residential pockets, faced unique logistical hurdles that necessitated a communal approach to waste collection—the "Green Box" system.  

Pocahontas County is home to the state’s smallest landfill in Dunmore, a facility that serves only its home county and operates under strict tonnage limits. This small scale creates a high fixed-cost environment where every ton of waste and every dollar of residential fees is critical to the facility’s solvency. In 2013, the facility was permitted to accept up to 1,400 tons per month, yet it averaged only 582 tons, utilizing approximately 41% of its permitted capacity. This underutilization, while environmentally favorable in terms of landfill longevity, proved financially catastrophic for an authority that relied on tipping fees and residential assessments to fund its operations and future remediation.  

The Mandatory Disposal Mandate and the Green Box Fee

The "Green Box" fee is a residential service assessment applied to property owners who do not subscribe to a private waste collection service. In Pocahontas County, the geography often precludes door-to-door pickup for a significant portion of the population, making the network of communal containers—the green boxes—the primary method of disposal for many. Under Section 4.2 of the PCSWA regulations, each person owning a residence is required to either provide proof of a private hauler contract or pay the Green Box fee.  

The legal basis for this mandatory fee was rooted in the state's police power to protect public health and welfare. However, the implementation of this fee was met with significant resistance from residents who argued they did not use the service. Many claimed they disposed of their waste through composting, recycling, or by utilizing the landfill's monthly "free day". The PCSWA’s rigid interpretation of the waiver requirements—requiring proof of landfill usage for every month of a fee period—became a primary point of contention in the ensuing litigation.  

Table 1: Comparative Landfill Operations and Financial Baseline (2013–2021)

Metric2013 Data2021 DataChange/Trend
Monthly Tonnage (Average)

582 tons

642 tons

Slight increase in volume
Permitted Capacity Utilization

41%

46%

Remains underutilized
Annual Green Box Fee

~$107

$115

Inflationary adjustment
Tipping Fee (per ton)

$72.75

$72.75

Stagnant pricing
Landfill Lifespan

21 years

5 years

Rapidly approaching closure
Green Box Annual Revenue~$450,000

$470,000

Primary revenue pillar
 

The financial data indicates that by 2013, the PCSWA was operating in a deficit environment. The authority reported annual losses of approximately $100,000, despite the collection of nearly half a million dollars in residential fees. This fiscal gap was further widened by the costs of the county’s recycling program, which, while mandated by the state, cost significantly more to operate than the revenue it generated from material sales.  

Journalistic Scrutiny: The David Gutman Reports

In early 2013, David Gutman, then a reporter for the Charleston Gazette, began investigating the PCSWA’s aggressive legal tactics. Gutman’s reporting, which often focused on the impact of state and local policies on West Virginia's most vulnerable populations, highlighted the mass filing of lawsuits against residents who had defaulted on their landfill fees. His work in January 2013 brought the Pocahontas situation to a statewide audience, framing it as a conflict between a cash-strapped local authority and a citizenry frustrated by what they perceived as an unfair "trash tax."  

Gutman’s reporting was situated within a broader context of investigative journalism at the Charleston Gazette, a publication known for its rigorous coverage of environmental and governmental accountability. At the time of the landfill litigation, Gutman was also covering themes of population decline and the socio-economic factors driving West Virginia's "brain drain"—trends that directly impacted the PCSWA’s ability to collect fees. As residents left the county, the burden of maintaining the waste infrastructure fell on a smaller number of people, leading to fee increases and more aggressive collection efforts.  

The article published in early 2013 detailed the PCSWA’s decision to move beyond mere billing and into the realm of mass litigation. The authority began filing civil actions not just in Magistrate Court, which handles small claims, but in Circuit Court, which is typically reserved for more significant legal disputes. This strategic choice was intended to consolidate cases and perhaps intimidate defaulters into paying, but it eventually proved to be a procedural error that would derail the authority’s collection efforts for years.  

