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"Pack It In, Pack It Out" But not across the county line!

 

 


Under the Flow Control Plan and existing regulations, businesses and commercial entities are strictly prohibited from using the residential Green Box system. To legally dispose of their garbage, businesses must either contract with a certified commercial waste hauler or transport their waste directly to the landfill (and eventually the Dunmore transfer station) to pay the required per-ton tipping fees.

Tourists and day visitors will not be individually required to drive to the Dunmore Transfer Station before leaving the county. Instead, the massive amount of waste generated by tourism—which officials describe as a significant economic "externality" for the county—is typically disposed of at the recreational sites, hotels, state parks, or Monongahela National Forest facilities where visitors stay. Once tourists dispose of their trash at these host locations, it becomes the legal responsibility of those commercial businesses and government agencies to manage the waste by using contracted haulers. The Solid Waste Authority (SWA) must aggressively enforce rules to prevent tourists and businesses from illegally bypassing this system by dumping their waste into the residential Green Boxes.

The "Flow Control" mandate itself is primarily aimed at these commercial haulers and municipalities; it ensures that once a hauler collects waste from a business or public park, they cannot bypass the county's system to take it to a cheaper out-of-county landfill. Every ounce must go through the Dunmore facility so the county can collect the tipping fees needed to pay for the transfer station lease.

Regarding the weekend logistical gap, the weekend closures do not prevent businesses from throwing away trash on their own premises; rather, they threaten the county's ability to transport that trash. The crisis stems from the fact that the destination regional landfills in neighboring counties (like Greenbrier) operate on standard industrial schedules and close over the weekend. Historically, Pocahontas County had to empty its Green Boxes seven days a week to prevent overflow. Once the local landfill closes, the SWA will not have an open destination to send its waste on Saturdays and Sundays, meaning the county will have to rely on the new transfer station's ability to consolidate and temporarily store the weekend waste until it can be hauled out-of-county on Monday.

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When visiting the Monongahela National Forest, managing your trash responsibly is essential to protect the environment, wildlife, and the experience of other visitors. While some developed areas offer disposal, many locations require you to "Pack It In, Pack It Out."

Typical Trash Disposal Options for Visitors

1. Within the National Forest

  • Developed Campgrounds and Day-Use Areas: Major recreation sites like Seneca Shadows Campground and Tea Creek Campground often have dumpsters or large, bear-proof trash receptacles for visitor use.

  • Bear-Proof Canisters: To prevent wildlife habituation, use the designated bear-proof containers where provided. Always ensure the latch is secured correctly.

  • Non-Developed or Dispersed Camping: If you are camping in a location without trash cans (often the case for backcountry or dispersed camping), you are required to pack all of your garbage out with you.

2. Nearby Facilities (Hotels, State Parks, and Communities)

  • Where You Stay: If you are a guest at a hotel, motel, or private cabin, you should use the garbage services provided at that facility.

  • State Parks: West Virginia State Parks located within or near the Monongahela National Forest (such as Blackwater Falls, Canaan Valley Resort, or Watoga) have their own waste disposal systems for their guests and day visitors.

  • Community Transfer Stations: If you have accumulated trash and are leaving the forest, you may be able to use a local municipal transfer station for a small fee. For example, the Mountaineer Transfer Station near Morgantown is one such option, though it is not a direct National Forest facility.

The Problem: Overflowing Trash Cans

Overflowing trash receptacles are a serious issue in the National Forest for several reasons:

  • Wildlife Attractant: Overflowing trash, especially food waste, is the primary cause of bear-human conflicts. Bears can become food-conditioned, leading to property damage and potential danger to people. A "problem bear" often must be euthanized.

  • Environmental Pollutant: Litter can contaminate soil and water, harm fish and wildlife, and is aesthetically unpleasant.

  • Operational Challenge: Managing waste in a remote national forest is logistically difficult and expensive. When cans overflow, it takes significantly more time and resources for already-strained forest staff to clean up.

