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A satirical and facetious sales pitch for the Meck Proposal

 


Step right up, citizens of Pocahontas County, and feast your eyes on "Option 4"—the undisputed masterpiece of modern municipal maneuvering, brought to you by Jacob Meck and JacMal Properties, LLC. Are you tired of tedious transparency? Exhausted by the grueling process of saving taxpayer money? Then you are going to love our revolutionary new transfer station proposal!

Why compete when you can collude? Forget the outdated concept of finding the "lowest responsible bidder" on the open market. With Option 4, we pioneered the "Developer-Led Criteria" method, meaning we kindly wrote the technical specifications ourselves, perfectly tailoring the project to our own crane maintenance capabilities. It’s a massive conflict of interest, sure, but it guarantees we win the contract without breaking a sweat!

The Magic Disappearing Public Land Trick! Normally, West Virginia Code § 7-3-3 requires public land to be sold at a public auction so the taxpayers get fair market value. How boring! Instead, we use the fabulous "GVEDC Bypass." The Solid Waste Authority (SWA) simply slips two acres of public landfill property to the Greenbrier Valley Economic Development Corporation, who then leases it to us. This brilliant "Title Shield" not only sidesteps public bidding laws, but it also magically erases our property tax liability.

A Financial Commitment Your Grandchildren Will Feel! Why use a non-binding, annually renewable lease when you can be legally suffocated by an inescapable 15-year unconstitutional debt?. For the low, low price of just $16,759 every single month for 180 months, the county gets the privilege of renting a facility we own. And the grand finale? A mandatory terminal buyout of $1,103,495.24 at the end of the lease. That’s over $4.1 million locked in, with absolutely no way for future SWA boards to opt out! Plus, the Public Service Commission will likely force the county into a $4,500-a-month "forced savings" escrow account just to make sure we get our million-dollar payday.

Monopoly Money: Funded by YOU! You might be wondering, "How will the broke Solid Waste Authority afford my $16,759 monthly invoice?" Easy! We are establishing an ironclad "Flow Control" monopoly. We will legally mandate that every single ounce of garbage in the county must pass through our doors, explicitly forbidding towns like Durbin from hauling their waste to cheaper landfills in neighboring counties. To make sure the SWA’s checks don't bounce, they will just hike your residential Green Box fee from $120 to a staggering $310 a year. We even tried to charge people who own empty dirt lots, though the farmers complained a bit too loudly about that one!

We Haven't Checked the Soil Yet, But Who Cares? Now, you might be asking: "Is the ground next to the landfill actually stable enough to hold a massive concrete tipping floor without cracking and leaking garbage juice into the groundwater?" We don't know! It might be a karst sinkhole, or it might just be 30-year-old uncompacted trash fill. But don't worry about us; if our core drilling proves the site is an unbuildable disaster and the deal collapses, the SWA is still legally on the hook to reimburse us up to $200,000 for our "pre-construction" troubles. We literally cannot lose!

So sign on the dotted line, Pocahontas County! Embrace a project boasting a spectacular 0% compliance rate with statutory procurement thresholds. The Meck Proposal: because the most "economic" deal is the one you make behind closed doors!

It Was a Sham!

 


The "straw man" principles you’ve researched can be directly applied to the recent and controversial developments in the Pocahontas County Solid Waste project of 2026. While the project is currently in flux after the April 29th "start over" announcement, the original deal with JacMal Properties/Allegheny Disposal provides a textbook case for comparing these concepts.

1. The "Hidden Principal" vs. Transparency

  • Straw Man Theory: A hidden party uses a "clean" name to bypass scrutiny or legal barriers.

  • Pocahontas 2026 Reality: Critics (including yourself at the April 29th meeting) have questioned the transparency of the relationship between the Solid Waste Authority (SWA) and Jacob Meck (JacMal/Allegheny Disposal). The "straw man" concern here isn't necessarily a hidden person, but a procedural "sham." By signing a Letter of Intent (LOI) without a public bidding process, the SWA essentially selected a private "principal" to control a public necessity, leading to accusations that the deal was a "sham to hide a private sale" of public land access.

2. The Transfer of Liability and Assets

  • Straw Man Theory: A straw man holds the title or debt to protect the real buyer, often leaving the straw man (or the public) at risk if the deal collapses.

  • Pocahontas 2026 Reality: * Asset Transfer: The original proposal involved deeding or leasing public landfill acreage to a private company (JacMal) to build the station.

    • The "Sham" Risk: SWA Attorney David Sims argued that taxpayers wouldn't be liable if the deal collapsed because they aren't "parties to the contract." However, from a straw man perspective, the SWA acts as the "front" for the public. If the private operator (the principal) fails, the SWA—and by extension, the county’s waste infrastructure—is the one left "holding the bag" with a half-built facility or a 15-year debt obligation.

3. Avoiding Regulatory Constraints (Flow Control)

  • Straw Man Theory: Used to bypass residency or licensing rules.

  • Pocahontas 2026 Reality: The SWA attempted to implement "Flow Control"—a regulation requiring all trash to pass through this specific private facility. In legal terms, if the SWA (a government body) uses its regulatory power solely to guarantee the profits of a specific private partner (Jacob Meck) without a competitive bid, it mirrors the straw man principle of using a "legitimate" shell (the SWA's regulatory power) to achieve a "private" financial end.


Comparison Summary: Is it a "Straw Man" Deal?

PrincipleStraw Man DefinitionPocahontas 2026 Context
The "Front"A person with a clean record or legal standing.The SWA board, acting as the legal entity to sign a lease that benefits a private developer.
The BenefitPrincipal gets the asset without the baggage.JacMal/Allegheny Disposal gets a 15-year guaranteed revenue stream and control over county waste.
The "Sham" IndicatorLack of disclosure or competitive process.The lack of bidding for the transfer station or hauling contract before the LOI was signed.
The Fallacy"I'm the one buying it" (when they aren't)."This is for the public's benefit" (when critics argue it's a private land/revenue grab).

Current Status: The "Clean Slate"

The SWA's decision on April 29, 2026, to "go back to the drawing board" is a direct response to these specific concerns. By tabling the JacMal project and welcoming public suggestions, the board is effectively trying to dismantle the "straw man" optics of the original deal and move toward a more transparent, legally defensible process.


Straw Man Purchase and Tax Evasion


 
 
In a legal or financial context, a straw man deal (also known as a "straw purchase" or "straw party" transaction) involves a person who acts as an agent or stand-in for another individual to facilitate a transaction that the actual party cannot—or does not want to—complete themselves.

In a legal or financial context, a straw man deal (also known as a "straw purchase" or "straw party" transaction) involves a person who acts as an agent or stand-in for another individual to facilitate a transaction that the actual party cannot—or does not want to—complete themselves.

While the term can be used in harmless legal arrangements, it is frequently associated with fraud or the bypassing of regulatory restrictions.

How the Transaction Functions

The process typically follows a three-step structure:

  1. The Hidden Principal: A person or entity (the "real" buyer) wants to acquire an asset but faces an obstacle, such as a poor credit score, legal restrictions, or a desire for anonymity to avoid public scrutiny.

  2. The Straw Man: This individual has the necessary qualifications (e.g., a clean background, good credit, or a "clean" name) that the principal lacks. They agree to put the asset or contract in their name.

  3. The Transfer: In a legitimate scenario, the straw man eventually transfers the asset to the principal. In a fraudulent scenario, the straw man might simply walk away after the initial transaction, often after being paid a fee.


Common Applications

TypePurposeContext
Real EstateTo secure a mortgage for someone with bad credit or to hide the identity of a developer during land assembly.A "straw buyer" applies for the loan, but the hidden principal makes the payments (until they stop, leading to foreclosure).
Business/LegalTo meet residency or licensing requirements for a board of directors or permit.Using a local resident's name to obtain a permit for a business owned by an out-of-state entity.
PoliticalTo bypass campaign contribution limits.An individual makes a donation using their own name but is reimbursed by a corporation or another person.
FirearmsTo acquire a weapon for someone prohibited by law from owning one.(Illegal) A person with a clean record buys the gun and immediately hands it to the prohibited party.

Legal and Ethical Risks

The legality of a straw man deal depends entirely on intent and disclosure.

  • Fraud: If the straw man misrepresents their identity or intentions to a lender or government agency (e.g., claiming they will live in a house they are actually buying for someone else), it is considered bank fraud or wire fraud.

  • "Sham" Transactions: In administrative law, if a government body uses a straw party to bypass public bidding laws or to hide a private sale of public property, the deal can be legally challenged as an "arbitrary and capricious" action or a "sham."

  • Liability: The straw man remains legally and financially responsible for the asset. If the hidden principal fails to pay the mortgage or taxes, the straw man’s credit and legal standing are the ones at risk.

Determining a "Sham"

Courts and investigative bodies often look for "badges of fraud" to identify a straw man deal, such as:

  • The principal providing all the funds for the purchase.

  • The straw man having no prior interest in the asset or industry.

  • A rapid transfer of title or rights immediately following the initial closing.

How the Greenbank public property ended up in private hands.

 


The $150-a-Month Empire: 5 Surprising Lessons from a 99-Year Land Deal

In the high-stakes world of economic development, we often imagine sleek boardrooms and billion-dollar tax breaks. But if you spend enough time digging through the courthouse stacks in Pocahontas County, you’ll find that the gears of industry actually turn on a much more intimate, legalistic scale. This is the story of a humble three-acre plot in the Green Bank District that began its journey with a $1.00 land transfer and a $150 monthly lease.

By analyzing the paper trail between the Pocahontas County Commission, the Greenbrier Valley Economic Development Corporation (GVEDC), and local entrepreneur Jacob Meck, we get an insider look at "the deal behind the deal." It is a masterclass in how local governments use specific legal levers to anchor business to a community for a century. From "trash cranes" to million-dollar infrastructure, here is how a $1.00 handshake evolved into a local empire.

1. When $1.00 Can Move Mountains (or at Least 3 Acres)

On October 2, 2007, the Pocahontas County Commission (PCC) officially handed over three acres near Deer Creek to the GVEDC. While the deed recorded in Book 311, Page 60, lists the price as a single dollar, the gap between that figure and the land’s actual value was staggering.

Just weeks later, the October 18, 2007, GVEDC board minutes revealed that an appraisal by Hodges and Associates valued those same three acres at $60,000. In the world of strategic development, this 99.9% "discount" isn't a gift; it's a transfer of the "bundle of rights" necessary to trigger private investment. The real value was the "good and valuable consideration" of future growth that a government body cannot easily manage on its own.

