Pocahontas County Landfill in Dunmore is currently still receiving
local solid waste, but it is in its final months of operation.
While
the transition to an out-of-county trucking model is actively being
finalized, the physical closure has not completely cut off local dumping
yet. The exact operational status and the timeline for the transition
are broken down below:
1. The Landfill is Still Open (For Now)
The
landfill has not yet hit its absolute capacity limit. Engineering
assessments by firms like Potesta & Associates calculated the
remaining volume and extended the operational life of the Dunmore
landfill until December 2026.
Until
that hard deadline is reached at the end of the year, local solid waste
haulers, municipalities (like Marlinton and Durbin), and residents
utilizing the county’s "Green Box" collection sites are still dumping
waste locally. The county is maximizing every cubic yard of remaining
space to avoid triggering the higher costs of exporting trash
prematurely.
2. The Status of the Transfer Station Transition
The
"truck-to-truck" transfer station model is the official plan for the
immediate post-closure era, but it is in the active construction and
logistics phase. The timeline highlights how the public-private
structure operates:
The Agreement: The Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (SWA) officially voted to partner with Jacob Meck of Allegheny Disposal, LLC.
The Construction Plan:
Allegheny Disposal is building a modern, clean-design transfer station
equipped with a trash crane and elevated ramps. This infrastructure
allows standard local garbage trucks to drive up an 18-foot elevation
and dump trash directly downward into massive, open-topped
tractor-trailers (including custom "walking floor" trailers purchased by
the SWA).
The Overlap Strategy:
Construction and permitting are scheduled to conclude late this year.
The explicit goal of the SWA and Allegheny Disposal is to create a
multi-month operational overlap, ensuring the transfer station is fully
active the exact week the Dunmore landfill stops accepting waste.
3. Where the Trash Will Go Post-2026
Once the transfer station opens and the landfill officially locks its gates to local waste, the county will enter a 100% export model.
The SWA will consolidate the county's household and commercial refuse
at the new station, pack it into high-capacity tractor-trailers, and
truck it entirely out of the county to regional hubs—primarily the Greenbrier County Landfill or the Tucker County Landfill.
The Current Reality:
The local landfill remains active as it burns through its final
remaining months of capacity. The public-private partnership with
Allegheny Disposal is a preventative plan; the paperwork is signed and
the engineering is underway so that when the landfill hits its absolute
limit, the county can seamlessly transition to exporting its standard
household trash without a single day's interruption in service.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
As of the most recent public updates, the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection (WVDEP) has not formally issued the final solid waste facility permit for the proposed transfer station.
The
proposal remains caught in a tight regulatory and bureaucratic timeline
that local officials fear will cause a "stopgap" or temporary service
interruption when the Dunmore landfill reaches absolute capacity.
The breakdown of where the permit proposal currently stands in the state system reveals several critical factors:
1. The Pre-Requisite Bottleneck
Before
the WVDEP Division of Water and Waste Management will even review a
technical design application for a new public-use transfer station, the
state mandates strict statutory prerequisites. The process must follow a
legal sequence:
Siting Plan Approval: The local Solid Waste Authority (SWA) must first approve the facility's location profile.
The PSC Hurdle: The developer (Jacob Meck of Allegheny Disposal) must apply for and be granted a formal Certificate of Need
from the West Virginia Public Service Commission (PSC). The PSC is
responsible for evaluating the economic footprint and establishing
allowable regional tipping fees.
2. The Feb-March 2026 Gridlock
The
project hit a major setback due to local voting deadlocks. At the SWA’s
special meeting, the board failed to swiftly advance the contract terms
due to intense debates over how the lease payments—slated at nearly
$16,000 a month for a 15-year lease-to-own model—would affect local
residents.
Members
noted that funding the transfer station would require aggressively
raising the annual local "Green Box" collection fees and truck tipping
rates. Because the board heavily delayed finalizing the explicit
contract option, the vital local agreements needed to anchor the
state-level permit applications were stalled.