How You Can Help: Leave No Trace

Please follow the "Pack It In, Pack It Out" principle to help protect the Monongahela National Forest:

  1. Plan Ahead: Bring durable containers and reusable items to minimize the amount of waste you generate.

  2. Repackage Food: Remove unnecessary packaging at home to reduce trash before your trip.

  3. Bring Your Own Trash Bags: Always have a plan for containing your own waste until you find a proper disposal location.

  4. Never Leave Trash in the Forest: This includes "natural" items like orange peels or apple cores, which decompose slowly and attract wildlife.

  5. Check Containers: If a trash can is full, do not pile more trash on top or leave it next to the bin. This creates an immediate wildlife hazard. Take it with you to the next available facility.

 

What Happens on the weekends?

 


The decentralized Green Box system of unattended dumpsters will remain a necessity for Pocahontas County, as private haulers are unwilling to provide affordable curbside collection to remote mountainous residences. However, the transition to a regional transfer station model will force significant logistical and financial changes upon the system.

Financial Impacts and Fee Increases To fund the costly transition to the new transfer station, the annual Green Box fee is projected to increase dramatically. Currently set at $120 per year, officials estimate the fee may need to rise to between $300 and $600 per household to cover the new operating costs. To help mitigate this massive hike, the Solid Waste Authority (SWA) is considering expanding the fee base by assessing the fee on all deeded properties in the county, including unimproved lots and farms, rather than just occupied residences. Additionally, the County Commission has proposed a "Green Box Fee assistance" program to help elderly residents on fixed incomes manage the sudden cost jump.

Logistical Challenges and Weekend Operations The Green Box system currently requires collection seven days a week to prevent the boxes from overflowing. A major impending crisis is that the regional destination landfills, such as the one in Greenbrier County, operate on traditional industrial schedules—closing early on Saturdays and remaining entirely closed on Sundays. Landfill Manager Chris McComb has warned that this creates a massive logistical gap for weekend waste; if the Green Boxes cannot be emptied over the weekend, they will overflow and likely trigger increased illegal dumping and cleanup costs.

Stricter Enforcement and Abandoned Upgrades The SWA previously considered upgrading the low-tech Green Boxes to higher-efficiency compactor sites to reduce pickup frequency, but the upfront capital costs for the equipment were deemed too high. Instead, the system will require stricter enforcement to maintain its financial viability. Because the system is plagued by vandalism and unauthorized use, the SWA must aggressively prevent commercial businesses and tourists from illegally dumping waste into the residential Green Boxes, which drives up the county's disposal costs without generating corresponding revenue.

Ultimately, the SWA has argued that adopting "Flow Control" (mandating all waste goes to the new transfer station) is an absolute necessity; without it, the authority could face bankruptcy, which would lead to a total collapse of the Green Box system that serves the county's most remote residents.

The 1932 Law That Still Controls Your Property Taxes

 


 

The 1932 Law That Still Controls Your Property Taxes: 5 Surprising Lessons from West Virginia’s Fiscal Revolution

In the early 1930s, West Virginia was gripped by a "catastrophic contraction" that threatened the very foundations of the state’s social contract. As the industrial and agricultural sectors collapsed, the fair market value of real estate plummeted, yet the millage rates—the property tax bills—remained tethered to a pre-crisis world.

For the average citizen, this was not merely a fiscal imbalance; it was an existential threat. Imagine the desperation of losing a family farm that had been held for generations, not due to lack of productivity, but because the tax bill remained static while property values and income vanished. This era of dispossession catalyzed a "constitutional intervention" that continues to dictate the state's fiscal policy today.

A Populist Mandate Forged in Economic Ruin

The 1932 Property Tax Limitation Amendment was not a subtle administrative adjustment; it was a populist uprising against a system that once drew 90 percent of all government revenue from property taxes. When the Depression hit, this reliance proved fatal. Statewide property tax revenue collapsed from $52 million in 1928 to a mere $27 million by 1933.