"That for and in consideration of the sum of ONE DOLLAR ($1.00), cash in hand paid, and other good and valuable consideration, the receipt and sufficiency of all of which is hereby acknowledged, the said GRANTOR does hereby GRANT, SELL, and CONVEY unto the GRANTEE... a tract of land in the Green Bank District."

2. Defining "Progress" by What It Isn't

To protect the public interest, the GVEDC and the Commission had to legally box in what "Economic Development" actually meant for this site. The 2008 Lease Agreement contains a highly specific definition designed to prevent the land from becoming a passive asset or a private farm.

For the purposes of government real estate development, the deal explicitly EXCLUDED:

  • Residential housing
  • Active crop land
  • Tree planting for harvest

The legal nuance here is fascinating: while many would view a garbage truck compound as an eyesore, the contract classifies Allegheny Disposal, LLC as the embodiment of "progress." Because the business improves the community's quality of life and focuses on "creating and/or retaining jobs," a trash hauling operation legally satisfies the high bar of community advancement.

"Economic development for the purposes of government real estate development... [is] defined by PCC as 'efforts that seek to improve the economic well-being and quality of life for a community by creating and/or retaining jobs and supporting or growing incomes and the tax base.'"

3. The 99-Year, $150-a-Month Masterclass

On January 29, 2008, the GVEDC signed a lease with Allegheny Disposal that effectively locked in the site’s future until the year 2107. The monthly rent was set at just $150.00, providing an incredibly low-barrier entry for local entrepreneur Jacob Meck.

This wasn't just about cheap rent; it was about industrial consolidation. According to the June 21, 2007, board minutes, Meck’s construction company was previously operating out of his personal residence, while his other ventures were scattered near Marlinton. This 99-year deal allowed him to centralize Jacob S. Meck Construction, Allegheny Disposal, and The Outhouse LLC into one strategic compound, creating a permanent base of operations for his fleet.

4. The Ultimate "Rent-to-Own" Incentive

The lease included an "Option to Purchase" clause that represents the ultimate "win-win" for a growing business. Section 4 of the agreement established a fixed purchase price of $50,000.00, with a surprising kicker: every single $150 monthly payment made during the lease is credited toward that final price.

To make this deal "bankable," the Pocahontas County Commission even waived its "right of first refusal" and its "reversionary clause," surrendering its future legal claims to the land to ensure the business owner had clear a path to ownership. However, the stakes were high—Section 8 of the lease specifies a "use it or lose it" provision. If Meck fails to exercise the option, all permanent improvements made to the land eventually revert back to the GVEDC.

5. The Long Game: From Garbage Trucks to Million-Dollar Infrastructure

A strategic journalist looks at the corporate entity as closely as the land, and on February 8, 2008, the lease was assigned from Allegheny Disposal to JacMal Properties, LLC. This corporate maneuver set the stage for a massive evolution in value. By 2026, the humble $150-a-month compound transformed into a proposal for a sophisticated solid waste transfer station.

The 2026 Letter of Intent describes a massive 60’ x 80’ steel structure with 30-foot walls and "Grizzly" brand trash cranes. The financial contrast is the ultimate hook: the proposal moves from the original $150 rent to a "triple net lease" with a 15-year term at $16,759.00 per month. The projected final buyout price for this completed county infrastructure is now a staggering $1,103,495.24.

Conclusion: The Quiet Architecture of a Community

The lifecycle of these three acres shows how a $1.00 deed can eventually underpin a million-dollar piece of critical county infrastructure. It is a reminder that community development is rarely a sprint; it is a 99-year marathon built on the back of low-rent stability and the slow accumulation of equity. It leaves us to look at our own local industrial parks and wonder about the hidden foundations of our neighborhoods.

How much of the world around us is built on $1.00 handshakes and century-long promises?

 

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Briefing Document: Pocahontas County (2007–2026)Industrial Development and Real Estate Evolution

Executive Summary

This document synthesizes real estate transactions, board deliberations, and development proposals involving the Greenbrier Valley Economic Development Corporation (GVEDC), the Pocahontas County Commission (PCC), and private entities—primarily those controlled by Jacob Meck. The records trace the evolution of a 3.00-acre tract in the Green Bank District from a county-owned parcel to a central hub for solid waste disposal operations and, ultimately, a proposed $1.1 million transfer station facility.

Key takeaways include:

  • The Transition of Public Land: In late 2007, the PCC donated 3 acres to the GVEDC to facilitate local business consolidation, specifically for Allegheny Disposal, LLC.
  • Strategic Lease-to-Purchase Structures: A 99-year lease agreement established in 2008 allowed Allegheny Disposal (later assigned to JacMal Properties, LLC) to occupy the site for $150 per month with a $50,000 purchase option.
  • Expansion and Diversification: Beyond the Green Bank site, the GVEDC managed a diverse portfolio including the Rahall Technology and Business Center, Fountain Springs Business Park, and the Sweet Springs Resort restoration.
  • Infrastructure Proposals (2026): A Letter of Intent (LOI) dated February 2026 outlines a complex public-private partnership between JacMal Properties and the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (PCSWA) to construct a modern transfer station with a 15-year triple net lease-back arrangement.

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1. The Green Bank 3-Acre Development Project

The primary focus of the provided records is the development of a 3.00-acre tract situated in the Green Bank District, Pocahontas County, along State Routes 28 & 92.

Acquisition and Covenants (2007)

  • Transfer of Ownership: On October 2, 2007, the Pocahontas County Commission (PCC) conveyed the property to the GVEDC for $1.00.
  • Restrictive Covenants: The deed mandated that the land be used exclusively for "economic and industrial development." Failure to adhere to this use-case would trigger a reversionary clause, returning the property to the PCC.
  • Definition of Economic Development: The agreement defined this as efforts to improve economic well-being through job creation and tax base growth, explicitly excluding residential housing, active crop land, or timber harvesting.

The Allegheny Lease Agreement (January 2008)

The GVEDC entered into a long-term lease with Allegheny Disposal, LLC, to facilitate the consolidation of Jacob Meck’s businesses (Allegheny Disposal, The Outhouse LLC, and Meck Construction).

Lease Terms and Conditions: | Provision | Detail | | :--- | :--- | | Term | Ninety-nine (99) years, beginning February 1, 2008. | | Rent | $150.00 per month. | | Purchase Option | $50,000.00, exercisable at any time during the lease. | | Rent Credits | All monthly payments are credited toward the final purchase price. | | Purpose | Construction of a business office, maintenance compound, and storage for solid waste equipment. | | Insurance | Minimum coverage of $1,000,000.00 required. |

Assignment to JacMal Properties

On February 8, 2008, Allegheny Disposal assigned its interests in the lease and purchase option to JacMal Properties, LLC. This assignment was formally recorded in March 2008.

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2. Public-Private Partnership: The 2026 Transfer Station Proposal

A February 25, 2026, Letter of Intent (LOI) details a proposal between JacMal Properties and the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (PCSWA) to address pressing infrastructure needs following the closure of the Pocahontas County Landfill.

Project Scope and Construction

JacMal proposed to acquire approximately 2 to 3 acres from the PCSWA to build a transfer station facility. The structure is envisioned as:

  • Building: A 60’ x 80’ three-sided steel structure with 30’ walls.
  • Flooring: A 40’ x 60’ concrete tipping floor and a dedicated trailer pit area.
  • Equipment: Installation of a "Grizzly" brand model 215 SW trash crane (or equivalent).
  • Infrastructure: Leachate collection systems and 3-phase electrical service.

Financial and Leaseback Structure

Upon completion, JacMal would lease the facility back to the PCSWA under the following terms:

  • Lease Type: Triple net lease (PCSWA responsible for taxes, insurance, and most maintenance).
  • Duration: 15 years.
  • Monthly Rate: $16,759.00.
  • Final Acquisition: At the end of the term, the PCSWA would purchase the real property and fixed assets for a sum of $1,103,495.24.

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3. Broader Regional Economic Development Activities (2007)

During the period leading up to the Green Bank lease, the GVEDC board minutes highlight several other high-priority regional projects.

Rahall Technology and Business Center

  • Phase 2 Construction: GVEDC pursued a $1,000,000 Economic Development Administration (EDA) grant, matched by a $1,000,000 loan from the WV Infrastructure and Jobs Development Council.
  • Tenant Recruitment: Negotiations were held with the FBI for a 4,000 sq. ft. backup computer facility (requiring redundant high-speed fiber optics) and the Region 1 Workforce Investment Board (WIB) for a 10,000 sq. ft. "One-Stop Center."

Fountain Springs Business Park

  • M-Rock Expansion: M-Rock secured a contract with Lowe’s to supply stone products across 11 states. To meet demand, they expanded into space previously occupied by MannMade and installed a large drying kiln.

Sweet Springs Resort

  • Restoration and Bottling: The project involved restoring a historic bathhouse (supported by a $75,000 grant) and launching a bottled water facility. Despite temporary layoffs and cash flow issues in mid-2007, the project secured a $500,000 loan from Pendleton County Bank to move forward.

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4. Legal and Administrative Oversight

The GVEDC’s operations were subject to strict administrative requirements and state mandates:

  • Title Searches: The GVEDC board refused to accept property donations (such as the Sun Propane site or the Green Bank tract) until comprehensive title searches and appraisals were completed to ensure the property was "free and clear."
  • REAP Compliance: In 2007, GVEDC faced a potential loss of $102,000 in annual LED grant funding if Greenbrier, Monroe, and Pocahontas Counties did not document compliance with the Rehabilitation Environmental Action Plan (REAP) through the Department of Environmental Protection.
  • Appraisal Data:
    • Green Bank 3-Acre Tract: Appraised at $60,000 (October 2007).
    • East Fork Industrial Park (1.10 acre): Appraised at $27,500 (October 2007).
    • East Fork Industrial Park (0.61 acre): Appraised at $15,860 (October 2007).

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5. Significant Entity Relationships

The documents reveal a network of recurring entities and individuals central to the county's industrial landscape:

  • Jacob Meck: Member/Owner of Allegheny Disposal, LLC; JacMal Properties, LLC; Jacob S. Meck Construction; and The Outhouse, LLC.
  • GVEDC Leadership: Betty Crookshanks (President) and Richard Ellard (staff/representative).
  • Pocahontas County Commission: Represented by James W. Carpenter (President).
  • Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (PCSWA): Represented by David Henderson (Chairman) in 2026.