The Supreme Court Affirmation of 2013

The first major legal milestone in this period was a memorandum decision issued by the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals on October 18, 2013. The case, consolidated under Case No. 07-C-30, involved several residents, including Petitioner Bernier and Petitioner Leyzorek, who had challenged the PCSWA’s authority to assess the Green Box fee.  

The petitioners raised a variety of constitutional and administrative challenges. They argued that because they did not use the green boxes, the fee constituted an unconstitutional tax rather than a service fee. They further asserted that the PCSWA’s refusal to grant waivers for alternative disposal methods like composting violated their equal protection rights. However, the Court relied on the precedent established in City of Princeton v. Stamper, which held that a mandatory service fee for refuse collection is a valid exercise of the state's police power.  

The Court’s decision was a significant victory for the PCSWA, affirming the following principles:

  1. Mandatory Nature: The fee is mandatory for all residents regardless of actual use, as the mere availability of the service provides a public health benefit.  

  2. Economic Deference: Regulations concerning waste disposal are viewed as economic regulations and are thus accorded "considerable deference" by the courts.  

  3. Waiver Conditions: The authority has the right to set strict conditions for waivers, such as requiring proof of disposal for every month of a given period.  

The summary judgments awarded in October 2013 against specific residents provided a glimpse into the financial stakes of the litigation. For example, Petitioner Bernier was ordered to pay $49 in unpaid fees from 2006, along with $150 in statutory penalties—a penalty three times the amount of the original fee—plus costs and interest.  

Table 2: Summary of Judgments against Key Petitioners (Oct 2013)

DefendantOriginal Fee AmountStatutory PenaltyLegal Status
Petitioner Bernier$49.00 (2006)$150.00

Judgment Affirmed

Petitioner Leyzorek$498.00Not Specified

Judgment Affirmed

Other Defendants< $1,546.80Varies

Dismissed in 2015

 

While the Supreme Court affirmed the authority's right to collect, the actual collection of these funds proved far more difficult. The litigation had only just begun to reveal the procedural complexities of suing hundreds of individual residents simultaneously.

Procedural Complications and the 2015 Setback

Despite the 2013 Supreme Court victory, the PCSWA’s attempt to collect from the larger pool of residents faced a devastating setback in 2015. In an effort to streamline their legal actions, the authority had joined a large number of residents as defendants in a single civil action in the Circuit Court of Pocahontas County. By late 2015, the court determined that this approach was legally untenable.

On October 29, 2015, the court issued an order dismissing the claims against nearly all remaining defendants, with a few notable exceptions like Jaeger, Leyzorek, and Stratton. The court’s reasoning centered on three major failures by the PCSWA:  

Improper Joinder of Parties

The court found that the PCSWA had inappropriately joined numerous defendants whose cases were not "connected in any meaningful way". Each resident had unique circumstances regarding their property, their disposal methods, and their reasons for non-payment. Joining them in one action created "unduly cumbersome litigation" that made courtroom proceedings "unworkable". Furthermore, it placed an unfair burden on the residents, as they would have been required to serve all other joined defendants with every pleading and motion.  

Jurisdictional Thresholds

A critical error in the PCSWA’s strategy was filing in Circuit Court rather than Magistrate Court. The Circuit Court generally has jurisdiction over civil actions where the amount in dispute exceeds $2,500. However, the claims against the individual residents—even with penalties included—did not exceed $1,546.80. Once the court severed the joined parties, it no longer had jurisdiction over the individual claims because they fell below the monetary threshold.  

Service of Process Failures

The most fundamental failure was the authority’s inability to properly serve the defendants. The PCSWA had attempted to notify residents via certified mail without restricted delivery. A significant number of return receipts were signed by people other than the addressee, and at least 80 letters were returned as "undeliverable or unclaimed". Without proper service, the court lacked personal jurisdiction over the defendants. The court noted that this "obscured the Plaintiff’s failure to properly handle the most basic of tasks relative to this case".  

