Safety Protocols and Mountain Grade Navigation
- Source Statement and Content Matter: Drivers hauling solid waste out of the county must navigate extreme Appalachian terrain, particularly on US-219 over Droop Mountain and Elk Mountain. The transport involves driving an 80,000-pound combination vehicle down severe inclines.
- Instructions Provided to Drivers: For steep declines ranging from 8% to over 10%, drivers are subject to extreme operational safety requirements, which include mandatory pre-trip brake checks, early low-gear downshifting, the use of hazard lights, and active tracking of runaway truck lanes.
- Interrogatories:
- Did you receive formal training or written instructions from the Solid Waste Authority (SWA) regarding mandatory pre-trip brake checks and early low-gear downshifting prior to navigating grades exceeding 8%?
- Have you ever experienced a failure of friction brakes or engine (Jake) brakes while operating an 80,000-pound waste vehicle on US-219, and if so, how was it documented?
Work Hours, Scheduling, and the "Green Box" Bottleneck
- Source Statement and Content Matter: The county's decentralized "Green Box" system creates a logistical bottleneck because waste generation heavily surges on weekends. If the county attempts to maintain current box operations without a 24/7 transfer station, the system will collapse under the volume.
- Instructions Provided to Drivers: Because the general public primarily dumps trash on Saturdays and Sundays, SWA front-load truck drivers are instructed that they must work Saturday evenings, Sunday evenings, and holidays to successfully clean all five Green Box sites.
- Interrogatories: 3. Describe the specific instructions you were given regarding mandatory shifts on Saturday evenings, Sunday evenings, and holidays to clear the Green Box sites. 4. Were there any instances where you were unable to clear all five Green Box sites within your allotted weekend shifts, and what instructions were given by SWA management when sites overflowed?
Vehicle Maintenance and Equipment Failures
- Source Statement and Content Matter: SWA's heavy vehicle fleet has suffered from severe reliability and maintenance facility issues. Management explicitly noted that the SWA's 2020 Peterbilt garbage truck has experienced numerous mechanical issues, sometimes taking it out of service for up to three weeks at a time.
- Instructions Provided to Drivers: Drivers and maintenance staff have had to navigate repairs in a shop building located at the landfill property that is deemed "not suitable for working on the garbage trucks, because the bay is too small".
- Interrogatories: 5. How many times did the 2020 Peterbilt garbage truck break down or require major servicing during your employment, and what instructions were you given for waste collection during those out-of-service periods? 6. Have you ever been instructed to operate a waste collection truck that you believed required maintenance but could not be properly serviced due to the inadequate size of the landfill shop bay?
Administrative Logging and "Free Day" Weighing
- Source Statement and Content Matter: Prior to the planned elimination of the state-mandated "Free Day," the SWA had to manually track residential waste coming into the landfill for free. Many times, the facility's scales (reading in 20-pound increments) did not accurately weigh small residential loads.
- Instructions Provided to Drivers/Scale Attendants: To track this unbilled waste, personnel were instructed to have the resident pull onto the scales, punch a ticket, and then manually fill out a specific log sheet that is kept completely separate from the regular daily tonnage log.
- Interrogatories: 7. Explain the exact step-by-step instructions you were given for logging a "Free Day" load when the scale failed to accurately register the weight of the resident's waste. 8. Were you ever instructed to estimate weights for the separate "Free Day" log sheets, and who reviewed these secondary logs before they were submitted to the state?
CDL Certification and Wage Agreements
- Source Statement and Content Matter: The SWA has struggled to retain qualified drivers and has utilized internal promotion to fill Commercial Driver's License (CDL) roles.
- Instructions Provided to Drivers: SWA records indicate specific employment arrangements where employees (such as William Handy) were instructed to obtain their CDL, after which the board authorized their transition to full-time employment at a pay rate of $16.00 per hour.
- Interrogatories: 9. Was your transition to full-time status or any specific wage increase (such as the $16.00 per hour rate) explicitly conditioned on obtaining or maintaining a valid CDL? 10. Given the high stress of mountain driving and weekend requirements, did SWA management ever provide you with written instructions, policies, or negotiations regarding hazard pay or overtime compensation?