The human cost of this revenue gap was articulated in the socio-economic records of the era:

"Many West Virginians, particularly those in rural counties whose livelihoods depended on agriculture or timber, faced the dual threat of evaporating income and rising tax burdens relative to their diminished assets. The result was a wave of tax sales, with citizens losing farms and homes that had often been in their families for generations."

The response was a historic voter mandate. In the 1932 referendum, West Virginians approved the tax caps by a staggering margin of 335,482 to 43,931. This forced the newly inaugurated Governor Herman Guy Kump and the legislature to implement a regime of radical fiscal restraint.

The Constitutional Fortress: Inverting the Ad Valorem Hierarchy

Codified in Article X, Section 1 of the State Constitution, the amendment created a rigid classification system that "inverted the traditional tax hierarchy." By design, it prioritized the "sanctity of the home" and agricultural viability over industrial and commercial wealth.

To ensure stability, the law established a two-step calculation. Property is appraised at its fair market value, but it is assessed for tax purposes at exactly 60 percent of that value—a constitutional safeguard designed to prevent local assessors from artificially inflating valuations to bypass levy caps. The mathematical formula for annual tax liability is expressed as:

\text{Tax} = \left( \frac{V \times 0.60}{100} \right) \times L

Where V is the fair market value and L is the aggregate levy rate. The amendment fixed absolute caps for the four classes of property:

  • Class I ($0.50 per $100): Tangible personal property employed exclusively in agriculture and intangible personal property (e.g., stocks and bonds).
  • Class II ($1.00 per $100): All owner-occupied residential property and farms occupied by owners or bona fide tenants.
  • Class III ($1.50 per $100): Real and personal property outside municipalities, primarily commercial and industrial assets.
  • Class IV ($2.00 per $100): Real and personal property inside municipalities, primarily commercial and industrial assets.

The Price of Protection: A Revolution of Centralization

The amendment saved homeowners, but it effectively ended local government autonomy. When local authorities could no longer raise sufficient property tax revenue, the state was forced into a massive administrative takeover in 1933 known as the "County Unit Plan."

This shift was a double-edged sword. On one hand, the state abolished 398 independent school districts, consolidating them into 55 county-wide systems. This allowed for "educational equity" that was years ahead of its time, ensuring students in poor rural counties received the same basic funding as those in wealthy industrial hubs. The move was highly efficient, resulting in the reduction of 940 teachers and $4.5 million in administrative costs in the first year.

Simultaneously, the State Road Act stripped "county courts" of their responsibility for local infrastructure. While this created one of the largest centralized road systems in the country, it permanently detached local planning from local property tax funding.

Judicial Fortification Against "Taxes in Disguise"

Over the decades, the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals built a "legal wall" to prevent the legislature from gutting these constitutional protections. In landmark cases like Finlayson v. Shinnston and Bee v. City of Huntington, the court ruled that these caps were mandatory and all-encompassing.

This strict constructionism occasionally rendered municipalities "insolvent." Because the court ruled that pre-existing debt service must be paid within the constitutional caps, some cities found their entire tax allotment consumed by old bonds, leaving literally zero millage for current operations like police or fire services.

To survive, cities attempted to implement "service fees" based on property value. However, in Hare v. City of Wheeling and City of Fairmont v. Pitrolo, the court struck these down as "property taxes in disguise." The justices established a clear mathematical line: if a fee is ad valorem (based on value) rather than a direct charge for a specific benefit, it is a tax subject to the 1932 limits.

The Modern Battlefront: The 2024 Snowshoe Precedent

The 1932 framework is not a relic; it is actively litigated today. A primary example is the 2024 case Silver Creek Association, Inc. v. Matthew Irby, centered on Snowshoe Mountain in Pocahontas County.