3. The Looming Post-Closure Risk
Because
the design review, a mandatory 30-day WVDEP public notice comment
period, and potential public hearings take months to clear, the delay in
local approval has squeezed the construction window.
The
contract specifies that Allegheny Disposal will construct a fully
equipped facility featuring elevated platforms for top-loading massive
"walking floor" tractor-trailers. However, because the WVDEP permit
process requires proof of bonding, local site authorization, and
engineering sign-offs, the state has not granted the operational green
light.
The Compliance Summary:
The WVDEP cannot formally permit the facility until the developer
successfully clears the Public Service Commission's Certificate of Need
process and secures the finalized local SWA structural approvals. With
the Dunmore landfill fast approaching its drop-dead closure date, the
delay in finalizing these permits means Pocahontas County faces a highly
critical race against the clock to establish its export transfer system
before local dumping space completely runs out.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The
transition from the local Dunmore landfill to an out-of-county
"truck-to-truck" export model via a public-private partnership has
ignited intense local debate.
At
public meetings, citizens—particularly from northern Pocahontas
County—have voiced a complex list of grievances against the Pocahontas
County Solid Waste Authority (SWA) and the 15-year lease-to-own
agreement with Jacob Meck of Allegheny Disposal.
The primary local grievances driving community pushback include:
1. Looming Financial Burdens (The $300+ Green Box Fee)
The most urgent concern for residents is a drastic hike in the annual Green Box Fee (the mandatory residential trash disposal fee).
The Projected Jump:
While the current fee sits at $135 per year, county officials warn that
once the landfill closes and the transfer station takes over, the
baseline fee will likely skyrocket to $300 or even $600 a year to cover the $16,759 monthly lease payments and out-of-county trucking tipping fees.
Fixed-Income Hardship:
Residents on fixed incomes and elderly citizens fear being priced out
entirely. SWA administrators admit that if the fee becomes unaffordable,
widespread non-payment could force the authority into a wave of
Magistrate Court lawsuits or even bankruptcy.
The Unimproved Parcel Dispute: Deep resentment was triggered by proposals to stretch the Green Box fee onto every parcel of land in the county,
regardless of whether it is developed or entirely vacant nonresidential
land. Residents strongly argue that charging fees on non-producing,
inherited acreage is inherently unfair.
2. Lack of Competitive Bidding
A
major point of contention for local critics is the lack of open-market
competition. The SWA accepted the long-term, multi-million-dollar
proposal from Allegheny Disposal without putting the construction of the
transfer station or the lucrative trash-hauling contracts out for
public competitive bidding. Opponents claim this single-source approach
left the county vulnerable to being overcharged.
3. Privatization of Public Infrastructure
Property
owners object to the physical logistics of the deal, which originally
included proposals to deed several acres of public landfill property
over to a private corporate entity to build the facility. While
alternative workarounds have surfaced—such as routing property control
through the Greenbrier Valley Economic Development Corporation
(GVEDC)—the perception of transferring public land assets to private
hands remains a lightning rod.
4. Direct Coercion: The Export Prohibition
To secure the massive financial commitments required for the 15-year lease, the contract framework restricts choice.
The Lockdown:
The proposal effectively prohibits independent trash haulers and even
private citizens from independently bypassing the system to haul
county-generated trash to neighboring counties on their own.
The Grievance: Local compliance advocates view this restriction as a forced geographic monopoly designed to ensure that every ounce of local waste is routed through Meck's transfer station to guarantee his long-term revenue stream.
5. Attempted Tax Ticket "Weapons"
Public
frustration reached a boiling point when the SWA's attorney petitioned
the County Commission to pass an ordinance allowing the unpaid Green Box
fees to be tacked directly onto residents' annual Sheriff's tax tickets.
The Backlash: The SWA is currently holding roughly $264,000 in unpaid judgments from residents who haven't paid their garbage fees over the years.