Financial Implications of the Litigation

The user specifically requested information on how much money was spent and collected. While a single, audited total for the entire multi-year litigation is not explicitly provided in the public record snippets, the available data allows for a sophisticated reconstruction of the financial impact.

The PCSWA was already in a precarious financial state, with annual losses nearing $100,000. The decision to engage in high-level litigation was a high-risk endeavor. Legal fees in the county for similar projects suggest the scale of expenditures: a separate project required $3,150 for an attorney and $4,000 for an engineer. For a lawsuit involving hundreds of defendants, multiple appeals to the Supreme Court, and years of Circuit Court filings, the legal costs for the PCSWA likely ran into the tens of thousands of dollars.  

Conversely, the collections were meager compared to the effort. While individual judgments of $200 to $500 were secured against a few individuals like Bernier and Leyzorek, the mass dismissal of 2015 meant that the authority failed to collect from the vast majority of the defendants in that specific civil action. The PCSWA was eventually forced to refile claims in Magistrate Court, where the filing fees and administrative time for individual hearings further eroded the net recovery.  

Table 3: Estimated Collection and Enforcement Costs (Post-2015 Shift)

Action ItemEstimated Cost/RevenueSource/Context
Magistrate Court Assessment$215.25 (Fines + Costs)

Standard for mandatory disposal

Typical Unpaid Fee (Annual)$107.00 - $115.00

2013-2023 rates

Statutory Penalty$150.00

Standard penalty applied

Attorney/Legal SpendHigh (Unquantified Total)

Multi-year Circuit/Supreme Court action

Revenue Recovered (Mass)Low

Setback due to 2015 dismissal

 

By 2024, Magistrate Court records show a steady stream of individuals being assessed $215.25 for "mandatory disposal" violations, indicating that the authority eventually settled into a more procedurally correct, albeit slower, method of enforcement. This shift suggests that the aggressive 2012-2013 strategy was ultimately a financial and administrative failure, despite the legal victory in the Supreme Court.  

The Socio-Economic Ripple Effects

The litigation had a profound impact on the relationship between the PCSWA and the community. The "green box fees" were often referred to as a "tax on being poor," particularly for elderly residents on fixed incomes who generated very little waste. Commission President Rebinski acknowledged this by suggesting that the county commission should assist elderly and needy people to pay the higher fees as a way of satisfying the law while maintaining community stability.  

The litigation also highlighted the desperation of the PCSWA. The authority was—and remains—under constant pressure to fund its future. The landfill in Dunmore requires a state-controlled escrow account for its eventual $1.8 million closure and remediation cost. Currently, the account holds about $1.2 million, funded by a $5.95 per ton surcharge from tipping fees. If the authority cannot collect residential fees, it must raise tipping fees, which would make the landfill uncompetitive with larger, regional facilities and accelerate its financial collapse.  

The Role of Investigative Journalism in Policy Reform

The work of David Gutman and the Charleston Gazette played a critical role in documenting this "slow-motion" financial crisis. By bringing the PCSWA’s legal tactics to light, the reporting created a public record of the authority's procedural missteps. The coverage likely influenced the 2015 court’s scrutiny of the "unduly cumbersome" nature of the litigation. Gutman's later work on population decline and the opioid crisis provided the necessary context for why such fee collections are so contentious in West Virginia: they represent an increasing burden on a shrinking population that is already struggling with a myriad of other socio-economic pressures.  

Administrative Oversight and Future Outlook

The governance of the PCSWA is not an isolated local matter but is subject to state-level oversight. The West Virginia Solid Waste Management Board (SWMB) acts as a coordinator between local authorities and the state, ensuring that facilities like the Pocahontas landfill comply with the state’s long-term solid waste plan. The PCSWA is also required to submit annual reports and undergo audits, which track its pension liabilities and other financial obligations.  

As the Dunmore landfill approaches the end of its projected lifespan—estimated at just 5 years in 2021—the focus of the PCSWA has shifted from landfill operation to the development of transfer stations. A transfer station would allow the county to consolidate its waste and ship it to a larger regional landfill, potentially lowering long-term costs but requiring significant upfront capital investment.  