The dispute was triggered by a 2019 circuit court order regarding a commercial bar and grill, "The Locker Room," located within a residential lodge. The Assessor subsequently attempted to reclassify 239 residential condos as Class III (commercial) property, arguing that because the units shared a "common element" with a business, the entire building lost its Class II status.

The Intermediate Court of Appeals reversed this, upholding the "split-ticket" assessment mechanism. The court ruled that constitutional protections must follow actual use: the residences remained Class II, while only the fractional interest in the commercial common area could be taxed at the Class III rate. This ruling ensures that modern developments cannot be used as a loophole to strip residents of their 1932 protections.

A Fiscal Soul Re-Ordered

The 1932 Property Tax Limitation Amendment was more than a reaction to the Depression; it was a fundamental re-ordering of West Virginia’s "fiscal soul." It institutionalized a system where the rights of the homeowner are constitutionally privileged over the needs of the public treasury.

The cultural and political weight of this 1932 framework was reaffirmed as recently as 2022, when voters overwhelmingly rejected the "Property Tax Modernization Amendment." Despite arguments that the state needed to exempt business inventory to remain competitive, the electorate chose to maintain the rigid protections established nearly a century ago.

As tourism-driven development and rising property values put new pressure on the state, West Virginia faces a persistent question: Is this framework a vital shield for residents or a barrier to modern local government? Whatever the answer, the legacy of 1932 remains the primary instrument ensuring that West Virginia maintains some of the most protected residential property in the United States.

Making Dunmore the Garbage Capital of Highlands

 

 

Geospatial and Regulatory Compliance Analysis of Solid Waste Transfer Station Siting in Pocahontas County, West Virginia

The determination of suitability for a commercial solid waste transfer station within the rural highlands of Pocahontas County necessitates a rigorous multi-disciplinary evaluation of environmental law, geospatial proximity, and infrastructure logistics. As the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (SWA) transitions from an active landfill model to a transfer-based disposal system, the primary site under consideration is the existing facility in Dunmore, West Virginia. This transition is catalyzed by the terminal capacity of the current landfill cells, which, according to engineering estimates provided by the firm Podesta, are expected to reach their useful lifespan by late 2026 or early 2027. The proposed relocation and re-permitting of waste activities on this site raise significant regulatory questions, particularly concerning the mandatory setbacks established by West Virginia’s Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) as they relate to sensitive receptors, specifically the Pocahontas County High School (PCHS).

Structural Context of Solid Waste Management in Pocahontas County

The historical trajectory of waste management in Pocahontas County is defined by its low population density and high proportion of public lands, factors that severely limit the availability of suitable acreage for industrial use. In 1986, the Pocahontas County Commission addressed a burgeoning solid waste crisis by constructing the current permitted landfill in Dunmore. This facility has served as the hub for the county’s "Green Box" system, a network of convenience centers that facilitate household waste collection in areas where door-to-door pickup is hindered by the rugged Appalachian terrain.

The current organizational structure involves a partnership between the Pocahontas County Commission and the Solid Waste Authority. While the Commission initially purchased the landfill property, it was eventually transferred into the name of the SWA in March 2025 following a protracted legal and administrative process. This ownership structure is critical because it dictates the responsibility for post-closure costs, currently estimated at approximately $75,000 annually for a period of up to 30 years.

Operational ElementLocation / MetricSource
Primary Landfill Address374 Landfill Road, Dunmore, WV 24934
Current Site CapacityEstimated closure: Dec 2026 - Oct 2027
Authorized Landfill ClassClass B and Class D
Management EntityPocahontas County Solid Waste Authority
Post-Closure Financial Liability$75,000 per year for 30 years

The transition to a transfer station model is not merely a logistical choice but an economic imperative. The SWA evaluated several alternatives, including hauling waste directly to the Tygarts Valley Transfer Station or continuing the use of Green Boxes while trucking waste to regional landfills in Greenbrier or Tucker counties. The construction of a local transfer station was deemed the most sustainable option, leading to the approval of "Option #4," a complex public-private partnership involving the Greenbrier Development Authority and JacMal, LLC.

