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FOIA Letter

 


April 28, 2026

VIA EMAIL: rbeezley@gvedc.com

Ruthana Beezley, Executive Director

Greenbrier Valley Economic Development Corporation

804 Industrial Park, Suite 5

Maxwelton, WV 24957

RE: Freedom of Information Act Request – JacMal Properties, LLC / Meck (Green Bank Property)

Dear Ms. Beezley:

Under the West Virginia Freedom of Information Act, W. Va. Code § 29B-1-1 et seq., I am requesting access to and copies of all public records regarding interactions between the Greenbrier Valley Economic Development Corporation (GVEDC) and the company known as JacMal Properties, LLC (or any related entities involving Jacob S. Meck or Malinda Meck) concerning property located in Pocahontas County, West Virginia.

Specifically, I am requesting records pertaining to the property in Green Bank, West Virginia, where the company operates a solid waste disposal system (transfer station/pumping service) and a storage facility. These records should include, but are not limited to:

  • Agreements: Any and all lease agreements, land transfer documents, deeds, or contracts between GVEDC and JacMal Properties, LLC (or Jacob/Malinda Meck).

  • Authorization Records: Corporate minutes, board meeting records, or resolutions authorizing the aforementioned leases, transfers, or business arrangements.

  • Ownership Status: Any documentation or internal correspondence identifying the current ownership and control status of the Green Bank property.

  • Correspondence: Any emails, letters, or memoranda between GVEDC staff/board members and representatives of JacMal/Meck regarding site development or operations at the Green Bank location.

Statutory Requirements

Pursuant to W. Va. Code § 29B-1-3(d), a response is required within five (5) business days of receipt of this request. If this request is denied in whole or in part, please cite the specific statutory exemption(s) justifying the withholding of information and notify me of the procedures for appealing your decision.

Delivery and Fees

I request that these records be provided in digital format (PDF or scanned electronic copies) via email to normanalderman@yahoo.com.

If there are fees associated with the search or duplication of these records, please inform me of the cost before proceeding if the total exceeds $25.00. However, I note that under W. Va. Code § 29B-1-3(e), public bodies are encouraged to provide records via electronic means to minimize costs.

Thank you for your prompt attention to this matter.

Sincerely,

/s/ Norman Alderman

normanalderman@yahoo.com

Metro Marlinton

 


The Marlinton Manoeuvre: Is Annexing an Entire County the Ultimate Tax Hack?

1. Introduction: The Administrative Theology of the Green Box

In the rugged Allegheny heights of Pocahontas County, West Virginia, geopolitical stability is anchored by silent, green monoliths. These "Green Boxes"—communal disposal units scattered across the landscape—have served as the bedrock of local waste management since 1989. However, life under the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (PCSWA) is governed by what can only be described as an "administrative theology." Under the SWA's mandatory disposal regulations, a "residence" is defined with draconian precision: any structure or shelter in which a person spends one or more nights per year.

This definition has turned every hunting cabin and summer shack into a taxable entity subject to the $120 annual Green Box Fee. With the county landfill on Route 28 reaching capacity and transitioning to a costly transfer station model, a "budgetary panic" has set in. The response is the "Marlinton Manoeuvre"—a radical proposal for the Town of Marlinton to annex the entire 942-square-mile geographic extent of the county. It is a desperate, brilliant attempt to use municipal status as a regulatory shield to escape a looming tax regime.

2. The Legal Loophole: Marlinton as a City of Refuge

The genius of the Marlinton Manoeuvre lies in an irony buried within the PCSWA’s own mandates. To ensure solvency, the SWA’s attorney, David Sims, suggested a "Flow Control" ordinance—a legal trap requiring every ounce of waste generated in the county to pass through SWA scales. Yet, the regulations provide a "City of Refuge" for those served by a municipal collection service.

Under the current rules, households served by the Town of Marlinton are explicitly exempted from the mandatory Green Box Fee because the town operates its own pickup. By redefining the entire county as "Marlinton," 942 square miles of mountain terrain would theoretically be liberated from the SWA’s jurisdiction.

"Residents of Marlinton are told they 'should not use the Green Boxes.' Marlinton residents who provide a receipt or statement showing town service within the past six months are granted free disposal of household furnishings at the county landfill."

3. The Impossible Commute: 800 Miles of Friday Trash Routes

While the legal theory is sound, the logistical reality is a fever dream of Appalachian physics. Marlinton’s current trash collection is a tidy, five-day operation. To fulfill the "town service" requirement for a "Greater Marlinton," the town would have to extend its Friday route across approximately 800 miles of public roads—119 miles of which are prone to landslides.