The debate over funding these future operations remains unresolved. PCSWA member David McLaughlin has repeatedly asked the county commission to fund future operations to the tune of $300,000 per year, a request that highlights the inadequacy of the current fee-based model. The commission, however, has been hesitant to provide direct funding, preferring to explore ways to help residents pay the existing fees.  

Conclusion: Lessons from the Pocahontas Litigation

The litigation initiated by the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority in 2012 and 2013, and the subsequent journalistic coverage by David Gutman, offers several critical insights into rural municipal governance.

First, the legal victory in the Supreme Court affirmed that mandatory service fees are a constitutionally sound method for funding public health infrastructure, even when those fees are assessed against non-users. This provides a vital legal tool for solid waste authorities across the state. However, the subsequent procedural defeat in 2015 serves as a stern warning against "cutting corners" in the interest of administrative efficiency. The failure to properly serve defendants and the attempt to use the wrong court for small-claims collection resulted in a significant waste of time and resources.  

Second, the financial data reveals that litigation is often a zero-sum game for small municipal authorities. The money "collected" from individual residents is frequently offset by the high costs of legal counsel and the administrative burden of enforcement. For the PCSWA, the true "cost" of the lawsuit was not just the attorney's fees, but the erosion of public trust and the years of delayed revenue.  

Finally, the Pocahontas case underscores the need for more sustainable funding models for rural infrastructure. As the state’s smallest landfill nears closure, the reliance on a shrinking pool of residential fee-payers appears increasingly tenable. The transition to transfer stations and regional waste management may provide a path forward, but only if local authorities can navigate the complex legal and social landscapes that journalists like David Gutman have so carefully documented.

The 2012–2015 era in Pocahontas County was defined by a desperate attempt to achieve fiscal stability through the courts. While the law was on the side of the authority, the reality of the judicial process proved to be far more difficult to manage. The case remains a definitive example of the "unworkable" nature of mass litigation in a rural setting and a testament to the importance of procedural rigor in municipal administration.

Who Knew? When did they Know? Why didn't they know?


 

The $300,000 Garbage Problem and the "Missing" Agendas: 5 Things You Need to Know About the Greenbrier Valley Land Deal

1. Introduction: The Paper Trail Paradox

In the high-minded rhetoric of West Virginia regional planning, the Greenbrier Valley Economic Development Corporation (GVEDC) is framed as a triumph of inter-county synergy—a bridge connecting Greenbrier, Monroe, and Pocahontas counties. The ideal is simple: shared resources lead to shared prosperity. But a recent, opaque property transfer involving the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (SWA) and a private firm has exposed a jarring disconnect between that ideal and the bureaucratic reality.

While the GVEDC was busy finalizing a deal to lease former public land to Jacmal Properties/Leasing LLC, several Pocahontas County commissioners were left in a state of self-reported ignorance, claiming to have "no knowledge" of the movement of these public assets. This is the paper trail paradox: how does a major land deal involving public waste authorities and private developers occur in a "Quiet Zone" while the very commission responsible for funding these entities remains silent?

2. The Invisible Vote: A Thursday Afternoon at 3:00 PM

The breakdown in communication is not a mystery of lost mail; it is the result of a centralized information bottleneck. Following the most recent election cycle, Commissioner Thane Ryder emerged as the single point of failure in the county’s information pipeline. After both he and Commissioner Jamie Walker declined the commission presidency, Ryder assumed a massive portfolio of board assignments previously held by the veteran power-holder Walter Helmick.

Among these was a seat on the GVEDC Board of Directors. On a recent Thursday afternoon at 3:00 PM, while the rest of the county was at work, a formal vote was held to execute a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) for the property transfer. Because Ryder sat in that room as a voting member, Pocahontas County was legally bound to the deal. His dual role as an elected official and a quasi-public board member created a systemic friction point: the county was represented in name, but the specifics of the transaction never effectively migrated from that 3:00 PM board room back to the full commission.