The Regulatory Framework: 33CSR1 and 33CSR3

The siting of any solid waste facility in West Virginia is governed by the West Virginia Code of State Rules (CSR), specifically Title 33, Series 1 (Solid Waste Management Rule) and Title 33, Series 3 (Yard Waste Composting Rule). These rules establish the technical standards for location, design, and environmental protection that a permittee must satisfy to obtain and maintain a valid permit from the DEP’s Division of Water and Waste Management.

General Location Standards under 33CSR1

Under 33CSR1 Section 3, a solid waste facility is prohibited in areas where there is a "reasonable probability" of significant adverse impact on natural wetlands, endangered species, or groundwater quality. The law mandates that no person may establish a facility in an area where the migration of explosive gases, specifically methane, would exceed twenty-five percent of the lower explosive limit in facility structures or exceed the limit at the property boundary.

The regulation also establishes hydrological buffers that are non-negotiable without specific engineering variances. Facilities must maintain a distance of at least 300 feet from any perennial stream, pond, lake, wetland, or spring. In the context of the Dunmore property, these buffers are vital as the site is situated in the headwaters of the Greenbrier River watershed, an area characterized by significant karst topography and underground water movement.

The 2,000-Foot Institutional Setback

The most stringent setback requirement impacting the Dunmore site is the 2,000-foot distance mandated between a waste facility and sensitive institutional receptors. While 33CSR3 (Yard Waste Composting) explicitly codifies this 2,000-foot buffer for schools, health care facilities, and churches, the general Solid Waste Management Rule (33CSR1) often incorporates these standards through the County Siting Plan process or through the Secretary's discretionary authority to prevent "nuisances".

Receptor CategoryMandatory Setback DistanceLegal Source
Schools (K-12 and Higher Ed)2,000 feet
Health Care Facilities2,000 feet
Churches / Places of Worship2,000 feet
Occupied Dwellings500 feet (Siting Plan) / 200 feet (Rule)
Federal/State Highway (RT 28)50 feet
Perennial Streams / Wetlands300 feet

The regulatory language in 33CSR3 Section 3.2.a.5 provides a mechanism for the Secretary of the DEP to reduce this 2,000-foot setback if the applicant can demonstrate that "a nuisance will not be created due to the operation of the facility". For a transfer station, this demonstration typically requires an enclosed building design, sophisticated air filtration, vector control (to prevent birds and rodents), and noise attenuation measures.

Property Analysis: Map 14, Parcel 16 (The Dunmore Site)

The property currently owned by the Pocahontas County SWA is located at 374 Landfill Road and is identified in the Pocahontas County Assessor’s records as Map 14, Parcel 16. This parcel comprises approximately 40 acres of land that has been historically designated as authorized for Class B and D landfill activities.

Geospatial Boundaries and "Option #4"

The proposed transfer station is not intended to cover the entire 40-acre parcel. Instead, the SWA has approved a plan to sell a approximately two-acre portion of the land, located adjacent to the existing landfill shop building, to the Greenbrier Development Authority. This two-acre sub-parcel is where JacMal, LLC will construct the actual transfer station structure.

The location of this shop building and its associated two-acre plot is the focal point of the compliance analysis. Historical survey work on the property has been subject to scrutiny; for example, in 2026, concerns were raised that the existing landfill disposal cells might not have respected the required 100-foot setback from the property owner’s boundary line. The precision of these boundaries is paramount when calculating the distance to the high school property.

Topographical and Geological Constraints

The Dunmore site was selected in the 1980s because it met the criteria of the time, including soil depth and proximity to transportation. However, modern siting rules under 33CSR1 and 33CSR3 prohibit facilities on land where the topography exceeds a six percent grade. While the active disposal cells are located on flatter terrain, the surrounding 40 acres contain steeper slopes that would be ineligible for new construction. Furthermore, any facility must maintain at least 20 inches of soil over bedrock and at least five feet of separation from the seasonal high water table.