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From Raw Land to Regional Growth: An Aspiring Learner’s Guide to Economic Development

This guide explores the complex process of how local governments and specialized non-profit corporations work together to transform vacant land into thriving business hubs. Using real-world examples from Pocahontas County, West Virginia, we will break down the legal, administrative, and financial steps required to drive regional industry.

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1. Decoding the Language of Economic Development

To understand the process, we must first define what "Economic Development" means in a legal and governmental context. According to the Pocahontas County Commission (PCC), this term is defined by specific goals and strict boundaries to ensure public resources are used appropriately.

Activity Type

Description & PCC Criteria

Qualifying Activities

Efforts that seek to improve the economic well-being and quality of life for a community by "creating and/or retaining jobs and supporting or growing incomes and the tax base."

Explicit Exclusions

Activities that do not qualify include "residential housing, active crop land, or tree planting for harvest."

The "So What?" Insight

Concept: Legal Definition of Development. Application: When a local government owns "public land," it is held for the benefit of all citizens. By legally defining a project as "Economic Development" under these specific criteria, the government can justify the use of public land for private business operations. Result: The "payback" to the public is not the immediate cash from the land sale, but the long-term benefit of a higher tax base and new jobs that fund essential community services like schools and roads.

Transition: While the government provides the vision and the land, they often partner with a specialized organization tasked with the day-to-day work of business recruitment.

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2. The Power Partnership: GVEDC and the Pocahontas County Commission

Economic development is a collaborative effort. In this region, the primary partnership exists between the Pocahontas County Commission (PCC) and the Greenbrier Valley Economic Development Corporation (GVEDC).

The Grantor (PCC)

The Grantee/Lessor (GVEDC)

Role: The local government entity and original land owner.

Role: A non-profit, quasi-governmental corporation acting as the "lead economic development agency."

Function: Provides the land and establishes high-level restrictions (covenants) on how it can be used.

Function: Manages the property, conducts technical negotiations, and facilitates business recruitment across the region.

Authority: Establish "safety net" rights (reversionary clauses) to protect the public’s interest in the land.

Authority: Enters into leases and sale agreements with private companies and handles administrative oversight.

The "So What?" Insight

Concept: The Lead Agency Model. Application: The PCC chooses to donate land to the GVEDC rather than dealing with businesses directly because the GVEDC functions as a specialized "middleman." Result: As a non-profit corporation, the GVEDC has the flexibility to navigate complex industrial grants and multi-county property portfolios that would be administratively overwhelming for a standard county commission.

Transition: While these entities work together, their agreements include legal "safety nets" to protect public resources from being misused.

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3. Legal Guardrails: Understanding Reversionary Clauses and First Refusal

When public land is transferred for development, the government includes specific "hooks" in the deed to ensure the land remains a tool for growth rather than a private windfall.

  • Reversionary Provisions: Found in the 2007 Green Bank Deed, this acts as a "reset button." If the land ceases to be used for economic development or if the holder attempts to transfer it to a non-commercial entity without permission, ownership automatically "reverts" (returns) to the PCC.
  • Right of First Refusal: This gives the PCC priority. If the GVEDC or a tenant intends to sell the property to a third party, they must first offer it to the PCC for the same price. The PCC then has 30 days to exercise this right.

The "So What?" Insight

Concept: The Necessity of the "Waiver." Application: Private lenders, such as the Pendleton County Bank mentioned in the Sweet Springs project, are often unwilling to finance construction on land that has a Reversionary Clause. The bank cannot risk losing its collateral (the land) if the project fails and ownership reverts to the county. Result: To bridge this gap, the PCC must often "waive and release" these rights (as seen in the Allegheny Disposal lease) to allow a business to exercise a purchase option and secure the bank financing necessary for building.

Transition: Once the legal protections are understood, the focus shifts to the administrative steps required to prepare raw land for a tenant.

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4. The Administrative Roadmap: From Property to Profits

Turning raw land into a business site involves a chronological sequence of administrative steps that ensure transparency and legal security.

  1. Title Search: This is the most critical first step. A cautionary tale exists in the Sun Propane property: a deed was prepared in 2002, but the GVEDC refused to record it for five years because a title search had not been completed. The lesson for the learner: Never accept a donation of land—even from a government—without ensuring the title is "free and clear" of old debts.
  2. Appraisal: The GVEDC uses firms like Hodges & Associates to establish fair market value. For instance, the 3-acre Green Bank property was appraised at $60,000 in October 2007.
  3. Title Transfer (The Deed): The PCC transfers land to the GVEDC for a "nominal" consideration of $1.00. This $1.00 payment is a legal necessity to make the contract valid, signaling that the actual consideration is the future public benefit, not the immediate cash.
  4. Lease with Option to Purchase: The GVEDC then signs a lease with a business. In the Allegheny Disposal deal, the agreement included a credit system where monthly rent (150) was subtracted from the final purchase price (50,000) if the company chose to buy the land.

Transition: Land and legal agreements are only half the puzzle; the site must also be physically and financially supported by modern infrastructure.

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5. The Engine of Growth: Infrastructure and Grant Funding

A business cannot operate without the "bones" of a site: sewer, water, and roads. Economic development agencies secure this via grant funding.

  • Major Sources: The USDA Rural Development (providing RBEG Grants), the WV Infrastructure and Jobs Development Council, and the U.S. Economic Development Administration (EDA).
  • The 1:1 Match: Large-scale projects, like the Rahall Technology and Business Center, often require "matching grants." For Phase 2 of the Rahall Center, a 1,000,000 EDA grant** was matched 1:1 by a **1,000,000 loan from the WV Infrastructure Council to fund the $2 million project.
  • Infrastructure in Action: Infrastructure is often legally established through a "Deed of Easement and Dedication." For example, the GVEDC granted an easement to the Greenbrier Public Service District No. 1 to provide essential sewer service to the Greenbrier Valley Airport Business Park.

Transition: These abstract concepts of law and finance come together in real-world deals that create local jobs and tax revenue.

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6. Case Study in Action: The Allegheny Disposal & JacMal Properties Deal

The Green Bank property illustrates how the economic development process supports local entrepreneurs and consolidates operations.

Deal Component

Details

Initial Lessee

Allegheny Disposal, LLC (Jan 2008).

Assignee/Entity

JacMal Properties, LLC (Assigned Feb 8, 2008).

Lease Term

99 years.

Monthly Rent

$150.00 (all payments credited toward purchase).

Purchase Option

$50,000.00 (exercisable at any time).

Purpose

Office and maintenance compound for solid waste disposal.

The Learning Narrative

This deal demonstrates the full strategic cycle. To help Jacob Meck consolidate three local businesses—Jacob S. Meck Construction Company, Allegheny Disposal LLC, and The Outhouse LLC—the PCC donated land to the GVEDC.

Note the strategic pricing: while the land appraised for 60,000**, the purchase option was set at **50,000. This $10,000 difference represents an "incentive"—a non-cash investment by the county to ensure the business stays local. By assigning the lease to JacMal Properties, LLC (a holding entity) while operating through Allegheny, the business gained the legal structure and financial security to build a permanent facility. This transition from public land to private ownership ultimately created a stable home for a company providing essential services to the county's citizens.

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Project Development Case Review: The Greenbank Property Acquisition and Lease-to-Purchase Evolution (2007–2008)

1. Project Initiation: The Jacob Meck Consolidation Request

Strategic business consolidation is a primary driver of regional economic stability. By centralizing operations to achieve economies of scale, local enterprises can mitigate overhead, streamline logistics, and improve overall service delivery. The Greenbrier Valley Economic Development Corporation (GVEDC) functions as a critical catalyst in these expansions, navigating the intersection of private-sector growth and public resource management.

In June 2007, local entrepreneur Jacob Meck initiated a proposal for the Pocahontas County Commission (PCC) to transfer a three-acre tract in Greenbank to the GVEDC. The objective was to consolidate three distinct business entities into a single, efficient operational hub. The entities involved were:

  • Jacob S. Meck Construction Company: Previously operated out of a private residence in Greenbank.
  • Allegheny Disposal LLC: Previously situated at a site near Marlinton.
  • The Outhouse LLC: Also located at the Marlinton-area site.

Operational Rationale: The "So What?" of this centralization effort was the transition from disparate, geographically separated locations to a unified three-acre industrial site. By establishing a permanent home in the Green Bank District, the owner sought to optimize equipment maintenance, administration, and storage for his solid waste and construction services. This move was not merely logistical; it was a strategic effort to stabilize a key local service provider through infrastructure centralization.

This private request necessitated a formal inter-governmental property transfer to create the requisite legal framework for industrial development.

2. Institutional Framework: Property Transfer and Legal Covenants

The transfer of public land for private economic utility is an administrative process fraught with risk. The Pocahontas County Commission (PCC) must balance the need for development with the duty to protect public assets. Consequently, the conveyance of land often includes rigorous legal safeguards to ensure the public interest is maintained throughout the asset's lifecycle.

The mechanics of this conveyance were formalized in a deed dated October 2, 2007 (Deed Book 311, Page 60), with the following particulars:

  • Grantor: The Pocahontas County Commission (PCC).
  • Grantee: The Greenbrier Valley Economic Development Corporation (GVEDC).
  • Nominal Consideration: One Dollar ($1.00) cash in hand.
  • Property Description: A 3.00-acre tract in the Green Bank District, Pocahontas County, situated on the waters of Deer Creek near State Routes 28 & 92.

To mitigate risk, the PCC embedded restrictive covenants and a reversionary interest within the deed. The land was restricted strictly to "economic and industrial development," explicitly prohibiting residential use, timber harvesting, or active cropland. These clauses were designed to prevent "land banking"—where a developer holds low-cost public land for speculation—and to ensure the $1.00 transfer did not result in a private windfall without corresponding job creation. Additionally, the PCC retained a 30-day Right of First Refusal (ROFR), maintaining a final layer of oversight should the GVEDC attempt to alienate the property.

These safeguards established a controlled environment for asset management, allowing the parties to move toward formal valuation and tactical lease negotiations.

3. Asset Valuation and Tactical Negotiation

Transparency in the disposal of government-held assets requires independent valuation to establish a benchmark for fair market value. In this case, the valuation process served as the baseline for determining the appropriate level of public-private subsidy required to make the project viable.