3. The Digital Disconnect: Nursing Scholarships Instead of Public Records

Transparency requires a functional window into the workings of government, but the GVEDC’s digital window is currently boarded up. A review of the corporation’s official website reveals an administrative failure that borders on the absurd. Instead of meeting minutes or board agendas for the 2025-2026 fiscal years, the public is met with data belonging to the American Association of Colleges of Nursing (AACN).

The discrepancy between the expected transparency and the actual digital record is startling:

  • July 17, 2025: Expected GVEDC Board Agenda / Actual: Information unavailable.
  • September 18, 2025: Expected GVEDC Board Agenda / Actual: Information unavailable.
  • November 20, 2025: Expected GVEDC Board Agenda / Actual: Nursing scholarship data (AACN).
  • January 15, 2026: Expected GVEDC Board Agenda / Actual: Information unavailable.
  • March 19, 2026: Expected GVEDC Board Agenda / Actual: Information unavailable.

"A review of these digital records shows that many are either missing or contain entirely unrelated content... When public agendas are replaced by information on the Scrubin Uniforms-AACN Scholarship... the public and other elected officials are effectively barred from reviewing the corporation's planned actions."

This technical glitch acts as a functional barrier to oversight. When agendas are replaced by Scrubin Uniforms scholarship links, the public is essentially locked out of the room where land deals are made.

4. The $600 Trash Bill: Why the SWA Had to Sell

The property transfer was not a casual real estate play; it was a desperate act of fiscal survival. The Pocahontas County SWA is currently drowning in the costs of maintaining its "green box" communal waste system. To keep the authority solvent, the county commission provides a staggering $300,000 annual supplement.

Taxpayers are already paying for the privilege of GVEDC membership to the tune of $9,836.25 in annual fees, and the SWA’s balance sheet shows why the commission is panicking:

  • Current Annual "Green Box" Fee: $300
  • Projected Fee Without County Supplement: $600
  • Annual GVEDC Membership Fee (Pocahontas County): $9,836.25

By offloading surplus property to the GVEDC, the SWA is divesting itself of maintenance liabilities it can no longer afford. It is a strategic retreat designed to prevent a 100% increase in waste collection fees for local residents.

5. The "Pass-Through" Power: Grants as the Hidden Engine

The GVEDC functions as a strategic intermediary, utilizing a "pass-through" model that neither the SWA nor a private entity like Jacmal can replicate. As a development corporation, the GVEDC has the unique authority to access Brownfields and EPA grants for environmental remediation.

Under the "Resolution #12" model, the GVEDC acts as the "lead administrative lead," managing contractors like Greenbrier Environmental to clear liabilities from contaminated or underutilized land. The GVEDC doesn't do this for free; they charge a service fee for this oversight. This allows the corporation to turn "dead" property into a "tax-paying" asset, positioning themselves as the only entity capable of bridging the gap between a public waste site and a private commercial lease.

6. The Quiet Zone Factor: Why Jacmal Matters

The end-user in this complex chain is Jacmal Properties LLC (and Jacmal Leasing LLC), a locally managed firm run by Jacob and Malinda Meck. Based in Green Bank, Jacmal operates in one of the most geographically and scientifically sensitive areas on the planet: the National Radio Quiet Zone.

Proximity to the National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO) means that any development must adhere to strict electronic interference regulations. This explains why a lease, rather than an outright sale, was the preferred vehicle for this deal. By maintaining ownership and leasing the land to Jacmal, the GVEDC retains long-term control over land use and "interference regulations," ensuring that local business expansion doesn't jeopardize the mission of the NRAO.

7. Conclusion: The Cost of Growth

The SWA-GVEDC-Jacmal deal may provide a necessary template for rural economic survival, turning environmental liabilities into business opportunities. However, the "missing" agendas and the communication blackout within the commission highlight the hidden price of this progress: the erosion of institutional transparency.