The elevation change alone is 2,190 feet. A truck departing from the town garage on Second Avenue would reach its weight capacity after hitting Huntersville and Caesar Mountain, long before it ever reached the northern border. Landfill Manager Chris McComb, after conducting a test run to a neighboring county, was blunt: "It ain’t gonna work! It cannot!" To maintain the "Manoeuvre," Marlinton would need to jump from a two-truck operation to a regional fleet, requiring a capital investment that would bankrupt a municipality that recently spent weeks debating a $10,000 lot purchase.

4. The Financial "Tax Shelter" That Costs 3x More

The most startling aspect of this jurisdictional chess match is the math. The primary motivation for annexation is to flee the $120 annual Green Box Fee. However, the costs of "escaping" are significantly higher than the fee itself. Residents fleeing a $10-a-month assessment would find themselves subject to municipal sewer rates, fire fees, and the actual cost of door-to-door hauling.

Annual Cost Comparison: The Price of "Freedom"

  • Green Box Fee (County): $120.00
  • SWA Non-compliance Penalty: $150.00
  • Estimated Town Service Fee (Marlinton): ~$420.00
  • Residential Fire Fee (Marlinton): $25.00
  • Unmetered Sewer Rate (Marlinton): $682.08

The psychological drive to avoid a "fee" is so potent that citizens seem willing to volunteer for a service that costs triple the price—all for the privilege of a municipal invoice and the hope that a truck can actually navigate their driveway in January.

5. Boardroom Brawls and the Fertig Fence Saga

The impetus for the Manoeuvre is rooted in the perceived dysfunction of the SWA board, where meetings have devolved into "spirited" exchanges and procedural stalemates. The board’s inability to finalize a land deal for the new transfer station has become a localized epic of "moving goalposts" known as the Fertig Fence saga.

A land purchase was famously stalled over a $3,000 discrepancy regarding a perimeter fence. Even more absurd were the deed restrictions: the SWA’s water access was limited to seven months a year, solely for the purpose of "controlling dust" on the road. This level of bureaucratic paralysis, featuring tie votes that require real-time calls to the West Virginia Ethics Commission, has driven the public toward radical "outside the box" solutions.

"Commissioner Jamie Walker described himself as 'sick and tired of dealing with this sale,' while SWA member Dave Henderson called the deed requirements an 'ultimatum.'"

6. Saving the "Green Bank Walmart"

Beyond the spreadsheets, there is a cultural resistance to the standardization of waste. In Green Bank, the recycling area is affectionately dubbed "Green Bank’s Walmart"—a "Wild West" community exchange where furniture and household items are repurposed.

The SWA’s plan to implement a "sticker system" for vehicles and end the "Free Tuesday" at the landfill represents a threat to this social infrastructure. When the SWA proposed removing the storage buildings at the site, 346 people signed a petition to save them. The Marlinton Manoeuvre, ironically, would likely kill the very community exchange it seeks to protect, replacing the "Walmart" of the woods with a standardized plastic bin and a monthly bill.

7. Legal Mechanics: Chapter 8 vs. The Metro "Poison Pill"

Executing the Manoeuvre requires navigating two distinct legal paths in the West Virginia Code, each with its own logical trap.

  • Annexation by Petition (§8-6-4): This requires a majority of qualified voters and property owners. The strategist’s hurdle here is the "one signature per parcel" rule and the fact that timber corporations count as qualified voters. Furthermore, the town must overcome "Contiguity" requirements and "Urban Growth Boundaries" (UGB). If the territory is outside the UGB, the County Commission must agree that the annexation is "for the good of the county"—essentially asking them to sign their own jurisdictional death warrant.
  • Metro Consolidation (Chapter 7A): This path has a lower entry bar (25% of voters) and would allow the new "Marlinton Metro Government" to fire the SWA board immediately. However, it contains a "poison pill": the new government would inherit the 30-year post-closure costs and inspection liabilities of the landfill, a financial burden that would dwarf any savings from abolished fees.

8. Conclusion: A Miniature Secession

The Marlinton Manoeuvre channels the very DNA of 1861, when western Virginia counties formed a "Restored Government" to grant themselves permission to secede from Richmond. This modern attempt to create a "Greater Marlinton" is a miniature version of that historical precedent—redefining jurisdictional identity to escape perceived draconian governance.