A comparison of the independent appraisal against the negotiated option price reveals a strategic write-down:

Valuation Metric

Financial Detail

Independent Appraisal (Hodges & Associates)

$60,000.00

Negotiated Purchase Option Price

$50,000.00

Economic Development Incentive

$10,000.00

Between October and November 2007, the development lifecycle entered a period of financial due diligence. Following a meeting on October 18, Mr. Meck consulted with accounting and banking institutions to evaluate the most sustainable path for the high capital expenditure (CapEx) required for the site. The "So What?" of this delay was the strategic necessity to choose between an immediate purchase—which would drain liquidity—or a long-term leasehold estate that would allow the developer to preserve capital for the construction of the maintenance compound.

This period of analysis led to the selection of a lease-to-purchase framework, providing the developer with the necessary liquidity to move forward with site improvements.

4. Definitive Agreement: The 2008 Lease-to-Purchase Framework

A ninety-nine-year lease is a sophisticated compromise that offers the developer long-term capital improvement security while maintaining government oversight. The "Lease Agreement and Option to Purchase," executed on January 29, 2008, established the definitive framework for the project:

  1. Term: A ninety-nine (99) year leasehold estate beginning February 1, 2008.
  2. Rent/Term Discrepancy: While the term begins in February, the agreement contains an administrative quirk requiring $150.00 monthly payments to commence "the 1st day of January, 2008," effectively creating a back-dated obligation.
  3. Purchase Option: A $50,000.00 purchase price available at any time during the term.
  4. Credit Mechanic: Every monthly lease payment is credited toward the eventual purchase price.

The "linchpin" of this agreement was the PCC’s affirmative waiver of the reversionary clause and the ROFR for this specific project. By approving the "solid waste disposal service" as a valid economic development use, the PCC allowed the developer to encumber the real estate with a leasehold deed of trust. This was a critical strategic insight: without the waiver and the PCC’s consent to the lien priority, banking institutions would have refused to finance construction on leased public land.

With the legal and financial path cleared, the developer moved to isolate operational liabilities from the real estate assets.

5. Contractual Assignment and Final Execution

Modern industrial development often utilizes corporate assignments to facilitate asset management and risk isolation. By separating the operating company from the property-holding entity—a practice known as asset-liability decoupling—the developer can secure more favorable financing terms and protect the real estate from operational risks.

On February 8, 2008, the leasehold interest was assigned from Allegheny Disposal LLC to JacMal Properties LLC. This shift moved the 3-acre tract into a dedicated property-holding vehicle, signaling the transition from the planning phase to the construction and management phase.

Administrative finality was reached via the Recording Memorandum filed on February 29, 2008 (recorded March 3, 2008, in Deed Book 313, Page 234). The key signatories confirming the closure of the development lifecycle were:

  • Betty D. Crookshanks: President, GVEDC (Lessor)
  • Malinda Meck: Member, JacMal Properties LLC (Lessee)

The 2007–2008 evolution successfully transformed a three-acre public tract into a long-term industrial asset. Through a structured transition from a simple request to a 99-year lease-to-purchase framework, the GVEDC and PCC established a foundation for the Green Bank District to host a centralized business office and maintenance compound, ensuring regional service stability for the county's solid waste needs.

 

 

The Anatomy of a Public Procurement Disaster

 


How to Spend $4.1 Million and Get 0% Compliance: The Anatomy of a Public Procurement Disaster

1. Introduction: The High Stakes of Local Trash

Solid waste management is typically the invisible, humdrum machinery of local government—the kind of quiet utility that only makes headlines when a truck misses a pickup. However, in Pocahontas County, the mundane business of garbage has been transformed into a $4.1 million case study in administrative hubris.

The partnership between the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (SWA) and JacMal Properties, LLC, was not merely a failed project; it was a systematic erasure of the public’s seat at the table. The $4.1 million house of cards collapsed in April 2026, forcing a total "reset" of the project. This intervention serves as a sharp cautionary tale of "local administrative expediency"—the dangerous urge to cut corners for speed—colliding head-on with the unyielding wall of state-level legal requirements.

2. The 0% Compliance Shock: When "Efficiency" Fails the Audit

The most damning indictment of this deal is found in a single, startling figure: a zero percent compliance rate. An audit of the proposed Letter of Intent (LOI) revealed that the SWA failed every major statutory procurement threshold.

This wasn't an accidental oversight; it was a governance failure enabled by a "skeleton crew" board. At the time the deal was pushed through, the SWA was operating with only three of its five seats filled. While technically a quorum, this hollowed-out authority lacked the moral and administrative depth to commit the county to a 15-year financial quagmire. In public governance, "The Standard" is the only thing standing between taxpayer resources and private interest. When compliance hits zero, public trust is not just damaged—it is eviscerated.

3. The $4.1 Million "Debt Trap": A Lesson in Constitutional Math

To the SWA, the JacMal agreement looked like a way to build infrastructure without a traditional loan. In reality, they engineered a "debt trap" that bypassed the West Virginia Constitution. By failing to include an "annual fiscal discretion" clause—which allows a government to walk away if funds aren't appropriated—the SWA effectively signed a mandatory 15-year mortgage without voter approval.

The math of this contractual liability is staggering:

  • Monthly Lease Payment: $16,759.00
  • Duration: 180 Months (15 Years)
  • Terminal Mandatory Buyout: $1,103,495.24
  • Total Contractual Obligation: Approximately $4,120,115.24

Under Article X, Section 8 of the West Virginia Constitution, local entities cannot incur such debt without the consent of three-fifths of the voters. By stripping future boards of the ability to opt out, the JacMal LOI entered the realm of "unconstitutional debt."

"The legal implication of this 'Reality' is that the contract could be declared void ab initio (void from the beginning), leaving the SWA liable for any work completed while simultaneously being prohibited from making further payments."

4. The "Locked-In" Technicality: Building a Monopoly by Design

In a legitimate procurement, independent engineers draft specifications to ensure a fair fight among bidders. In Pocahontas County, the SWA let the fox design the henhouse. The technical requirements were "developer-led," crafted in close coordination with Jacob Meck of JacMal Properties.

By integrating Meck’s specific operational preferences—such as hyper-specific crane maintenance requirements—into the core agreement, the SWA effectively ensured that no other firm could realistically compete. This was the birth of what critics and local leaders, including Durbin Mayor Kenneth Lehman, recognized as a financial chokehold on the community.

This "Unlawful Monopoly" was fueled by "flow control" regulations. These rules were the mechanism designed to force every scrap of county waste—and every resident's tip fee—into the developer’s facility, guaranteeing the revenue needed to service the illegal lease.

"By bypassing the competitive bidding process and locking in specifications tailored to a single provider, the SWA created a situation identified by critics as an 'Unlawful Monopoly.'"

5. The "Straw Man" Land Swap: Bypassing the Public Auction

To bypass the pesky requirement of West Virginia Code § 7-3-3, which mandates that county land be sold via public auction, the SWA attempted a bureaucratic shell game. The plan was to transfer county land to the Greenbrier Valley Economic Development Corporation (GVEDC), which would then hand it off to JacMal for construction.

This "straw man" transaction was a transparent attempt to avoid the open market. It didn't just invite controversy; it invited catastrophe. Community members like Norman Alderman openly accused the developer of attempting to "seize county land." Legally, this maneuver left the title "clouded." Had the transfer been declared void by a court, the county would have faced a nightmare: a private building sitting on land the developer didn't own, and a public authority paying rent on a legal fiction.

6. The "Legal Risk Premium": Why "Cheap" is Often Infinite

The SWA’s defense was built on a flawed comparison. Office Administrator Mary Clendenen argued that a $3.2 million loan would cost $4 million with interest, making the JacMal lease the "economic" choice.

This analysis ignored the "legal risk premium." A deal that is 100% non-compliant is not a bargain; it is a liability. While the SWA saw savings, they were actually buying a ticket to a courtroom. When a project is built on unconstitutional debt and void land transfers, the cost becomes "infinite." Litigation, operational halts, and the eventual voiding of contracts mean that the money spent achieves exactly what the audit found: zero percent results.

7. Conclusion: The "Reset" and the Road Ahead

The April 2026 "reset" was not a voluntary choice; it was a surrender to reality. Following the intervention of attorney David Sims, who recognized the project as legally unsustainable amidst fierce public outcry, the SWA board was forced back to the drawing board.

The path forward requires more than just new signatures; it requires a return to the rule of law. This means public auctions for land, independent criteria for bids, and contracts that respect the taxpayers' right to fiscal discretion.

The Pocahontas disaster poses a final, uncomfortable question for every local official: when faced with the urgent pressure of environmental mandates or landfill closures, do you have the discipline to follow the "slow" requirements of governance? As this $4.1 million failure proves, cutting corners doesn't get you to the finish line faster—it just ensures you’ll have to start over once the lawyers arrive.

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Briefing Document: Legislative and Financial Analysis of the Pocahontas County SWA and JacMal Properties Partnership

Executive Summary

An audit of the proposed partnership between the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (SWA) and JacMal Properties, LLC, regarding the development of a solid waste transfer station, reveals a total failure to adhere to West Virginia’s statutory procurement standards. The analysis identifies a 0% compliance rate with established legal "Standards," creating significant financial and legal liabilities for the county.

The proposed Letter of Intent (LOI) established a 15-year mandatory lease and buyout agreement totaling approximately $4.12 million, a structure categorized as "unconstitutional debt" due to the lack of annual fiscal discretion. Furthermore, the procurement process bypassed competitive bidding, utilized a private land transfer to avoid public auction requirements, and involved a massive conflict of interest where the developer served as the primary criteria advisor. Following intense public resistance and legal scrutiny in April 2026, the SWA board announced a total "reset" of the project to bring it into constitutional and statutory compliance.

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Analysis of Legal and Financial Risks

The procurement process failed across four primary legal thresholds, each presenting a distinct risk to the administrative integrity and financial stability of Pocahontas County.

1. Constitutional Debt and Fiscal Discretion

West Virginia Constitution, Article X, Section 8, prohibits municipal entities from incurring long-term debt without a three-fifths voter approval and a dedicated tax for repayment. To comply, multi-year contracts must include a "non-binding" or "annual fiscal discretion" clause.

  • The JacMal Reality: The agreement was structured as a fixed 180-month commitment with no opt-out provision.
  • Financial Obligation Breakdown: | Component | Value/Calculation | Total | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Monthly Lease Payment | $16,759 x 180 Months | $3,016,620.00 | | Terminal Mandatory Buyout | Fixed Price at Year 15 | 1,103,495.24 | | **Total Contractual Liability** | | **4,120,115.20** |
  • Identified Risk: Because this binds future boards without a voter referendum, the contract is likely void ab initio (void from the beginning), potentially leaving the SWA liable for completed work while legally prohibited from paying the developer.