The Receptor: Pocahontas County High School

Pocahontas County High School (PCHS) is located at 271 Warrior Way, Dunmore, WV 24934. The school campus sits on a significant parcel of land in the Dunmore district, also identified as being on Map 14.

Spatial Relationship Between the SWA Site and PCHS

The proximity of the high school to the landfill property is noted in SWA documentation, which describes the 374 Landfill Road address as being "near PCHS". The high school’s main entrance on Warrior Way is located less than a mile north of the intersection of Landfill Road and Route 28.

The physical structure of the high school and its auxiliary buildings (such as portable classrooms) are the specific points from which the 2,000-foot setback must be measured. Preliminary geospatial modeling suggests that the southern boundary of the school property and the northern boundary of the SWA property are in close proximity, potentially within 1,000 to 1,500 feet of each other. This creates a "compliance gap" where the proposed transfer station site at the existing shop building may fall well within the prohibited 2,000-foot zone.

FeatureCoordinate/Location ContextSource
PCHS Main Building271 Warrior Way, Dunmore
PCHS Portable ClassroomsMap 14, Parcel 11.1 (Nearby)
SWA Shop BuildingProximity to Landfill Road Entrance
Estimated Distance (PCHS to Shop)Potentially < 2,000 feet

Compliance Gap Analysis: Applying the Setback Parameters

When applying the setback parameters of West Virginia solid waste law to the specific geography of Dunmore, several layers of potential non-compliance emerge.

The Institutional Nuisance Conflict

The 2,000-foot setback from schools is designed to mitigate a range of "nuisances" including noise from heavy machinery, dust from truck traffic, and odors from municipal solid waste. A transfer station, by its nature, consolidates waste from across the entire county. This means that instead of the current localized landfill traffic, all waste generated in Pocahontas County—from Marlinton to Green Bank—will be funneled through the Route 28 corridor and into the Dunmore site.

The SWA's proposal for "Flow Control" would mandate that all waste haulers use this single facility to ensure the economic viability of the JacMal lease. This would result in a significant increase in heavy-duty truck traffic (packer trucks and transfer trailers) passing directly by the high school entrance during school hours, potentially creating a safety and noise nuisance that would make a DEP waiver of the 2,000-foot setback difficult to obtain.

Property Boundary and Buffer Zone Infractions

The 100-foot property line setback is another critical factor. Under 33CSR3 Section 3.2.a.8 and 33CSR1, the operational area of a facility cannot be located within 100 feet of an adjacent property owner's boundary line. In Dunmore, the SWA property is surrounded by private parcels and agricultural land. If the "Option #4" two-acre plot is situated too close to the property line of a non-participating neighbor, the facility would be in violation unless written permission is obtained from that neighbor.

Setback TypeLegal RequirementDunmore Site Challenge
School Buffer2,000 feetPCHS buildings are likely within this radius.
Boundary Buffer100 feetOngoing survey disputes regarding cell and shop placement.
Dwelling Buffer500 feetPrivate residences along Landfill Rd and RT 28.
Road Buffer50 feetProximity to RT 28 for the entrance/exit.

Locating a Compliant Site: Where Must the Facility Go?

Given the density of restrictions at the current Dunmore location, it is necessary to identify where a solid waste transfer station would have to be located to satisfy all West Virginia setback parameters. This requires a "site-exclusion" methodology, where layers of prohibited land are stripped away to reveal compliant "islands" of potential suitability.

Elimination of Public Lands and Population Centers

According to the Kanawha County Siting Plan (used here as a benchmark for DEP-approved methodology), transfer stations are generally prohibited within "population centers" and "public lands". In Pocahontas County, the Monongahela National Forest and various state forests cover nearly 60% of the land area, immediately excluding them from consideration. Furthermore, the towns of Marlinton, Hillsboro, and the unincorporated villages of Dunmore, Cass, and Green Bank are population centers where siting would face insurmountable public health and nuisance challenges.