However, much like the 1911 Supreme Court case of Virginia v. West Virginia, which took decades to resolve state debts, any successful annexation would likely trigger "SWA v. Marlinton" litigation over outstanding lease obligations and transfer station debts. While legally possible under §8-6-4, the logistical "victory" would create a municipal monster responsible for 800 miles of mountain roads. In the quest for exemption, Pocahontas County risks a classic Appalachian performance of cutting off one’s nose to spite one’s face, proving that in the mountains, the most expensive thing you can own is a "free" way out.

Analysis of the Marlinton Maneuver and the Pocahontas County Waste Crisis

Executive Summary

The Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (PCSWA) is currently facing an administrative and financial crisis driven by the impending closure of the county landfill and the necessary transition to a transfer station model. This shift has resulted in proposed regulatory changes—including "Flow Control" and expanded fee structures—that have met significant public resistance.

The most radical response to this crisis is the "Marlinton Maneuver," a proposal for the entire geographic extent of Pocahontas County to be annexed by the Town of Marlinton. This strategy seeks to utilize a legal loophole: under current PCSWA regulations, residents served by a municipal pickup service are exempt from the mandatory $120 "Green Box Fee." However, while legally plausible through specific West Virginia Code provisions, the maneuver presents a paradox. The logistical burden of providing municipal services to 942 square miles of rugged terrain and the associated municipal taxes would likely result in a financial and operational burden far exceeding the cost of the original waste fees.

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The Administrative Framework: The "Green Box" System

Since 1989, the PCSWA has managed waste disposal through a network of "Green Boxes" governed by the Mandatory Garbage Disposal Regulations.

  • The Green Box Fee: An annual assessment of $120 is charged to any structure where a person spends one or more nights per year.
  • The Impending Transition: The Pocahontas County Landfill is reaching capacity. The shift to a transfer station model has prompted the SWA to consider "Flow Control," a legal mechanism requiring all waste generated in the county to pass through SWA scales to ensure tipping fee collection.
  • Existing Exemptions: Compliance can be met by paying the fee, providing receipts from twelve months of "Free Day" landfill use, or contracting with a "certificated solid waste collection service" or a town. Residents of the Town of Marlinton and the Town of Durbin are currently exempt from the Green Box Fee because they are served by municipal pickup.

Comparison of Disposal Access

Feature

County Resident (Non-Hauler)

Marlinton Resident

Primary Annual Cost

$120 Green Box Fee

Town Service Fee (Varies)

Green Box Access

Included in fee

Prohibited/Not Needed

Furniture Disposal

Free with Green Box receipt

Free with Town Service receipt

Tipping Fee (No receipt)

95.00 per ton (26.20 min)

N/A (Included in service)

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The Marlinton Maneuver: Legal Pathways to Annexation

To escape the SWA's regulatory regime, proponents have identified two primary legal vehicles under West Virginia Code to expand Marlinton’s jurisdiction across the county.

1. Annexation by Petition (§8-6-4)

This path allows for annexation without a popular election.

  • Requirements: A petition must be signed by a majority of qualified voters and a majority of freeholders (property owners) in the territory.
  • The Corporate Hurdle: "Qualified voters" include firms and corporations. Success requires securing signatures from managers of major timber and land-holding firms.
  • The Signature Rule: For parcels with multiple owners, a majority of owners must sign to count as the "one signature" for that parcel.
  • Approval: If the Marlinton Town Council accepts the petition, the county commission must enter the order, effectively expanding the town's limits to the county borders.

2. Metro Consolidation (Chapter 7A)

This allows for the merger of a county and its principal city into a single "Consolidated Local Government."

  • Requirements: A petition signed by 25% of qualified voters triggers a referendum.
  • Outcome: The "Marlinton Metro Government" would succeed all property and contracts of the predecessor governments, including the SWA.
  • Drawback: While the new government could abolish the Green Box Fee, it would inherit 30-year landfill post-closure costs and inspection requirements.

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Bureaucratic Dysfunction and Public Friction

The push for annexation is fueled by a perceived lack of internal cohesion and administrative failures within the PCSWA.