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The issue of out-of-state waste in West Virginia is rooted in a history of environmental resistance, culminating in modern laws that govern how waste can legally move across county and state lines:
The "Garbage Wars" and Mega-Dumps During the late 1980s and early 1990s, West Virginia faced a perceived threat of becoming a "dumping ground" for out-of-state waste generated by East Coast urban centers. Private corporations proposed developing massive "mega-dumps" within the state, planning to transport out-of-state garbage into West Virginia using empty coal trains returning from metropolitan areas.
To prevent this regional exploitation, the state passed the West Virginia Comprehensive Solid Waste Act in 1991. This legislation introduced cost structures that made the long-distance rail transport of garbage economically unviable, effectively ending the era of the mega-dumps.
The "Free Flow" Policy While the state restricted mega-dumps, current West Virginia law actually protects the movement of waste across borders. Under W. Va. Code § 22-15-1, the state legislature explicitly commits to "participating in the waste stream market and not interfering with the free flow of solid waste into or out of this state".
Conflicts with Local Export Bans This state policy protecting the "free flow" of waste is currently at the center of a legal controversy in Pocahontas County. To guarantee that their new transfer station receives enough tipping fee revenue to survive, the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (SWA) drafted regulations featuring an exportation ban, which makes it illegal to take municipal solid waste out of the county.
Legal analyses in the sources indicate that this local ban is highly vulnerable for two reasons:
- Conflict with State Law: The ban directly contradicts the state legislature’s stated objective in § 22-15-1 to not interfere with the free flow of solid waste.
- Dormant Commerce Clause: Because solid waste is considered an "article of interstate commerce," local laws that prohibit the export of waste can be challenged as unconstitutional under the Dormant Commerce Clause. By functionally enforcing an exportation ban to guarantee revenue for a specific facility, the SWA acts as a protectionist monopoly, which violates federal constitutional principles.
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As an artificial intelligence, I do not have a physical body and have never delivered solid waste.
However, the provided documents contain specific information about how solid waste is delivered and hauled out of Highland County, Virginia:
Because Highland County does not operate an active sanitary landfill, it utilizes a transfer station and recycling center in Monterey and relies on a public-private contract model to haul its garbage away.
After previously contracting with Republic Services, Highland County issued an open bid for waste collection and hauling in late 2023. Due to the geographic isolation of the area and high transit costs over mountain passes, large national conglomerates did not bid. Highland County received exactly one bid, which came from Allegheny Disposal LLC, a commercial hauler based in Green Bank, West Virginia.
Following negotiations, Highland County established a long-term agreement with Allegheny Disposal to handle the hauling and manage the infrastructure at its five local collection sites.
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Regarding the waste collected in Highland County, Virginia, the provided documents explain that the county aggregates its trash at a transfer station in Monterey, where it is then hauled away by a private contractor, Allegheny Disposal LLC. However, the sources do not specify the final landfill or destination where the garbage from Highland County is ultimately deposited.
For context, the sources do mention that in neighboring Pocahontas County, West Virginia, Allegheny Disposal's proposed contract involves hauling local waste to the Tucker County Landfill.
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Based on the provided documents, there is no evidence to suggest that solid waste from Highland County, Virginia, is being transported to the Pocahontas County Landfill. In fact, the 2025 West Virginia State Plan specifically notes that the Pocahontas County Landfill serves "only its home county". This detail is used to reinforce the highly localized nature of the facility's operations and confirms the "absence of large-scale commercial importation" of waste into the county.
Furthermore, while the private hauler Allegheny Disposal LLC manages Highland County's waste transfer, the extensive monthly tonnage reports for the Pocahontas County Landfill do not show any intake of out-of-state municipal waste from Virginia.
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However, based on the provided documents, Highland County, Virginia, does not operate an active landfill of its own. Instead, the county aggregates its trash at a transfer station in Monterey, and the waste is hauled away by a private contractor, Allegheny Disposal LLC.
The sources do not specify the exact landfill where Allegheny Disposal ultimately deposits the garbage it collects from Highland County.
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Based on the provided documents, it is not specified whether the solid waste collected in Highland County is transported to a landfill within Virginia or taken to another state.
The sources only confirm that Highland County aggregates its trash at a transfer station in Monterey and has contracted with Allegheny Disposal LLC, a private commercial hauler based in West Virginia, to manage the hauling and disposal. The ultimate destination landfill for Highland County's waste is not mentioned in the provided text.
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