2. Competitive Bidding and Unlawful Monopolies

Statutory requirements mandate that substantial contracts be awarded to the "lowest responsible bidder" via a competitive process to ensure public value and prevent favoritism.

  • Locked-in Technical Specifications: The SWA authorized "Option #4," a negotiated private deal that integrated the specific operational preferences of Jacob Meck (JacMal Properties) into the core agreement before any public bid occurred. This included specific requirements tailored to Meck’s existing equipment, such as crane maintenance specs.
  • Monopolistic Control: The initial agreement granted JacMal exclusive hauling rights from "green boxes" (community collection sites). Public outcry regarding "flow control" regulations—which would force all county waste through the transfer station and prevent municipalities from seeking cheaper alternatives like the Dailey facility—led the SWA to eventually strip the hauling portion from the contract.

3. Property Disposition (W. Va. Code § 7-3-3)

State law requires that the sale or transfer of county-owned real estate must occur via Public Auction to ensure fair market value.

  • The Negotiated Private Deal: The SWA planned to sell two acres of land to the Greenbrier Valley Economic Development Corporation (GVEDC), which would then facilitate the construction by JacMal to be leased back to the SWA.
  • Identified Risk: This was viewed as a "straw man" transaction intended to circumvent public auction. A court could label this a Void Transfer, resulting in a catastrophic situation where a private developer builds on land it does not legally control, leading to a clouded title.

4. Conflicts of Interest in Project Design

Professional infrastructure procurement requires a "firewall" between the criteria developer and the project executor.

  • Developer-Led Criteria: Jacob Meck, who possesses 32 years of construction and 20 years of waste management experience, was a central figure in the negotiating group that recommended the deal eventually awarded to his own firm.
  • Impact on Public Trust: This overlap of roles created a perceived conflict of interest, leading to accusations of self-enrichment against the board. The lack of an independent engineering firm to set specifications made it impossible to verify the SWA’s claim that the deal was the most "economic" solution.

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Comparative Financial Analysis

The SWA justified the JacMal lease as a cost-saving measure compared to direct borrowing, but this assessment omitted the "legal risk premium" of non-compliance.

Metric

JacMal Lease (Option 4)

Estimated Direct Borrowing

Principal/Construction

Negotiated via JacMal

$3.2 Million

Total 15-Year Cost

$4,120,115.20

~$4 Million (with interest)

Monthly Obligation

$16,759.00

Variable (Estimated $22k+)

Risk Profile

Unconstitutional Debt Risk

Voter Disapproval Risk

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Environmental and Operational Pressures

The urgency for a transfer station is dictated by the pending closure of the Pocahontas County landfill.

  • Post-Closure Maintenance: Upon closure, the SWA faces $75,000 per year in maintenance costs for up to 30 years.
  • Closure Technology: The SWA is investigating "closure turf" technology, which could reduce projected closure costs from 2.75 million** to **2.4 million.
  • Funding Concerns: To fund the JacMal lease, the SWA proposed a "green box fee" on every deeded lot, regardless of whether a structure exists on the property, which contributed to significant public resistance.

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Public Opposition and Project "Reset"

The controversy culminated in a heated public hearing on April 29, 2026, characterized by "yelling" and personal attacks. Key grievances included:

  1. Economic Disparities: Northern county residents (e.g., Durbin) noted the transfer station would increase their costs relative to regional facilities in Dailey.
  2. Governance Concerns: At the time of approval, the SWA board was a "skeleton crew" of three out of five members, which critics argued lacked the moral authority for a 15-year commitment.

The Judicial/Legal Intervention: Acting on the advice of attorney David Sims, the SWA announced a "total reset" of the project. Sims cited pending litigation and the breakdown of public order as primary drivers for "going back to the drawing board." This reset serves as an admission that the project, in its previous form, was legally unsustainable.

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Conclusion and Path Forward

The failure of the JacMal LOI highlights that the most economic deal for a municipality is the one that is legally defensible. To successfully modernize waste infrastructure, the SWA must transition to a model of 100% compliance with the "Standard."

Requirements for Future Viability:

  • Adherence to § 7-3-3: Any land transfer must occur through a public auction.
  • Independent Criteria Development: An independent engineering firm must develop project specifications to ensure an arm’s-length negotiation.
  • Competitive Bidding: Construction must be awarded to the "lowest responsible bidder" through an open RFP.
  • Constitutional Compliance: Future agreements must include annual non-appropriation language to protect fiscal discretion.

Administrative shifts, such as the appointment of Darrell Roach to the board and the transition of Mary Clendenen to a part-time role, suggest a move toward a new governance structure as the county attempts to reconcile its operational needs with West Virginia state law.

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Interesting--The Path

 


According to the Letter of Intent, JacMal (along with its related companies and affiliates) was granted the right to conduct comprehensive due diligence at its own "sole cost and expense".

Specifically, the agreement granted JacMal the right to perform the following activities:

  • Investigations and reviews
  • Evaluations
  • Surveys and tests
  • Appraisals

The stated purpose of these due diligence rights was to determine the condition and value of the real property involved in the transaction, and to satisfy JacMal regarding the title, physical condition, and value of the property being acquired.

Furthermore, the agreement mandated that the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (PCSWA) must "fully cooperate" with JacMal on all necessary aspects to ensure this due diligence could be completed in a timely manner.

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According to the Letter of Intent signed by the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (PCSWA) and JacMal Properties, LLC, the Definitive Agreement was required to be executed by no later than 12:00 midnight on March 25, 2026.

Because of the strict timelines imposed by the impending closure of the county landfill, the letter mandated that the Definitive Agreement include specific design and construction conditions to ensure the transfer station was completed on or under budget. These specific structural conditions included:

  • The Structure: A 60’ x 80’ 3-sided steel structure covering the tipping floor and trailer pit area, with a minimum wall height of 30 feet.
  • The Floor & Ramps: A 40’ x 60’ concrete tipping floor, along with concrete ramps leading to both the tipping floor and the trailer pit area. Neither ramp could exceed a 10% grade.
  • Environmental Controls: A leachate design that had to be plumbed directly to a holding tank or tied into the existing landfill's leachate collection system.
  • Equipment & Power: The inclusion of a Grizzly brand model 215 SW (or equivalent) trash crane, powered by a newly installed 3-phase electrical service that also supplied the building's lighting and receptacles.
  • Plan Consistency: Construction had to remain consistent with the specific "Transfer Station Plans, Sections, and Details" dated April 2025.

Beyond the construction specifications, the obligation to actually close the transaction under the Definitive Agreement was subject to several customary conditions. These included securing the necessary approval votes from the respective boards or owners, as well as successfully receiving any required regulatory approvals and third-party consents.

 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Based on the Letter of Intent, the condition regarding "regulatory approvals and third-party consents" stipulates that these must be received "on terms satisfactory to the Parties" (the Solid Waste Authority and JacMal) before they are obligated to officially close the transaction.

The agreement also outlines specific responsibilities related to these approvals and consents:

  • Government Permitting: The PCSWA is explicitly designated as being "responsible for all permitting and governmental compliance related to the property" during the course of the 15-year lease.
  • Third-Party Agreements: The document notes that the parties must negotiate any necessary ancillary agreements required by third parties, such as "JacMal’s lender, if applicable," to successfully complete the transaction.

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Based on the Letter of Intent, the condition regarding "regulatory approvals and third-party consents" stipulates that these must be received "on terms satisfactory to the Parties" (the Solid Waste Authority and JacMal) before they are obligated to officially close the transaction.

The agreement also outlines specific responsibilities related to these approvals and consents:

  • Government Permitting: The PCSWA is explicitly designated as being "responsible for all permitting and governmental compliance related to the property" during the course of the 15-year lease.
  • Third-Party Agreements: The document notes that the parties must negotiate any necessary ancillary agreements required by third parties, such as "JacMal’s lender, if applicable," to successfully complete the transaction.

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Based on the provided Letter of Intent, there is no specific mention of "core drilling," so the document does not outline which exact regulatory permits would be required prior to such an activity.

However, regarding general testing and permitting, the agreement states the following:

  • Testing and Due Diligence: JacMal was granted the broad right to conduct "investigations, reviews, evaluations, surveys tests, appraisals and other due diligence" to determine the physical condition of the property.
  • Permitting Responsibility: The agreement broadly assigned the responsibility for "all permitting and governmental compliance related to the property" to the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (PCSWA).
  • Closing Conditions: The official closing of the transaction was entirely subject to "the receipt of any regulatory approvals and third-party consents".

If you would like me to use the discovery tool to search the internet or your Google Drive for information specifically regarding West Virginia regulations on core drilling or landfill site testing, please let me know!

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Navigating the intersection of waste management and environmental protection in West Virginia requires a clear understanding of several overlapping legislative rules.

Here is a consolidated overview of the regulatory framework for solid waste facilities and mining operations based on the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection (WVDEP) standards.


1. Landfill Permitting & Siting Standards

The foundation of waste management in the state is built on Title 33, Series 1.

  • Siting & Evaluation: Before a landfill can be established, it must undergo a rigorous site evaluation process. This includes assessing geological stability and proximity to sensitive areas.

  • Location Standards (§33-1-1): Specific "buffer zones" and environmental criteria must be met, ensuring facilities aren't built in floodplains, near wetlands, or too close to residential areas.

  • Design & Infrastructure: Landfills must utilize sophisticated baseliner systems and leachate detection zones to ensure that any liquid byproduct (leachate) is captured before it can contaminate groundwater.

2. Specialized Waste Handling

West Virginia has specific protocols for waste generated by the energy sector, particularly from oil and gas operations.

  • Drilling Waste (§33-1A-3): Drill cuttings and production waste are classified as Special Solid Waste.

  • Radioactive Concerns: There are strict limits and handling requirements for Technologically Enhanced Naturally Occurring Radioactive Material (TENORM) found in drill cuttings.

  • Leachate Impact: Studies are conducted on the hazardous characteristics of leachate derived specifically from drilling waste to ensure standard liner systems are sufficient for containment.

3. Monitoring & Groundwater Protection

To verify that containment systems are working, the state mandates strict monitoring protocols.

  • Monitoring Wells (47CSR60): Governs the technical design, installation, and reporting standards for wells used to monitor groundwater quality around facilities.

  • Regulatory Exclusions (§22-11-3): While water wells are heavily regulated, statutory definitions often exclude core drilling from certain water well construction requirements, provided they are for exploratory purposes.