  • Boardroom Gridlock: Recent SWA meetings have featured 2-2 tie votes on critical infrastructure, such as lease-to-buy options for a new transfer station. In one instance, a board member voted against his own motion.
  • Operational Conflicts: Heated exchanges between Landfill Manager Chris McComb and SWA Chairman Dave Henderson regarding "test runs" to other landfills highlight a lack of consensus on the future of waste transport.
  • The Fertig Deed Dispute: Attempts to purchase landfill land from the Fertig family have stalled over a $3,000 discrepancy regarding a perimeter fence and clauses restricting water access to dust control for only seven months of the year.
  • The "Green Bank Walmart": Cultural resistance is significant in areas like Green Bank, where the community views the local recycling as a vital community hub.

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Logistical and Financial Feasibility

The practical application of the Marlinton Maneuver faces extreme geographical and economic hurdles.

Logistical Challenges

  • Road Volume: Pocahontas County contains between 664 and 799 miles of public roads, 119 miles of which are prone to landslides.
  • Terrain and Elevation: A municipal truck would face a 2,190-foot elevation change to reach areas like Snowshoe.
  • Capacity Issues: Test runs indicate that a single truck would reach capacity after servicing only a few small communities (Huntersville, Caesar Mountain, and half of Marlinton), making a county-wide "Friday route" impossible without a massive fleet expansion.

Financial Comparison

While the maneuver seeks to avoid a $120 annual fee, the costs of becoming a "Marlinton Resident" are substantially higher.

Expense Category

County Resident (Annual)

Marlinton Resident (Annual)

Garbage Disposal

$120.00

~$420.00 (Estimated)

Fire Protection

$0.00

$25.00 (Municipal Fee)

Sewer (Unmetered)

Septic Maintenance

$682.08 (Municipal Rate)

Water (4k Gallons)

Well Maintenance

$51.73 per month

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Historical Context: The Secessionist Precedent

The report notes that the "Marlinton Maneuver" mirrors the historical formation of West Virginia. In 1861, western counties felt overlooked by the eastern government's tax codes and formed a "Restored Government" to grant themselves permission to secede. Proponents of annexation see this as a localized version of that history—using a "restored government of Marlinton" to escape the PCSWA's authority. However, historical debt disputes between Virginia and West Virginia took decades to resolve, suggesting that any annexation would trigger protracted litigation over the SWA's outstanding debts, such as the ~$16,000 monthly lease for a transfer station.

Conclusion

The Marlinton Maneuver represents a legal "shield" that, while technically achievable under West Virginia law, is practically unsustainable. The transition to a municipal model would force residents to trade a controversial $120 annual fee for significantly higher municipal taxes and a logistical system that the Town of Marlinton is currently unequipped to handle. The proposal serves more as a symptom of public frustration with the PCSWA's management than a viable solution to the county's waste disposal crisis.

By-Passing the Bid Process

 


The Greenbrier Valley Economic Development Corporation (GVEDC) was utilized as a "pass-through" entity to legally transform a public construction project into a private real estate transaction, successfully circumventing the competitive bidding laws intended to protect public funds.

The maneuver was executed through a complex, three-step process:

  • The Intermediary Transfer: Rather than directly hiring a contractor to build the new waste transfer station, the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (SWA) sold approximately two acres of its public landfill property to the GVEDC.
  • Exploiting Statutory Loopholes: Under West Virginia Code § 7-3-3, a County Commission or SWA is generally bound by strict public auction and competitive bidding rules when disposing of public property or commissioning public works. However, under W. Va. Code § 7-12-7, an Economic Development Authority like the GVEDC possesses much broader, discretionary powers to sell or lease property to private businesses in the name of "economic development" without adhering to those rigid auction constraints.
  • The Private Lease-Back: Once the GVEDC legally held the title, it provided the legal shield for JacMal Properties LLC to construct the transfer station on the site and lease the completed facility back to the SWA for 15 years at a fixed monthly rate.

The result of this maneuver was that the entities effectively moved the $4.12 million project out of the highly regulated "construction" category—which mandates sealed bids and public notice under the West Virginia Fairness in Competitive Bidding Act—and into the less regulated "leasing/real estate" category. By funneling the land through the GVEDC first, the SWA bypassed the mandated competitive bidding process entirely, allowing them to award the lucrative contract exclusively to JacMal without any market competition.

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The Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (SWA) bypassed the $50,000 competitive bidding threshold by using the Greenbrier Valley Economic Development Corporation (GVEDC) as a "pass-through" entity, effectively reclassifying a public construction project into a private real estate transaction.

