The $4 Million Trash Loophole: Inside a Small-Town Waste War
Pocahontas County is defined by its quiet, rugged landscapes and a sense of rural self-reliance. But behind the serene facade, a high-stakes financial drama is unfolding—a $4.12 million "public-private partnership" that evidence suggests is a calculated bypass of public oversight. At the center of the storm is the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (PCSWA) and its controversial deal with JacMal Properties LLC, a project critics and legal filings now describe as being built on a foundation of "profound economic distress" and "failed public governance."
This is more than a dispute over garbage collection; it is a battle for the very concept of fiduciary duty. A formal regulatory complaint recently submitted to the West Virginia Public Service Commission (PSC) exposes a systematic effort to evade state law and favor a private developer at the expense of the local taxpayer. The following five takeaways from that filing reveal the anatomy of a systemic failure.
## Takeaway #1: The "Single-Choice" Narrative Was a Myth
To justify bypassing a competitive bidding process, the PCSWA promoted a "Monopolistic Fallacy." The authority repeatedly asserted that only one company—Allegheny Disposal, a Meck family enterprise—possessed the licensure and capacity to manage the county’s municipal solid waste. This "single-choice" narrative was the primary leverage used to convince the public that a sole-source partnership with the Mecks’ real estate entity, JacMal Properties LLC, was the only viable path forward.
However, the "expert" claims were debunked not by government officials, but by residents. By conducting an empirical audit of the Snowshoe Mountain resort area, locals manually verified that Greenbrier Valley is already operating as the largest trash collector in that region. This on-site verification, paired with a review of regulatory registries, confirmed that three separate companies hold valid, active licenses for the county—one of which has been active since 1978.
"An independent audit of West Virginia Public Service Commission licensing records exposes this claim as entirely false... three separate companies hold valid, active solid waste collection licenses designated for Pocahontas County."
This deception was critical. By fabricating a monopoly, the PCSWA was able to suppress public demand for competitive bidding and steer a multi-million dollar contract toward a preferred partner without ever testing the market.
## Takeaway #2: The Deeding "Loophole" Used to Avoid Public Bids
Under West Virginia Code § 5-22-1, public corporations are legally required to solicit competitive, open bids for any construction project exceeding $50,000. To award a $4.12 million contract to JacMal Properties LLC without an open bid, the PCSWA and the County Commission utilized a "jurisdictional shield." They exploited the broader statutory leasing powers of the Greenbrier Valley Economic Development Corporation (GVEDC) to "launder" the title of public land and bypass transparency laws.
The strategic routing of the land followed a convoluted path:
- Pocahontas County Commission: Transfers the land to the PCSWA.
- PCSWA: Deeds approximately two acres of the public landfill parcel to the GVEDC.
- GVEDC: Acts as the intermediary conduit to sign a non-bidded Memorandum of Understanding (MOU).
- JacMal Properties LLC: Receives the land to construct the station, then leases it back to the PCSWA.
This "legally suspect" routing used the GVEDC as a laundry for the title, exploiting West Virginia Code § 7-12-1 to execute a private MOU. By utilizing this loop, the PCSWA effectively shut out competitive market forces, leaving the public tethered to a single, highly inflated, non-bidded contract.
## Takeaway #3: The Math of "Statistical Impossibility"
The financial architecture of the project, labeled "Option #4," is a formula for permanent insolvency. Once operational, the PCSWA expects a net margin of just $2.70 per ton of waste. However, the facility carries fixed annual operating and staffing costs exceeding $500,000 and an annual lease payment of over $201,000.
To cover these total expenses, the county would need to generate over 260,000 tons of waste annually. For a rural county characterized by a small, declining population, this volume is a statistical impossibility. The PCSWA is attempting to install industrial-scale infrastructure designed for high-density urban areas—capable of processing 90 tons per hour—in a region where the tonnage simply cannot support the overhead.
"The mandate [for an escrow account] forces the PCSWA to lock away 54,000 annually (810,000 over the life of the lease) in an illiquid account, further starving the public agency of vital liquid operating capital and accelerating the timeline toward insolvency."
As admitted by PCSWA Attorney David Sims, the PSC will likely require a $4,500 monthly escrow to guarantee a $1.10 million buyout at the end of the 15-year lease. This requirement removes even more liquid capital from an agency already drowning in a project that is mathematically incapable of maintaining solvency.
## Takeaway #4: Experts Silenced by a Personal Injury Lawyer
The most striking aspect of the complaint is the wholesale dismissal of expert consensus. Five independent municipal solid waste specialists, each with over 40 years of experience, reviewed the county’s demographics and waste tonnage. They unanimously concluded that a massive industrial transfer station is "entirely unsuitable" for a low-tonnage rural county, recommending instead a decentralized network of waste compactors as the optimal solution.