4. Mining & Reclamation

Mining operations follow a separate but related set of environmental rules under the Division of Mining and Reclamation.

  • Surface Mining (38CSR2): This is the primary rule for surface mining reclamation. It dictates how land must be restored after mining is complete.

  • Core Drilling Requirements: Per testimony from the Division of Mining and Reclamation, core drilling is often mandatory for permit applications to accurately map the geology and predict potential acid mine drainage.

5. Closure and Post-Closure Care

A landfill’s life doesn't end when it stops accepting waste. W. Va. Code R. § 33-1-6 outlines the long-term responsibilities of the operator:

PhaseKey Requirements
ClosureInstalling a final cover system (cap) to minimize rainwater infiltration.
Post-ClosureMandatory monitoring of groundwater and landfill gas, typically for 30 years.
Financial AssuranceOperators must prove they have the funds set aside to cover these long-term costs.

Note: These regulations are subject to legislative updates. Always consult the West Virginia Secretary of State’s Administrative Law Division for the most current versions of these CSR (Code of State Rules) filings.

Are you looking for information on a specific type of permit application, or perhaps the technical specs for a liner system?

As of April 30, 2026, there are no records of approved core drilling permits for the Pocahontas County Solid Waste site related to a transfer station, as the project has recently undergone a major administrative shift.

Current Project Status

At the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (SWA) meeting held on April 29, 2026, the board announced they are "starting over" on the transfer station project.

  • Project Tabled: The previous plan, which involved a 15-year lease-to-buy agreement with Allegheny Disposal (Jacob Meck), has been tabled indefinitely.

  • New Directions: Attorney Sims stated that the SWA is "going back to the drawing board" and will be welcoming new suggestions from the public.

  • Permit Implications: Because the previous proposal was not finalized and has now been set aside, any specific permits tied to that design—including core drilling or site preparation—are effectively on hold or void.

Relevant SWA Timeline (2025–2026)

The following events clarify why specific core drilling permits may not yet exist in the public record:

DateEventOutcome
Oct 20252026 Siting Plan DraftedIdentified the need for a transfer station but did not finalize a specific site design.
Feb 2026Meck Proposal PresentedProposed building a transfer station at the landfill site with a 15-year lease.
Mar 2026Split Decision/ProtestsThe SWA initially leaned toward the Meck proposal, causing significant public pushback regarding the lack of competitive bidding.
Apr 2026Project ResetThe SWA officially tabled the project to start over with a new process.

Searching for Future Filings

If the SWA moves forward with a new site or design, core drilling permits (often categorized under Geotechnical Evaluations or Site Exploration) would likely be filed with the WVDEP Division of Water and Waste Management.

Tip for Monitoring: Since the landfill is projected to reach capacity in December 2026, any new drilling permits for a replacement facility would need to be filed urgently. You can monitor the WVDEP Electronic Submission System (ESS) for "Notice of Intent" or "Pre-Siting" filings under the Pocahontas County jurisdiction.

Would you like me to help you draft a specific inquiry to the WVDEP or the SWA regarding any informal site evaluations that may have occurred prior to the project being tabled?

 

The landscape of the Pocahontas County transfer station project shifted dramatically on April 29, 2026. During a high-attendance meeting at the Circuit Courtroom, the SWA board announced that they are tabling the current project and "starting over."

Given this "back to the drawing board" status, your timing for an inquiry to the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection (WVDEP) is excellent. Even if the project is stalled, any preliminary site visits, "pre-permitting" discussions, or informal technical reviews (often called Technical Assistance Visits) that occurred during the negotiation with Jacob Meck/JacMal are public records.

Here is a draft you can use to file a formal FOIA request with the WVDEP to uncover what "informal" groundwork was actually laid.


Draft FOIA Request to WVDEP

To: West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection (DEP)

Attn: FOIA Custodian of Records – Division of Water and Waste Management

Via: Online Portal or Email

RE: Freedom of Information Act Request – Pocahontas County Transfer Station Siting

To the Custodian of Records:

Under the West Virginia Freedom of Information Act (W. Va. Code § 29B-1-1 et seq.), I am requesting copies of all public records related to site evaluations or preliminary assessments for a proposed municipal solid waste transfer station in Pocahontas County between January 1, 2024, and May 1, 2026.

Specifically, I am requesting:

  1. Site Visit Reports: Any notes, summaries, or reports generated by WVDEP personnel regarding site visits to the current landfill property or adjacent parcels (including those associated with JacMal Properties, LLC or Jacob Meck) for the purpose of evaluating suitability for a transfer station.

  2. Correspondence: All emails, letters, and memoranda between WVDEP staff and representatives of the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (SWA) or Jacob Meck/Allegheny Disposal regarding "Option 4," the proposed lease-to-own facility, or preliminary permitting requirements.

  3. Informal Evaluations: Records of any "Technical Assistance" provided to the SWA regarding the feasibility of the JacMal site versus other locations evaluated in the 2026 Siting Plan.

  4. Draft Applications: Any draft permit applications or "pre-application" documents submitted by or on behalf of the SWA or JacMal Properties.

I request that these records be provided in electronic format. If there are fees associated with this request exceeding $25.00, please notify me in advance.

Thank you for your prompt attention to this matter.

Sincerely,

[Your Name] [Your Contact Information]


Key Strategy Notes for Your Inquiry

  • The "Paper Trail" Gap: The SWA board recently claimed they had "no other options" because construction and permitting takes too long. Finding out if the DEP actually discouraged other sites—or if the JacMal site had "informal" red flags—would directly challenge that narrative.

  • Targeting the "Re-start": Since the SWA attorney, David Sims, stated they are "starting over" and "welcoming suggestions," getting these records now allows you to enter the new public input phase with the same technical knowledge the board has.

  • The SWA Angle: You could send a parallel (but shorter) request to the SWA specifically asking for the "Engineer’s bid package" mentioned in their October 2025 minutes to see exactly what specifications they were using for the Meck deal.

Would you like me to refine the language for an SWA-specific request, or should we focus on finding those "financially unworkable" alternative proposals mentioned in the meeting?

During the April 29, 2026, meeting, SWA attorney David Sims highlighted a few specific proposals that were characterized as financially unworkable or logically flawed compared to the recently tabled "Meck Proposal."

The "financially unworkable" tag was primarily applied to the idea of building a new landfill rather than a transfer station.

1. The "New County Landfill" Proposal

  • The Claim: Proponents of this idea suggested a new landfill could be built for approximately $5 million.

  • The Rebuttal: Sims stated this figure was "way off." He argued that $5 million would only cover the construction of one landfill cell. To match the lifespan and capacity of the current facility, the county would need four or five cells, pushing the actual cost significantly higher.

  • Verdict: Labeled financially unworkable due to the massive capital investment required for engineering, liners, and long-term environmental monitoring compared to a transfer station.

2. Public SWA-Built Transfer Station (Independent of Meck)

  • The Idea: The SWA building its own facility from scratch without a private partnership.

  • The Constraint: The SWA emphasized that they are a board of unpaid volunteers with limited liquid capital. Without a private partner like JacMal (Jacob Meck) to front the construction costs, the SWA argued they would have to secure massive public loans, which they were hesitant to do given the "buyout" risks.

  • The Counter: Critics at the meeting argued that the "lease-to-own" deal with Meck (which included a $960,000 buyout after 15 years) was its own form of financial risk.

3. The "Flow Control" & Expanded Fees Strategy

While not a "proposal" for a building, Sims proposed a financial overhaul to make any transfer station work, which some residents found unworkable for their budgets:

  • Mandatory Flow Control: Requiring all waste generated in the county (including from towns like Marlinton) to go through the county transfer station to ensure tipping fees are collected.

  • Expanded Green Box Fees: Extending the annual fee to all county properties, even those without structures or residents.

  • The Pushback: SWA members David McLaughlin and David Henderson were skeptical of this, noting it would be an "incredible increase" in costs for farmers who own multiple deeded lots that don't actually generate trash.


Current Conflict Summary

The meeting ended in a stalemate because the public's primary "alternative proposal"—competitive bidding—was exactly what the SWA had bypassed by negotiating exclusively with Jacob Meck. By "starting over," the SWA has essentially admitted that the previous "unworkable" label on other ideas might need to be re-evaluated through a formal bidding process.

Since the landfill is expected to close in December 2026, the SWA now has roughly eight months to find a proposal they actually consider "workable" before the county runs out of space.

Do you want to look into the specific geotechnical requirements that would make a new landfill cell (the $5M option) so expensive under West Virginia's Title 33 regulations?

Under West Virginia’s Title 33, Series 1 (Solid Waste Management Rule), building a new landfill cell is an engineering feat that requires far more than just digging a hole.

The $5 million estimate mentioned in the SWA meeting is actually the low end of the current industry range ($5M–$15M per cell), primarily because of the "multi-layered sandwich" design mandated by state law.


1. The "Geotechnical Sandwich" (Liner Systems)

Title 33 requires a composite liner system that acts as a redundant barrier against groundwater contamination. This is where a large chunk of the budget goes:

  • Subgrade Prep: The ground must be engineered and compacted to support the weight of thousands of tons of waste without shifting.

  • Clay Barrier: A layer of re-compacted clay (typically 2 feet thick) with a hydraulic conductivity of no more than $1 \times 10^{-7}\text{ cm/sec}$. If the onsite soil doesn't meet this, clay must be hauled in at high cost.

  • Geomembrane: A 60-mil High-Density Polyethylene (HDPE) liner is welded over the clay.

  • Leachate Collection Layer: A network of perforated pipes buried in a foot of high-permeability gravel or sand to catch "trash juice" (leachate) before it hits the liner.

2. Mandatory Core Drilling & Siting (§33-1-3)

Before a shovel hits the dirt, geotechnical investigations are required to prove the site is stable.

  • Boring Requirements: Title 33 mandates a specific frequency of borings to map the bedrock and "high water table."

  • Pocahontas Paradox: In karst regions (common in the Greenbrier Valley), identifying underground caverns or unstable limestone via core drilling is non-negotiable. If drilling reveals a void, that section of the land is often legally "un-permittable," potentially wasting hundreds of thousands in engineering fees.

3. The "Financial Assurance" Anchor (§33-1-3.13)

WVDEP doesn't just want to see the money to build the cell; they want a Bond or Letter of Credit to ensure it can be closed and monitored for 30 years after it's full.