The "Compliant Island" Search

To be fully compliant with the 2,000-foot school setback and other parameters, a facility must be located on a parcel that meets the following criteria:

  1. Distance from Schools: At least 2,000 feet from PCHS (Dunmore), Green Bank Elementary/Middle, Marlinton Elementary/Middle, and Hillsboro Elementary.

  2. Distance from Dwellings: At least 500 feet from any occupied residence (unless a waiver is signed).

  3. Hydrology: At least 300 feet from the Greenbrier River and its major tributaries.

  4. Topography: A relatively flat area with a slope of less than 6 percent.

  5. Infrastructure: Within reasonable distance of a major truck route (RT 219 or RT 28) capable of handling 80,000-lb transfer trailers.

Identified Potential Compliant Zones

Based on these parameters, the facility would likely need to be moved to a more isolated industrial or agricultural area.

The East Fork Industrial Park (Frank, WV): This area has historically been used for timber processing and industrial activity. It is located several miles from the nearest school (Green Bank). However, compliance here would depend on maintaining the 300-foot buffer from the East Fork of the Greenbrier River and ensuring that any adjacent residential dwellings are more than 500 feet from the facility boundary.

The Seneca Trail / Route 219 Corridor (Marlinton to Hillsboro): There are several large, relatively flat agricultural parcels south of Marlinton that are far from schools. However, these areas are often characterized by sinkholes and karst features. Under 33CSR3 Section 3.2.a.9, a facility cannot be located on land where runoff drains into a sinkhole. Any site in this corridor would require a detailed geological survey to prove that it is not atop an unstable karst network.

The Northern Route 28 Corridor (Green Bank to Durbin): The area between Green Bank and Durbin contains private parcels that are distant from schools. However, the SWA has noted that constructing a "greenfield" site in a new location would cost upwards of $10 million, as it would require new leachate treatment systems and access roads.

Economic and Engineering Feasibility of Compliance

The SWA’s decision to pursue the Dunmore site despite the setback challenges is driven by the presence of existing infrastructure. The Dunmore property already features a leachate collection and treatment facility, which is a massive capital asset.

The Cost of a Compliant Move

If the DEP were to strictly enforce the 2,000-foot PCHS setback and deny a variance for the Dunmore site, the SWA would face a financial crisis.

Cost ComponentDunmore Site (Option #4)Compliant Greenfield Site
Land Acquisition$0 (Owned)$500,000 - $1,500,000
Leachate TreatmentExisting (Upgrade only)$2,000,000+ (New Plant)
Site Preparation (Liner/Pad)$2,750,000 (JacMal)$5,000,000+
Permitting & Engineering$150,000$500,000+
Total Estimated 15-Year Cost$4,120,000$10,000,000+

The SWA currently generates its revenue through tipping fees and "Green Box" fees. The transition to a new, fully compliant greenfield site would likely require a significant increase in these fees for county residents, a move that the SWA board has shown reluctance to implement.

The Role of JacMal, LLC and "Option #4"

The "Option #4" lease agreement is the SWA's attempt to bridge the gap between compliance and cost. By selling the 2-acre plot to the Greenbrier Development Authority and leasing back the facility from JacMal, LLC for $16,759 per month, the SWA avoids the upfront capital expenditure of a move. However, this strategy assumes that the DEP will approve a "minor permit modification" or a new permit for the transfer station at the Dunmore site.

Third-Order Implications: The Future of PCHS and the Dunmore Corridor

The siting of the transfer station near PCHS has implications that extend beyond simple legal setbacks. It represents a long-term commitment to industrializing the Dunmore corridor.