Despite this 200-year pool of collective expertise, the PCSWA deferred to a "cost analysis" provided by David Sims. Sims is a personal injury and medical malpractice lawyer from Wheeling with zero technical training in solid waste logistics. He never submitted a written report or a formal methodology; instead, he provided a verbal declaration that the $4.12 million JacMal project was the "best option."
The governance failure reached a breaking point during the "Pressured Re-Vote" on February 25, 2026. After the project was initially rejected, Chairman Dave Henderson and David McLaughlin reportedly pressured board members Phillip Cobb and Ed Riley to flip their votes. The fallout was immediate: on March 15, 2026, board member Ed Riley resigned his seat, citing the severe financial consequences of the deal.
## Takeaway #5: Taxation Without Waste and the End of Public Benefits
To sustain a project that is structurally insolvent under normal market operations, the PCSWA has proposed a series of "regressive revenue extractions." Foremost among these are "Flow Control" laws, which mandate that every ounce of waste generated in the county pass through the JacMal facility, effectively outlawing the use of cheaper out-of-county landfills.
Even more controversial is the plan to expand "Green Box" fees—currently user fees for residences—to all deeded land parcels. This targets 1,738 farms and 4,671 unimproved lots. Farmers and landowners with zero waste output are being forced to pay a tax-like levy purely to guarantee risk-free revenue for a private developer. The plan also strips residents of long-standing benefits:
- Abolition of the "Free Day": The monthly day for free disposal at the landfill will be canceled.
- Furniture Fees: Household furnishings will no longer be disposed of for free; they will be weighed and charged at standard tipping rates.
A Question of Accountability
The West Virginia Public Service Commission has already begun to intervene, blocking emergency approvals and relocating formal hearings directly into Pocahontas County to ensure residents are heard. This intervention is a victory for civic transparency, yet it highlights a lingering question: How did a public agency tasked with economical waste disposal commit to a deal mathematically destined for failure?
The role of fiduciary duty in small-town government is to protect the public’s resources, not to bypass bidding laws for the benefit of private interests. As the PSC continues its review, the central finding of the experts remains the definitive word on the matter. For a county with a declining population and low waste volume, a massive industrial transfer station "is entirely unsuitable and financially unjustifiable."
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Assessment of Systemic Governance and Financial Failures: Pocahontas County Transfer Station Proposal
Executive Summary
This briefing document outlines a formal complaint submitted to the West Virginia Public Service Commission (PSC) regarding a proposed $4.12 million solid waste transfer station in Pocahontas County. The project, a public-private partnership between the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (PCSWA) and JacMal Properties LLC, is alleged to be the result of systemic fiduciary neglect, statutory circumvention, and flawed financial modeling.
Key findings indicate that the PCSWA utilized a complex land-transfer loop to bypass mandatory state bidding laws and relied on false claims of a local monopoly to justify a non-competitive contract. Technical experts have unanimously rejected the transfer station model as unsuitable for the county's low-tonnage needs, recommending decentralized compactors instead. Financial analysis suggests the project is structurally insolvent, requiring impossible waste volumes to break even. To offset these deficits, the PCSWA has proposed regressive regulations, including mandatory "Flow Control" and taxes on vacant land, which shift all financial risk to local property owners.
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Procedural Irregularities and the "Monopolistic Fallacy"
The PCSWA justified the sole-source partnership with JacMal Properties LLC—owned by Jacob and Melinda Meck—by asserting that Allegheny Disposal (another Meck family enterprise) was the only entity licensed and capable of handling the county’s municipal solid waste.
An audit of West Virginia PSC records reveals these claims to be factually incorrect:
- Active Licensure: Three separate companies hold valid solid waste collection licenses for Pocahontas County.
- Operational Presence: Two of these entities are currently active within the county. One carrier has maintained active regulatory status in the county since 1978.
- Market Competition: Greenbrier Valley is documented as the largest active trash collector at Snowshoe Mountain resort, a fact verified by resident-led empirical audits of waste dumpsters.
The PCSWA board failed to perform basic regulatory due diligence, accepting verbal claims of a monopoly to justify a multi-million dollar capital commitment without a competitive bidding process.
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Procurement Ethics: The GVEDC Land-Deeding Loop
To avoid the requirements of West Virginia Code § 5-22-1—which mandates competitive bidding for public improvement projects exceeding $50,000—the PCSWA and the Pocahontas County Commission employed a "land-deeding loop" involving the Greenbrier Valley Economic Development Corporation (GVEDC).
The Transaction Mechanism:
- Transfer: The County Commission transferred approximately two acres of the Dunmore landfill parcel to the PCSWA.