  • Post-Closure Care: This includes maintenance of the cap, gas monitoring, and groundwater testing.

  • Economic Impact: For a small county SWA, tying up millions of dollars in financial assurance bonds can paralyze their ability to fund other projects (like a transfer station).

4. Why $5M is "One Cell"

A typical landfill cell might only last 3 to 7 years depending on the county's waste volume.

  • The Math: If a $5M cell lasts 5 years, the county has to start saving for the next $5M cell on Day 1 of operations.

  • Scale: Large private landfills (like those in the Eastern Panhandle) spread these "fixed" engineering and permitting costs over millions of tons of waste. A small-scale operation in Pocahontas County doesn't have that economy of scale, making the "per ton" cost of a new cell significantly higher.


The "Unworkable" Conclusion

Attorney Sims’ argument was essentially that a Transfer Station is a "one-time" capital expense of roughly $1.5M–$2M, whereas a Landfill is a recurring $5M expense every few years, plus a 30-year legal and financial liability that never goes away.

Since the SWA has "gone back to the drawing board," do you think there's a specific "middle ground" proposal—like a smaller-scale regional partnership—that they might have overlooked?

The "middle ground" you’re looking for likely sits in a Multi-County Regional Authority model, something that has been successful elsewhere in West Virginia but has historically been a point of friction in the Greenbrier Valley.

Based on the legal framework in W. Va. Code § 22C-4-1 and the current logistical crisis, there are three specific "overlooked" or under-explored paths the SWA could take now that they’ve hit the reset button.


1. The "Region 8" Consolidation Model

One of the most successful regional models in the state is the Region 8 Solid Waste Authority, which covers Grant, Hampshire, Hardy, Mineral, and Pendleton counties.

  • How it works: Instead of each county owning its own landfill or individual contract, they operate as a single legal entity. They run two large regional transfer stations (Romney and Petersburg) that funnel all waste to a single destination.

  • The Benefit for Pocahontas: By joining a regional authority (potentially with Randolph or Greenbrier), Pocahontas would no longer be a "small fish" negotiating with private haulers like Allegheny Disposal. They would have the combined tonnage of multiple counties, which drastically increases their bargaining power to lower tipping fees.

2. The "Public-Public" Partnership (Marlinton + SWA)

The SWA has often viewed the Town of Marlinton as a competitor for "flow control" revenues. However, a middle ground exists in a joint-venture transfer station.

  • The Conflict: Marlinton currently operates its own sanitation system. The SWA wants Marlinton’s trash to go through their proposed facility to pay for it.

  • The Middle Ground: Instead of a "Host Agreement" with a private company like JacMal, the SWA could form an Intergovernmental Agreement (IGA) with Marlinton.

    • The Split: Marlinton provides the labor/personnel (which they already have), and the SWA provides the land and permitting.

    • The Result: This avoids the "pre-selected company" optics and keeps 100% of the revenue within the public sector, bypassing the $960,000 private buyout clause that drew so much heat in the April meeting.

3. The "Roll-Off" Satellite System

A major point of contention was the $1.5M to $2M price tag for a "full-scale" transfer station. For a county of 7,000 people, that’s a massive capital hit.

  • The Alternative: A High-Volume Roll-Off Station (as detailed in rural waste management studies).

  • Why it’s a "Middle Ground": Instead of a permanent tipping-floor building with heavy loaders (which requires massive concrete pads and leachate systems), the SWA could use compacting roll-off trailers.

  • Lower Barrier to Entry: These are much cheaper to permit under Title 33, as they are considered "storage and support" rather than a full "solid waste facility." It would allow the county to bridge the gap until 2030 without committing to a 15-year lease-to-own debt cycle.


The "Overlooked" Political Lever

The SWA keeps mentioning they are "unpaid volunteers" with no money. However, W. Va. Code § 7-16-4 explicitly gives them the power to issue Revenue Bonds.

The board has seemingly "overlooked" (or been hesitant to use) their authority to bond the project themselves. By bonding, they could own the facility outright from Day 1 at a lower interest rate than a private company would charge in a lease-to-buy markup.

The big question remains: Does the SWA have the "stomach" for the administrative work of running a facility, or are they still searching for a "turn-key" private solution just to get the responsibility off their plate?

Given the December 2026 deadline for the landfill closure, which of these seems like the most realistic "pivot" for the board to make by their next meeting?

With the next Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (SWA) meeting scheduled for Wednesday, May 27, 2026, and only 19 months until the landfill's hard closure, the "reset" button pressed in April forces a high-stakes pivot.

While regional partnerships or bonding are the most fiscally sound long-term moves, the most realistic pivot for the SWA to announce at the May meeting is a Formal Request for Proposals (RFP) for a "Design-Build-Operate" Transfer Station.

Here is why this specific move is the most likely path forward to meet the December 2026 deadline.


1. The "Legal Shield" Pivot (The RFP)

The primary reason the "Meck Proposal" collapsed was the outcry over a lack of competitive bidding. By issuing an RFP, the SWA accomplishes two things immediately:

  • Political Cover: It silences the "backroom deal" accusations by opening the floor to other companies (like Greenbrier Environmental or Republic Services).

  • Price Validation: If Allegheny Disposal (JacMal) remains the only bidder or the lowest bidder, the SWA can finally say to the public, "We looked, and this is truly the market rate."

2. The "Bridge" Strategy: Temporary Transfer Station

Given that a permanent, Title 33-compliant concrete tipping floor can take 12–18 months to permit and build, the board is likely to pivot toward a Temporary Use Permit.

  • The Reality: They cannot afford to miss the December 2026 cutoff.

  • The Pivot: They may propose a "Phase 1" approach: using specialized roll-off compactors on the existing landfill subgrade (which is already permitted for waste) while the permanent building is constructed around it. This keeps the "trash moving" even if the building isn't finished by next winter.

3. The "Flow Control" Compromise

To make any proposal "workable," the SWA needs a guaranteed revenue stream.

  • The Likely Move: Expect the board to pivot away from taxing all vacant land (which was highly unpopular) and instead focus on a Mandatory Hauling Ordinance.

  • The Logic: They will likely propose that all commercial haulers in the county must tip at the new station. This secures the "tonnage" needed to pay off a construction loan without an across-the-board tax hike on residents.


The "Wildcard" for the May 27th Meeting

Keep a close eye on the Marlinton Home Rule discussion. If the SWA wants a truly "public" middle ground, they might pivot toward a joint venture with the Town of Marlinton to share the operational costs. However, given the current friction, an RFP with a shorter lease term (e.g., 5–10 years instead of 15) is the more typical bureaucratic path to a "compromise."

Summary of the May 27th Outlook:

Action ItemLikely Status
JacMal/Meck DealDeclared "Tabled/Dead"
New Landfill CellDismissed as "Cost Prohibitive"
RFP IssuanceHigh Probability (The Pivot)
Green Box Fee HikePostponed pending bid results

If they don't have an RFP draft ready by the end of May, the "December 2026" deadline becomes an emergency rather than a transition.

Would you like to focus on the minimum requirements the SWA would have to put in that RFP to ensure they don't end up with the same "unworkable" financial terms they just rejected?

To prevent a second collapse of the project, the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (SWA) must move beyond a simple handshake proposal and draft a formal Request for Proposals (RFP) that addresses the specific "poison pills" found in the previous deal.

Based on W. Va. Code § 99-6-7 and Title 33 Series 1 environmental standards, here are the minimum requirements the SWA should include in an RFP to ensure the new terms are both "workable" and legally defensible.


1. Tiered Pricing & "Open Book" Tipping Fees

The previous deal was criticized for a fixed-rate structure that lacked transparency. A "workable" RFP should require:

  • Variable Rate Schedule: Bidders must provide a price-per-ton that scales. If the county increases recycling or reduces waste, the SWA shouldn't be penalized with a "minimum tonnage" penalty.

  • Consumer Price Index (CPI) Caps: To prevent runaway costs, any annual fee increases must be capped at a specific percentage or tied to the national CPI.

2. The "Public Ownership" Path (Short-Term Lease)

The rejected 15-year lease-to-own model with a nearly $1 million buyout was seen as a massive liability.

  • The Requirement: The RFP should ask for two distinct bid options:

    1. Direct Purchase (Design-Build): The county pays for the facility upfront (via revenue bonds) and owns it immediately.

    2. Operational Lease: A private company builds and operates it, but with a "Right of First Refusal" for the SWA to buy the facility at depreciated market value (not a fixed $960k) at the 5- or 10-year mark.

3. Geotechnical & Environmental Accountability

Since the SWA has no money for "surprises," the burden of site readiness must shift to the bidder.

  • Core Drilling Responsibility: The RFP must mandate that the winning bidder performs all W. Va. Code R. § 33-1-3 geotechnical borings and assumes the financial risk if the site is found to be "un-permittable" (e.g., karst voids or high water table).

  • Leachate Management: The bidder must provide a certified plan for leachate disposal. If they plan to haul it to a treatment plant, they must provide a written "Letter of Intent" from that facility to avoid a mid-project permitting stall.

4. "Alternative Revenue" Sharing

The "unworkable" financial labels often stem from the SWA bearing 100% of the cost.

  • The Requirement: Bidders must specify a Revenue Share for recyclables and "Special Waste" (like drill cuttings or tires). If the operator makes a profit from selling scrap metal or cardboard, a percentage should be rebated back to the SWA to lower the resident tipping fees.

5. Performance Bonds & "Exit" Clauses

With the December 2026 deadline looming, the SWA cannot afford a contractor who walks away.

  • Completion Bond: A mandatory bond that pays the county if the transfer station isn't operational by the landfill's closure date.

  • Termination for Convenience: A clause allowing the SWA to end the contract if the operator fails to meet WVDEP environmental standards, without a massive financial penalty.


The "Competitive" Minimum

Under West Virginia's purchasing guidelines, the SWA should aim for at least three qualified bids. To get this, they may need to broaden the RFP to include regional companies from the Greenbrier and Shenandoah valleys.

Which of these requirements do you think would be the hardest "sell" for the current SWA board, given their desire for a hands-off solution?

The hardest "sell" for the current SWA board is the requirement for Geotechnical Accountability and Mandatory Core Drilling, as it demands a level of technical risk and direct financial oversight they have spent over a year trying to offload onto a private partner.

Based on the recent reset during the April 29, 2026 meeting, here is why that specific requirement is the ultimate hurdle for this particular board:

1. The "Administrative Trap" of Site Readiness

The board members have consistently emphasized that they are unpaid volunteers with no engineering staff.