Cumulative Impact on the Educational Environment

The interaction between an industrial waste hub and a high school creates a "cumulative impact" scenario. Even if the transfer station is "under roof," the increased volume of waste and the concentration of the county's garbage trucks at one location create potential environmental justice concerns for the student population. If the 2,000-foot setback is waived, PCHS becomes a "host neighbor" to a facility that will operate for at least the next 15 to 30 years.

The Leachate Liability

The current landfill is closing, but its "post-closure" care will continue for 30 years. If the transfer station is built on the same site, the leachate from the transfer station and the legacy leachate from the closed landfill cells will likely be treated in the same system. This creates a "stacked liability" where any failure in the treatment system could impact the groundwater that serves the Dunmore area and PCHS.

Conclusion: Synthesizing the Siting Logic

The Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority’s property in Dunmore (Map 14, Parcel 16) is the current epicenter of the county's waste management strategy. However, applying the setback parameters of West Virginia solid waste law reveals a significant compliance risk as it relates to Pocahontas County High School.

The analysis indicates that the proposed transfer station site at the existing landfill shop building is likely within the 2,000-foot prohibited zone for schools mandated by 33CSR3 and often applied as a nuisance standard in 33CSR1. To achieve full compliance without a discretionary waiver from the DEP Secretary, the facility would have to be relocated to a more isolated private parcel, such as the East Fork Industrial Park in Frank or a large agricultural plot along the Route 219 corridor south of Marlinton.

However, the economic reality—specifically the $10 million cost of a new "greenfield" site compared to the $4.12 million lease-back model at Dunmore—has driven the SWA to favor the current location. The future of the project depends on whether the SWA can demonstrate to the DEP that a modern, enclosed transfer station represents a "zero-nuisance" operation, thereby justifying a legal variance to the 2,000-foot school setback. Failure to secure this variance would necessitate a complete re-evaluation of the county's siting plan and a search for a more remote, geologically stable, and topographically flat location that satisfies all state laws while remaining financially accessible to the citizens of Pocahontas County.

The "Warriors" of PCHS and the SWA are thus locked in a spatial tension where the preservation of the educational environment must be balanced against the logistical necessity of regional waste disposal. The final determination of the transfer station’s location will be a landmark decision for the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection and a defining moment for the infrastructure of the Greenbrier Valley.

The Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (SWA) intends to place the transfer station within the current exclusionary zone by securing a legal variance from the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) and implementing a specific development strategy known as "Option #4".

The primary mechanisms the Authority is using to bypass the standard setback restrictions include:

  • Discretionary Setback Reduction: Under West Virginia Code (33CSR3 Section 3.2.a.5), the Secretary of the DEP has the authority to reduce the 2,000-foot school setback if the owner or operator can "successfully demonstrate that a nuisance will not be created" by the facility.

  • "Under Roof" Engineering: To meet the "no nuisance" legal standard, the SWA has concluded that the facility must be fully enclosed. By storing materials "under roof" or in box trailers, the SWA argues it can prevent odors, dust, and ground or surface water contamination that would otherwise impact Pocahontas County High School.

  • Leveraging Existing Designations: The SWA is relying on the fact that the 40-acre parcel in Dunmore (Map 14, Parcel 16) is already designated in the county's approved siting plan as an authorized area for Class B and D solid waste activities. They intend to use a "minor permit modification" to existing operations rather than seeking a entirely new "greenfield" permit.

  • Public-Private Partnership (Option #4): On February 25, 2026, the SWA approved a plan to sell a two-acre portion of the property near the existing landfill shop to the Greenbrier Development Authority. A private entity, JacMal, LLC, will construct the station on this site and lease it back to the SWA for $16,759 per month.

This strategy is driven largely by economics; the SWA estimated that building a new, fully compliant facility at a different location would cost upwards of $10 million over 15 years, whereas the lease-back model at the current site is estimated to cost approximately $4.12 million.


 

"Pack It In, Pack It Out" But not across the county line!

    Under the Flow Control Plan and existing regulations, businesses and commercial entities are strictly prohibited from using the resident...

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