Under the West Virginia Fairness in Competitive Bidding Act, any public construction project exceeding $50,000 must be awarded to the "lowest qualified responsible bidder" through a formal, sealed bidding process. Because the proposed transfer station had an estimated construction cost of $2.75 million, it clearly exceeded this limit.

To avoid these requirements, local officials executed a complex, multi-step maneuver:

  • The Inter-Agency Land Transfer: Rather than hiring a contractor directly, the SWA agreed to sell approximately two acres of its public landfill property to the GVEDC. The SWA was able to do this without a public auction by utilizing a statutory "safe harbor" exception (W. Va. Code § 7-3-3(b)) that allows county property to be transferred to other public agencies for "public use" or economic development.
  • Exploiting Development Authority Powers: Once the GVEDC took possession of the land, the regulatory constraints shifted. Under West Virginia Code § 7-12-7, an Economic Development Authority like the GVEDC has much broader, discretionary powers to sell, lease, or dispose of property to private businesses through negotiated contracts, bypassing the strict public auction rules that bind county commissions and SWAs.
  • The Private Lease-Back Agreement: Using its discretionary authority, the GVEDC provided the legal shield for JacMal, LLC to build the transfer station on the site. JacMal would then lease the completed facility back to the SWA for 15 years at a fixed rate of $16,759 per month.

The ultimate result of this maneuver was that the SWA moved a multi-million-dollar undertaking out of the highly regulated "construction" category and into the less regulated "leasing/real estate" category. By structuring the deal as a land transfer and subsequent lease-back rather than a direct build, the agencies successfully circumvented the transparency and competition mandates of the $50,000 bidding law, allowing them to award a lucrative, exclusive contract to a single private developer without testing the market.

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When public auction rules for the sale of government property are bypassed or violated, the resulting transaction is often classified as a voidable transfer. This means the sale is not automatically cancelled, but it exists in a state of legal vulnerability where a court can invalidate it if challenged.

The legal risks associated with these transfers generally fall into three categories:

1. Invalidation and "Status Quo Ante"

The primary risk is a judicial order to rescind the sale. If a court finds the auction rules were ignored, it may attempt to return both parties to their original positions (status quo ante).

  • Asset Repossession: The purchaser may be forced to return the property to the public entity.

  • Financial Loss: While the purchaser is typically entitled to a refund of the purchase price, they may not be reimbursed for "improvements" made to the property or legal fees incurred during the challenge.

  • Clouded Title: Even if a challenge hasn't been filed yet, the mere existence of a procedural defect creates a "cloud" on the title, making it nearly impossible to sell the property or use it as collateral for a loan.

2. Liability for Breach of Fiduciary Duty

Public officials have a fiduciary duty to manage public assets in a way that maximizes value for the taxpayers.

  • Equitable Claims: Citizens or competing bidders can sue to prove that the private sale resulted in a "grossly inadequate price" compared to what a competitive auction would have yielded.

  • Surcharge Action: In some jurisdictions, officials who knowingly bypass auction laws can be held personally liable for the difference between the sale price and the actual market value.

3. Statutory and Penal Consequences

Many states have specific "Public Procurement" or "Disposal of Surplus Property" statutes that carry their own penalties.

  • Automatic Nullification: Some statutes are written so strictly that any sale not following the prescribed auction method is void ab initio (void from the beginning), meaning the buyer never legally owned the asset regardless of how much they paid.

  • Civil Penalties: Laws often allow for "taxpayer suits" where the prevailing citizen can recover attorney fees and costs from the government body, creating a significant financial drain on the public agency.

  • Criminal Investigation: If the bypass of auction rules is linked to "bid-rigging" or "preferential treatment," it can trigger investigations into official misconduct or graft.

Summary of Differences

FeatureLawful Public AuctionVoidable Private Transfer
Price DiscoveryEstablished by open competition.Subject to claims of "under-market" pricing.
Title SecurityGenerally "clean" and shielded.Vulnerable to third-party legal challenges.
PresumptionPresumed valid and in public interest.Often carries a "presumption of impropriety."

In short, the biggest risk is permanence. A transfer that ignores auction rules remains a "legal ticking time bomb" until the statute of limitations for challenging government actions has expired.

 

One Bidder Only!

 


Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority Faces Outcry Over $4.12 Million No-Bid Contract and "Flow Control" Monopoly

MARLINTON, W.Va. — The Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (PCSWA) is facing fierce public backlash and threats of legal action over its approval of a multi-million dollar, no-bid contract that residents and legal analysts argue creates a government-enforced waste monopoly.