Just Imagine!

 


Imagine an elderly resident of Pocahontas County living on a strict, fixed income, making up part of the 20% of the local population living at or below the poverty level. It is July 2026, and the Solid Waste Authority (SWA) has officially eliminated the state-mandated "Free Day," permanently removing the senior's only legal, $0 option for waste disposal.

Soon after, the senior receives their new annual "Green Box" solid waste bill. Because the SWA is passing the $201,108 annual lease cost of the new transfer station directly to residents, the senior's bill has skyrocketed from $135 to a staggering $310 or more. The lifeline they were hoping for—a proposed county subsidy from Commission President John Rebinski to freeze elderly rates at $135—was never finalized.

This sudden jump of $175 to over $465 a year is not money the senior has in the bank. They are forced into an impossible choice: pay the exorbitant new trash fee, or use that exact money to buy their monthly heart medication and groceries.

Desperate, the senior considers simply not paying the bill or holding onto their trash, but the county's new enforcement laws are designed to punish this exactly. If they cannot produce a receipt proving they properly disposed of their waste every 30 days, they will be hit with an automatic $150 civil penalty. Repeatedly failing to use the system could even result in misdemeanor charges, carrying additional fines of up to $1,000.

Ultimately, if the senior chooses to feed themselves and buy their medicine, the county will aggressively enforce the unpaid solid waste debt. The SWA has the authority to place a lien directly on the senior's modest home. The worst-case scenario ends with the senior living in constant anxiety, knowing that because they chose to survive, the county will legally encumber their property, effectively robbing their children of their family inheritance just to collect an unaffordable dumpster fee.

Your Signature is Important

 


Under West Virginia Code §24-2-11, the "Rule of 20" refers to the legal threshold required to elevate a formal complaint to the official status of a "substantial protest".

When a petition against an action—such as a proposed rate hike—gathers 20 or more signatures from "aggrieved customers," it officially achieves this upgraded status. For the signatures to count toward this 20-person threshold, they must come strictly from actual local ratepayers who pay the relevant fees or use the service in question.

Reaching this 20-signature benchmark is highly significant because it forces the West Virginia Public Service Commission (PSC) to take the complaint more seriously. Specifically, achieving a "substantial protest" status often triggers a mandatory decision timeline and can potentially force the state to hold a local public hearing to investigate the issue directly.

Meck's Mononoly

 


The Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (SWA) proposal creates a monopoly on solid waste service through the implementation of a strict "Flow Control" ordinance combined with a 15-year, unbid contract awarded to a single private operator.

The cornerstone of this monopoly is the Flow Control policy, which legally mandates that "every ounce" of solid waste generated within the county—whether by individual residents, commercial businesses, or major public institutions like the National Forest—must be processed exclusively through the county’s new transfer station. This rule strictly prohibits commercial haulers and private citizens from bypassing the local system to transport their garbage to other counties..

This forced consolidation of waste is intended to guarantee a continuous stream of "tipping fees" to ensure the transfer station remains financially viable. However, residents are outraged because this effectively hands exclusive control of the county's entire waste economy over to a single private entity. The SWA approved a 15-year "lease-to-own" agreement with local contractor Jacob Meck (Allegheny Disposal) to build, equip, and operate the station, and they did so without opening the multi-million dollar project to a competitive public bidding process.

To ensure no one escapes this "government-mandated monopoly," the proposal includes severe enforcement mechanisms:

  • Commercial Hauler Penalties: If a commercial hauler attempts to bypass the county transfer station to find a cheaper rate elsewhere, they face the revocation of their operating franchise and civil administrative penalties of up to $5,000 per day (capped at $20,000 for a single incident).
  • Residential Penalties: Residents face an automatic $150 civil penalty simply for failing to produce a receipt proving they disposed of their waste through the approved system every 30 days. If they refuse to pay the county's skyrocketing annual "Green Box" fees—which could jump to over $310 to subsidize the new facility—the county can place a lien on their private property.