- Routing: The PCSWA deeded the land to the GVEDC to exploit the broader leasing powers granted to economic development authorities under WV Code § 7-12-1.
- MOU: The GVEDC entered into a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with JacMal Properties LLC for the construction of the station.
- Leaseback: JacMal Properties constructs the station and leases it back to the PCSWA for operation at a total cost of $4.12 million over 15 years.
This structure allowed the PCSWA to award a high-cost contract to a private developer while shielding the project from the competitive market forces required by state law.
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Financial Architecture and Insolvency Risk
The "Option #4" lease-to-buy contract is characterized by high fixed costs and low projected margins, creating a significant risk of long-term insolvency.
Financial Metric Summary
Category | Specific Element | Value |
Lease Costs | Monthly Lease Payment | $16,759 |
Cumulative 15-Year Payments | $3,016,620.00 | |
Mandatory Year-15 Buyout | $1,103,495.24 | |
Total Lease Contract Cost | $4,120,115.24 | |
Comparison | Estimated Public Construction Cost | $2,750,000.00 |
Regulation | Monthly Escrow Deposit (PSC Mandate) | $4,500 |
Operations | Annual Staffing & Overhead | > $500,000 |
Revenue | Net Margin on Hauled Waste | $2.70 / ton |
The Breakeven Challenge
The PCSWA projects a net margin of only $2.70 per ton after transportation, fuel, and tipping fees. Based on the project's fixed costs, the annual tonnage required to reach a breakeven point is:
- To cover operating expenses only: 185,185 tons per year.
- To cover operating expenses and lease payments: 259,670 tons per year.
For a rural county with a small and declining population, generating over a quarter-million tons of waste annually is considered a "statistical impossibility." Furthermore, the PSC is expected to mandate a $4,500 monthly escrow deposit to ensure the $1.10 million buyout fund is available at Year 15, further straining liquid capital.
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Technical Evaluation and Expert Consensus
The technical necessity for an industrial transfer station—capable of processing 90 tons per hour—is unsupported by the county's actual waste volume. Five independent municipal solid waste experts, each with over 40 years of experience, reviewed the county's demographics and logistics. Their conclusions were unanimous:
- Unsuitability: A transfer station is financially unjustifiable for Pocahontas County's low tonnage.
- Recommended Alternative: A decentralized network of modern waste compactors was identified as the optimal solution.
- Benefits of Compactors: Compactors offer lower infrastructure costs, reduced haulage volume, and better protection for local groundwater.
The PCSWA reportedly dismissed these findings and refused to conduct a formal cost-benefit analysis of the compactor alternative.
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Governance and Fiduciary Neglect
The decision to adopt "Option #4" was driven by non-expert advice and political pressure rather than objective analysis.
Role of Legal Counsel
The technical "cost analysis" for the project was conducted by David Sims, the PCSWA’s attorney. Sims is a personal injury and medical malpractice litigator based in Wheeling with no technical credentials in solid waste management or logistics. He provided only verbal declarations that the JacMal contract was the "best option" and did not submit a written report or methodology.
Board Instability
The approval of the contract followed a period of intense pressure:
- February 18, 2026: Option #4 was initially rejected by the board.
- February 25, 2026: Following pressure from the Chairman and David McLaughlin, board members flipped their votes to pass the option.
- March 15, 2026: Board member Ed Riley resigned, citing the severe financial fallout of the decision.
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Proposed Regressive Regulations
To sustain the insolvent transfer station, the PCSWA and Attorney Sims drafted aggressive updates to county regulations:
- Mandated Flow Control: Legally requires all waste generated in the county to pass through the JacMal facility, outlawing the use of cheaper regional landfills.
- Vacant Land Levies: Proposes expanding the "Green Box Fee" (currently $135) to all deeded land parcels, including 4,671 unimproved lots and 1,738 farms that generate no waste.
- Elimination of Benefits:
- Abolition of the monthly "Free Day" for disposal.
- Elimination of free disposal for household furnishings; all furniture would be weighed and charged standard tipping fees.
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Regulatory Intervention and Relief Sought
The West Virginia PSC has already blocked emergency approvals and initiated a rigorous administrative review, including moving formal hearings to Pocahontas County. The formal complaint seeks the following relief:
- Denial of Certificate: Permanent denial of the Certificate of Need for the $4.12 million station.
- Invalidation of Land Transfer: Nullification of the GVEDC land transfer used to bypass bidding laws.
- Rejection of New Fees: Denial of Flow Control and vacant land taxes.
- Mandated Study: Requirement for a professionally engineered cost-benefit study of a decentralized compactor network by a certified engineering firm.
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