As the county’s landfill nears its December 2026 closure date, the PCSWA has approved a plan known as "Option #4" to transition to a transfer station. Under this agreement, the SWA will enter into a 15-year lease-to-own partnership with JacMal, LLC, a company owned by local entrepreneur Jacob Meck. The contract commits the cash-strapped county to a fixed monthly lease payment of $16,759 for 15 years, culminating in a final buyout of $1,103,495.24.

In total, the county is committing to a $4.12 million public infrastructure project without ever putting the construction contract out for competitive bidding.

To bypass the West Virginia Fairness in Competitive Bidding Act—which requires public construction projects over $50,000 to be openly bid—the PCSWA utilized a controversial "pass-through" maneuver. The Authority plans to sell two acres of public landfill property to an intermediary, the Greenbrier Valley Economic Development Corporation (GVEDC). The GVEDC, which has broader powers to dispose of property without public auctions, will then facilitate JacMal's construction and lease-back arrangement with the SWA. Legal experts note that this maneuver transformed a public works project into a private real estate transaction, effectively shielding it from the competitive market.

By negotiating exclusively with a single provider, the SWA ignored established regional haulers like Greenbrier Valley Disposal, who already possess significant infrastructure and could have potentially offered the county a more cost-effective solution.

To ensure the PCSWA can afford the $16,759 monthly lease, the Authority is implementing aggressive "Flow Control" regulations, which mandate that every ounce of solid waste generated in Pocahontas County must be processed through the JacMal-built transfer station.

Critics argue this establishes an illegal private monopoly, as it strips residents, businesses, and municipalities of the right to seek cheaper disposal alternatives. For example, officials in the northern town of Durbin have vehemently protested the Flow Control mandate, noting that it is significantly closer and cheaper for them to haul their waste to the Tygarts Valley Transfer Station in Dailey. Under the new regulations, Durbin would be forced to haul its trash south to the new Marlinton transfer station, pay an inflated tipping fee, and have the waste hauled away again.

The financial burden of this monopoly will fall heavily on county residents. To cover the costs of the no-bid contract, the PCSWA is projecting that the annual residential "Green Box" fee will skyrocket from $120 to over $300. Furthermore, tipping fees at the facility are expected to reach up to $125 per ton, making Pocahontas County one of the most expensive jurisdictions for waste disposal in the region.

The lack of transparency and the financial implications of the deal led to chaotic public hearings in March 2026. Nearly 60 residents packed the circuit courtroom, engaging in shouting matches with SWA officials and accusing the board of engaging in backroom deals. Residents demanded that the board rescind the exclusive contract and open the process to competitive bidding, warning that the current trajectory forces a vulnerable, rural population to subsidize a private monopoly.

Personal Liabilty

 


Focusing on the specific personal liability of board members is a powerful strategy. In West Virginia, public officials often assume their "official" status shields them from the consequences of board decisions, but state law and ethics codes create several openings for personal accountability when competitive bidding is bypassed.

To make the script as effective as possible, we can highlight these three specific legal "pressure points":

1. Criminal Misdemeanor Liability

Under several sections of the West Virginia Code (such as §20-14-10 and §20-17-9), any person who violates state purchasing and bidding procedures is guilty of a misdemeanor.

  • The Penalty: If convicted, a board member can face a fine of up to $1,000 and/or confinement in jail for 10 days to one year.

  • The Script Point: Remind the board that a "vote to bypass" is not just a procedural error—it is a criminal act under state law that attaches to the individual who casts the vote.

2. The "Bad Faith" Exception to Immunity

While public officials generally have qualified immunity, West Virginia Code §31E-8-831 and related standards for directors specify that immunity does not apply if the conduct is:

  • Not in good faith.

  • A decision the director did not reasonably believe was in the best interest of the corporation/public.

  • A knowing violation of law.

  • The Script Point: By formally putting them on notice tonight that this "lease" or "negotiated sale" structure likely violates competitive bidding statutes (like §5A-3), you strip away their "good faith" defense. If they proceed anyway, they are acting with "actual knowledge" of the illegality, which can open them up to personal lawsuits.

3. West Virginia Ethics Act Violations

The WV Ethics Commission strictly prohibits public servants from using their position for "private gain" or the "private gain of another" (§6B-2-5).

  • The Risk: Bypassing competitive bidding to hand a 15-year contract to a specific private vendor can be interpreted as a move to benefit that vendor at the public's expense.