Ultimately, taxpayers and critics argue that this "forced monopoly" restricts free-market competition, stripping citizens of more affordable disposal options merely to ensure the financial success of a secretive, no-bid private contract.



Secret Meetings

 


Secretive proceedings by the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (SWA) have severely degraded the public's understanding of local waste management plans, replacing clarity with widespread distrust, outrage, and allegations of collusion.

These secretive actions have impacted the public's understanding in several critical ways:

  • Fueling Suspicion Over Unbid Contracts: Because the SWA pursued a 15-year, $5 million to $6 million transfer station agreement with a private contractor (Allegheny Disposal/Jacob Meck) without a competitive public bidding process, residents have been left to view the deal as an opaque and potentially illegal maneuver. This secrecy prevents the public from fully understanding why they are facing massive fee hikes, a forced monopoly via "Flow Control" regulations, and the potential transfer of public landfill property to private entities.

 

  • Silencing Community Input: By deliberately excluding a slot for public comment from the agenda for their critical March 19th special meeting, the SWA further alienated the community. This exclusionary tactic blocks a two-way dialogue, leaving citizens in the dark and frustrated over major impending decisions, such as the elimination of the state-mandated "Free Day" and the expansion of "Green Box" fees to all county properties.

 

  • Violating the Spirit of State Transparency Laws: The West Virginia Open Governmental Proceedings Act (OGMA) mandates that public business be conducted openly because citizens "do not yield their sovereignty to the governmental agencies that serve them," nor do they grant public servants the right to decide what is "good" for the public to know. The law strictly requires "reasonably descriptive" agendas so that the public can actually comprehend the issues at hand before a vote is taken.

 

  • Masking the Mechanics of Property Transfers: When public bodies misapply open meeting laws—such as using vague agenda items like "Property Matters" or improperly making final decisions behind closed doors in "executive sessions"—it strips the public of their ability to understand how taxpayer assets are being managed. Officials who habitually rely on secret meetings to broker collusive property transfers or contracts prevent public understanding to such a degree that they may become subject to criminal presentment by a grand jury.

Ultimately, the West Virginia Legislature recognizes that public confidence and understanding actually ease resistance to government programs. By operating what citizens have called a "secretive operation," the SWA has achieved the exact opposite—creating a political crisis where residents feel completely disenfranchised from understanding the financial risks threatening their county.

What Killed the Dump!

 


In the spring of 2022, a concentrated period of structural demolitions in Marlinton precipitated a systemic crisis for the Pocahontas County landfill.

The demolitions, driven by both private commercial redevelopment and public-sector efforts to remove dilapidated buildings, generated a massive, unexpected surge of Construction and Demolition (C&D) debris. This was compounded by concurrent municipal infrastructure upgrades in Marlinton, such as replacing 10,000 linear feet of water lines and 20 fire hydrants, which added "special waste" like excavated soil and old pipes to the landfill's burden.

This influx drastically affected the landfill in the following ways:

  • Rapid Depletion of Air Space: C&D materials like brick, concrete, and treated lumber are bulky and much harder to compact than standard municipal solid waste (MSW). The landfill was only able to achieve a compaction rate of 0.52 tons per cubic yard for the C&D waste, compared to 0.73 tons per cubic yard for regular MSW. As a result, the demolition debris disproportionately consumed the available "air space" in the landfill's dedicated C&D cell.
  • Accelerated Landfill Closure: The rapid filling of the C&D cell fundamentally altered the facility's terminal trajectory. Before the crisis, the landfill had a projected lifespan of around five years, but the surge of Marlinton demolition waste reduced its remaining functional lifespan to just four years.
  • Emergency Moratorium: Because the cell filled up much faster than anticipated and the Solid Waste Authority lacked the permitted space to develop a new one, they were forced to pursue emergency regulatory relief from the state. This resulted in a moratorium that officially stopped the acceptance of all C&D waste at the landfill in May 2022.

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