The Grievance:
Residents fiercely protested this move as an aggressive, backdoor
collection tactic. The County Commission ultimately rejected the
proposal after legal findings confirmed that West Virginia code does not
permit the inclusion of independent municipal solid waste fees directly
on formal property tax bills.
The Civic Fallout:
The friction has become so intense that groups of local residents have
begun contributing their own money to fund a lawsuit aimed at halting
the transfer station's deployment entirely, while actively petitioning
the County Commission to strip long-standing board members of their
seats in favor of grassroots community representatives.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Settling
the deep-seated grievances surrounding the Pocahontas County solid
waste transition requires navigating a highly structured legal,
regulatory, and administrative gauntlet under West Virginia state law.
Because a public entity (the Solid Waste Authority) and a private
corporation (Allegheny Disposal, LLC) have already executed a binding
Letter of Intent and unanimously approved "Option 4" for a 15-year,
$16,759 monthly lease-to-own agreement, citizens cannot simply vote the
project away.
Resolving
these grievances—ranging from the steep Green Box fee hikes to the lack
of competitive bidding—must proceed through specific legal channels to
achieve a binding remedy or settlement.
1. Navigating the Public Service Commission (PSC)
Before the transfer station can open, Jacob Meck of Allegheny Disposal must secure a Certificate of Need from the West Virginia Public Service Commission (PSC). The PSC is the legal gatekeeper for utility rates and territory monopolies in the state.
The Grievance Targeted:
Unreasonable Green Box fee hikes (potentially rising toward $300+) and
the creation of a forced geographic monopoly that prevents local hauling
flexibility.
The Legal Process for Settlement:
Formal Intervention:
Groups of citizens (such as the coalition funding local legal action)
can petition to become formal "Intervenors" in the PSC case.
Rate Cap Negotiations: A successful legal settlement here does not necessarily kill the transfer station; instead, it results in a PSC-mandated rate settlement.
Intervenors can negotiate strict rate-stabilization provisions, forcing
the SWA to look at alternative funding mechanisms—such as local
Hotel-Motel tax revenue allocations or small commercial tipping fees—to
legally subsidize the residential Green Box baseline and keep it far
below the feared $300 to $600 threshold.
2. Addressing the Lack of Competitive Bidding via Court Injunction
Local
frustration over the SWA single-sourcing the multi-million dollar
contract to Allegheny Disposal without an open-market procurement
process is a prime target for a circuit court challenge.
3. Resolving the "Unimproved Parcel" Fee Dispute
The
pushback against charging mandatory waste disposal fees on vacant,
nonresidential, or non-producing inherited parcels strikes at the heart
of statutory interpretation.
The Grievance Targeted: Extending the Green Box fee to vacant, non-residential land.
The Legal Process for Settlement:
Strict Adherence to WV Code: Under West Virginia Code § 22C-4-10, the authority to levy mandatory solid waste fees is tied directly to the generation of solid waste from a "residence" or "business establishment." The code specifically defines a residence as a structure or shelter.
The Settlement Vector:
This grievance is settled via administrative rule making. Under threat
of a class-action lawsuit challenging unauthorized fee assessments, the
SWA can adopt a formal Hardship and Vacancy Exemption Policy.
This legally binds the SWA to exempt strictly unimproved parcels that
contain no habitable structures or active commercial operations, keeping
the fee purely tied to waste producers.
4. Remedying Board Representation and Accountability
A
core undercurrent of the community's grievance is a perceived lack of
transparency and a feeling that long-standing board members are
disconnected from the public's economic limits.
The Reality of a Legal Settlement:
In complex municipal solid waste disputes, a "successful settlement" is
rarely an all-or-nothing victory where the transfer station is
abandoned entirely—the hard physical deadline of the filling Dunmore
landfill makes an export station an operational necessity. Instead, a
successful legal settlement reshapes the contract into a compromise: it
preserves the county's upcoming export infrastructure while legally
locking down rate protections, enforcing parcel exemptions, and
maintaining public oversight over private operational costs.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------