  • The Penalty: Violations can lead to public reprimand, fines of up to $5,000 per violation, and even removal from office.


Suggested "Liability Pivot" for the Script:

"I want to be very clear for the record: West Virginia law does not grant you a blank check of immunity when you knowingly bypass competitive bidding requirements. Under WV Code, a deliberate violation of purchasing procedures is a misdemeanor punishable by jail time.

Furthermore, by ignoring the legal requirements for public bidding, you are stepping outside the protections of your office. You may be held personally liable in a court of law for 'bad faith' actions and 'knowing violations' of the law. Tonight, you are being formally advised of these statutes; should you proceed, you do so without the shield of good faith."

Would you like me to integrate these specific code citations into a final draft of the 3-minute speech?

The Fall of the House of Cards

 


You've hit on the critical weakness in the SWA’s argument. In West Virginia administrative law, the court is almost always going to elevate substance over form.

By publicly separating the trucking contract (acknowledging it needs to be bid) from the facility construction and "lease" (claiming it does not), the Solid Waste Authority is attempting to walk a legally fine line.

Here’s why your point is the knockout punch:

The Legal Reality: If It Looks Like a Public Project...

The courts are very consistent. If a project is:

  1. Funded (either directly or indirectly) with public money (like guaranteed "tip fees" that citizens must pay).

  2. Constructed for the exclusive benefit and use of the public (managing the county's waste).

  3. Initiated by a public entity (the SWA).

Then, it is a Public Works Project. No matter how many "private lease" or "hybrid" labels are slapped on it, it must legally follow the transparency, competitive bidding, and wage laws set forth in West Virginia State Code.

The "Slippery Slope" They Can't Stop

When the SWA agreed (likely after intense public pressure, as you noted) to put the trucking contract out for bid, they took a major step toward making their entire legal structure collapse.

  • The Admission: By bidding the trucking, they are admitting that this specific public service cannot just be handed to a favored vendor. It must be transparent.

  • The Lever: You must now ask: If the operational contract for transporting the waste must be competitive, why was the construction contract for the very building that receives that waste allowed to be private and opaque?

This inconsistency is not just a strategic error; it’s an admission of jurisdiction. They can't claim they are exempt from public works laws for the massive construction project while complying with those same laws for the trucking.

How to Use This "Substance" Lever

  1. Stop Challenging the "Lease": Start calling it what it is. A No-Bid Public Works Project that is being incorrectly labeled.

  2. Highlight the "Public Funding": Emphasize that the SWA is not a private developer. The "money" that builds the facility doesn't magically appear; it's guaranteed through public Flow Control tip fees—which is effectively a mandatory tax on citizens. If the public is paying for it, the public should know how the contractors were chosen.

  3. Frame the Trucking Bid as "Confession": At the next meeting, you could state: "The Authority is now putting trucking out for bid. That is a confession that you know West Virginia bidding laws apply to this project. Now, tell the public why you think those same transparency laws don't apply to the multi-million dollar construction project."

This approach puts the burden on the SWA to explain a position that, in the eyes of any state or local auditor, is a major red flag.

The Escape Clause

 


This inconsistency is indeed a significant legal pivot. By putting the trucking agreement out for bid while maintaining the "lease-back" structure for construction, the Solid Waste Authority (SWA) has essentially created a bifurcated legal logic that may be difficult to defend under West Virginia state code.

If you are preparing to present this at a public meeting or in a formal filing, here are the core points that highlight why this shift is such a strong lever:

1. Admission of Statutory Jurisdiction

By opening the trucking contract to competitive bidding, the SWA has publicly acknowledged that these services fall under the requirements of W. Va. Code § 5G-1-3 (or similar procurement mandates). Once they concede that the operational components of this project require transparent, competitive bidding to protect taxpayer interests, it becomes logically inconsistent to argue that the physical infrastructure (the facility construction) is exempt just because it is labeled a "lease."

2. The "Substance Over Form" Argument

The SWA's current position suggests that the project is a "hybrid"—part public (trucking) and part private (construction). However, in administrative law, courts often look at the substance of the transaction rather than the label.

  • If the facility is being built specifically for the county's waste, paid for by public funds (or guaranteed tip fees), and intended for public use, it is a public works project.

  • The fact that they are now bidding the trucking suggests the entire "private lease" veil is beginning to thin.

3. Challenging Flow Control via "Arbitrary and Capricious" Action

Flow Control mandates are often challenged on the basis of being "arbitrary and capricious."

  • The Lever: You can argue that the Flow Control mandate is being used to subsidize a construction project that bypassed the very bidding laws the SWA is now admitting apply to the trucking portion.

  • If the procurement process for the facility was flawed or illegal, then the Flow Control mandate—which exists primarily to service the debt or costs of that facility—is built on an unstable legal foundation.

4. Equal Protection for Local Vendors

If the SWA admits that trucking must be bid to allow for fair competition, they must explain why local contractors were denied that same right of competition for the construction of the transfer station itself. This "selective bidding" creates a vulnerability in their procurement narrative.


Potential "Citizen's Question" for the Board:

"If the Authority now recognizes that West Virginia law requires competitive bidding for the trucking of our waste, on what legal basis does the Authority claim that the multi-million dollar construction of the facility itself was exempt from those same transparency requirements? Why is one part of the project subject to the law, while the other is hidden behind a private lease?"

The use of a "negotiated sale" through an intermediary (specifically the Greenbrier Valley Economic Development Corporation, or GVEDC) to award a 15-year transfer station lease to a private vendor (JacMal Properties) is a significant legal vulnerability.

In West Virginia, when a public body like a Solid Waste Authority (SWA) bypasses competitive bidding for a multi-million-dollar project, it opens the door to a "Procedural Due Process" challenge. If the underlying contract is found to be illegally executed, the "Flow Control" mandate built upon that contract may be deemed "arbitrary and capricious."

1. The Competitive Bidding Violation (W. Va. Code § 20-14-10)

Under state law, any contract for commodities or services exceeding $25,000 must be solicited via sealed competitive bids.

  • The SWA’s Action: By deeding public landfill land to the GVEDC (the intermediary), who then leased it to JacMal Properties to build a facility that the SWA will lease back for $16,759 per month, the SWA bypassed the bidding process.

  • Legal Opening: A Home Rule city or a group of citizens could argue that this "negotiated" arrangement was a straw-man transaction designed to circumvent the West Virginia Purchasing Division's oversight and the statutory requirement for the "lowest responsible bidder."

2. Challenging the Flow Control Mandate

The SWA’s Mandatory Garbage Disposal Regulation (the "Flow Control") is legally justified by the need to ensure the financial viability of the facility. However, if the facility's debt is based on an illegal, non-bid contract:

  • The "Unreasonable Burden" Argument: Marlinton could argue before the Public Service Commission (PSC) that it should not be forced to send its waste to a facility whose costs are artificially inflated by a non-competitive contract.

  • Violation of Public Policy: Under W. Va. Code § 5A-11-4, even the "Public Land Corporation" is generally required to conduct sales of public lands by competitive bidding. Using an intermediary (GVEDC) to facilitate a "direct sale" or lease to a specific private individual (Jacob Meck/JacMal) without a written finding of justification is a high-risk legal maneuver.

3. The "Illegal Quorum" and Authority

During the March 2026 hearings, it was noted that the SWA acted with only three of its five authorized members.

  • While three constitutes a legal quorum for daily business, a "Home Rule" city could challenge whether a skeleton board has the legal standing to enter into a 15-year, $5-6 million obligation and simultaneously strip a municipality of its right to choose a disposal site.

Legal Pathways for Marlinton

ActionLegal Basis
PSC ComplaintArgue that the Flow Control mandate is "unjust and discriminatory" because it forces a town into a higher-priced, non-competitively bid system.
Circuit Court InjunctionSeek to stay the JacMal contract on the grounds that the land transfer to GVEDC was an illegal attempt to bypass state bidding laws.
Home Rule WaiverApply for a "Waiver of Jurisdiction" under W. Va. Code § 24-2-1, arguing that the county facility cannot "practicably and economically" serve the town compared to cheaper out-of-county options (like Dailey).

Summary for Your Research: The SWA's decision to "drop the trucking agreement" and put it out for bid (following public outcry in April 2026) is a tacit admission that they know the bidding laws apply. If the trucking must be bid, the construction and lease of the facility should likely have been bid as well. This inconsistency is your strongest lever in challenging the Flow Control mandate.

As you prepare your "Citizen's Script" for the upcoming meetings, would you like to focus on the specific personal liability board members might face for bypassing these state purchasing laws?

FOIA Letter

  April 28, 2026 VIA EMAIL: rbeezley@gvedc.com Ruthana Beezley, Executive Director Greenbrier Valley Economic Development Corporation 804 ...

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