  • The Desire: They want a "turn-key" solution where a company like Allegheny Disposal (JacMal) handles the permitting, engineering, and drilling risks.

  • The Hard Sell: An RFP that shifts geotechnical accountability back to the SWA—or forces the SWA to manage it—requires them to "own" a complex engineering process. If core drilling reveals a karst void or high water table (common in Pocahontas County), the board fears being left with a $100,000+ engineering bill and no buildable site, a scenario they simply don't have the liquid capital to survive.

2. The "Private Risk" vs. "Public Ownership" Stalemate

The board’s reliance on the 15-year lease-to-own model (Option 4) was driven by a lack of funds.

  • The Conflict: To make the project "workable" under an RFP, the SWA might need to require the bidder to front the costs of core drilling.

  • The Difficulty: Most private companies will not spend six figures on core drilling for a site they don't own without a guaranteed, long-term contract. The public’s demand for competitive bidding and short-term contracts directly contradicts the "hands-off" deal the board feels is necessary to attract any private builder at all.

3. The Flow Control Political Firestorm

Attorney David Sims has argued that Mandatory Flow Control (forcing all trash to the station) is the only way to make the numbers work.

  • The Board's Stance: Members David McLaughlin and David Henderson have already expressed that they "did not favor" expanding fees to farmers and multiple deeded lots.

  • The Hard Sell: Including a requirement for "Mandatory Flow Control" in an RFP is a massive political liability. Without it, however, no contractor will bid because they won't have a guaranteed revenue stream. The board is essentially stuck between a public that hates the fees and an industry that won't build without them.

The Bottom Line

The board is currently in a defensive crouch. Having just ejected a resident from the last meeting and faced accusations of personal gain, they are hyper-sensitive to conflict.

The most difficult part of the May 27th pivot will be the board admitting that they cannot have it both ways: they cannot have a "hands-off" private solution while also satisfying the public's demand for total transparency and public control.

As they move toward the May meeting, do you think the board will try to find a middle-ground partner—like the Town of Marlinton—to share these technical risks, or will they stick to the private RFP model despite the backlash?

Given the history and current landscape, the SWA board is highly unlikely to seek a partnership with the Town of Marlinton. Instead, they will almost certainly stick to a private RFP model, but with significant cosmetic and structural changes to avoid a repeat of the April backlash.

Here’s why the "private path" remains their target and why a Marlinton partnership is a non-starter.

1. The "Flow Control" Friction

The relationship between the SWA and the Town of Marlinton is currently defined more by competition than collaboration.

  • The Conflict: The SWA’s financial survival depends on "Flow Control"—forcing all county waste, including Marlinton’s, through the new transfer station to collect tipping fees.

  • The Rivalry: Marlinton has its own sanitation system. Asking the town to "share technical risks" would require the town to potentially give up its own autonomy or revenue, which the board views as a legal and political quagmire they don't want to navigate.

2. The "Hand-Off" Instinct

The board’s reset in April wasn't a change in ideology, but a change in procedure.

  • The Goal: They still want a "Design-Build-Operate" solution where a private company takes the liability.

  • The Pivot: Expect the May RFP to be a "Meck-plus" document. It will likely mirror the technical specs of the previous Allegheny Disposal (JacMal) proposal but will be wrapped in a formal bidding process to satisfy the demand for transparency.

3. The Marlinton "Home Rule" Threat

The board is wary of Marlinton’s status. If Marlinton uses its authority to handle its own waste or partner elsewhere, the SWA loses a massive chunk of its projected revenue. By sticking to a private RFP for a county facility, the SWA maintains its position as the primary authority, rather than becoming a junior partner to the town council.


What to watch for at the May 27th Meeting:

If the board were truly moving toward a middle-ground partner, you would see Marlinton Mayor Sam Felton or town council members on the agenda for a joint session. Instead, look for these signs of a "Private RFP" pivot:

  • Appointment of a "Bidding Committee": To show the public they are being objective.

  • A "Draft RFP" Presentation: Watch if the technical specs (like the truck-to-truck transfer method) still perfectly match the equipment Jacob Meck already owns.

  • The "Emergency" Label: The board will likely use the December 2026 deadline to argue that a private contractor is the only entity that can move fast enough to avoid a trash crisis.

The board isn't looking for a partner to share the risk; they are looking for a contractor to absorb it—they just realized they have to let other people "apply" for the job to keep the public from revolting.

Do you think a competitive bid will actually attract anyone other than Allegheny Disposal, or is the "reset" just a formality?

Whether the "reset" is a formality or a true opening for competition depends entirely on how the SWA structures the bid, but current evidence suggests it is more than just a formality, even if Allegheny Disposal (Jacob Meck) remains the frontrunner.

Here is an analysis of why this reset is a high-stakes gamble for the board and who else might actually show up to the table.

1. Why it might be more than a formality

The April 29 meeting was a watershed moment. Attorney David Sims' announcement that the board was "starting over" and "going back to the drawing board" was a direct response to a massive public outcry and potential legal threats.

  • The Litigation Shield: Sims noted the board was holding executive sessions to discuss "pending litigation." A fake "formality" bid could lead to a lawsuit that a small SWA simply cannot afford. To be legally safe, the RFP must be legitimate.

  • The "One-Contractor" Problem: One of the most damning revelations in April was that only two entities in the county hold the PSC "Certificate of Need" required to haul and transfer trash: Allegheny Disposal and the SWA itself. By opening a competitive bid, the SWA is essentially inviting outside companies (from Greenbrier or Randolph counties) to apply for a temporary or permanent certificate, which breaks Allegheny’s local monopoly.

2. Who else could actually bid?

While Pocahontas County is remote, the "tonnage" at stake is enough to attract a few specific regional players:

  • Greenbrier Environmental / Greenbrier County SWA: They already have the infrastructure nearby. If the RFP is lucrative enough, they could bid to haul Pocahontas waste to their own regional facility, bypassing the need for a $2M building in Dunmore entirely.

  • Republic Services or Waste Management (WM): These national giants often bid on municipal transfer stations if they can integrate the route into their existing West Virginia regional hubs (like Charleston or Bluefield).

  • Region 8 SWA: While less likely to bid as a contractor, they could offer a partnership model that the board might now be forced to consider as a "public" alternative to a private contract.

3. The "Jacob Meck" Advantage

Even with a fair RFP, Allegheny Disposal holds two "home field" advantages that are hard for any competitor to beat:

  • Existing Equipment: Meck has already made down payments on specialized equipment and had architectural drawings ready. A competitor would have to start from scratch, making their bid naturally higher.

  • The $200,000 Liability: Under the previous Letter of Intent, the SWA agreed to reimburse Meck up to $200,000 for his prep costs if the deal fell through. Any new bidder would essentially have to be $200,000 "better" than Meck just to break even for the SWA.

The Verdict

The "reset" is a procedural necessity to avoid a lawsuit and a public relations disaster, but it is unlikely to produce a "surprise" winner.

The most realistic outcome for the May 27 meeting is that the SWA will present a formal RFP, and you will see the board work very hard to prove that they are "welcoming suggestions." However, unless a regional neighbor like Greenbrier County steps in with a significantly lower price, the board will likely end up back with Allegheny Disposal—only this time, they’ll have a "competitive process" paper trail to protect them from the "Concerned Citizens."

Do you think the $200,000 reimbursement clause will be the "anchor" that keeps the board tied to Meck, or will the public pressure be enough to force them to eat that cost in favor of a different partner?

The $200,000 reimbursement clause is less of an "anchor" and more of a landmine that the SWA board is currently trying to defuse by "starting over."

While that figure represents a significant portion of the SWA’s limited liquid capital, the board's decision on April 29, 2026, to go back to the drawing board suggests that the threat of public litigation and political fallout has finally outweighed the fear of paying Jacob Meck back.

Here is the breakdown of how that $200,000 will likely influence the board's behavior moving toward the May meeting.

1. The Financial Trap: Why it's a "Hard Sell"

The SWA is not a wealthy agency—they recently received a grant for just $6,055 just to help cover utility costs.

  • The Math: Cutting a check for $200,000 to Jacob Meck for "nothing" (architectural drawings and equipment down payments) would essentially bankrupt the authority’s current reserves.

  • The "Anchor" Effect: Because the SWA is so cash-strapped, any new partner or bidder would effectively have to be $200,000 cheaper than Meck just to put the SWA in the same financial position they were in before the reset.

2. The Legal "Starting Over" Strategy

Attorney David Sims’ decision to "table the project in its present form" was a tactical move to mitigate this exact liability.

  • The Letter of Intent (LOI): The $200,000 cap was part of the Binding Letter of Intent signed in February. By "starting over" rather than "canceling for a different bidder," the SWA is likely looking for a legal loophole or a way to incorporate Meck’s previous work into a new, more transparent RFP process to avoid triggering that reimbursement.

  • Public Pressure vs. Private Debt: The "claps and cheers" from the public on April 29th showed the board that the community would rather see the $200,000 paid out than commit to a $5–$6 million, 15-year debt that they believe was negotiated in bad faith.

3. Will They "Eat the Cost"?

The board's pivot is a high-stakes game of chicken with Jacob Meck.

  • The Bluff: By inviting the public to "bring suggestions," the SWA is signaling to Meck that his "Option 4" is no longer the only game in town.

  • The Reality: Unless a "white knight" bidder (like a regional authority or a large corporation) arrives with a proposal that is so much better it justifies the $200,000 loss, the board is still technically "anchored."

The Outlook for May 27

Expect the board to attempt a "Meck-Neutral" RFP. They will likely draft a bid that allows any contractor to use the existing plans or equipment already ordered. This would allow Jacob Meck to bid again without the SWA having to "reimburse" him, as the contract would simply continue.

The "Moment of Truth": If a different company wins the bid, the SWA will have to face a very angry Jacob Meck and a very empty bank account.

Do you think the board's sudden willingness to "start over" is a sign they've found a way to avoid that $200,000 payment, or are they just stalling for time while they figure out how to pay it?

The "starting over" resolution on April 29, 2026, is likely a strategic legal reset designed to mitigate the $200,000 reimbursement clause rather than an immediate plan to pay it or a sign that the money has been found.

By "tabling the project in its current form" instead of flatly canceling it, the SWA board is attempting to navigate a narrow legal path. Here is the reality of the board's position:

1. Avoiding the "Termination" Trigger

The $200,000 reimbursement limit was a specific concern raised by attorney David Sims. Under the Binding Letter of Intent, this money is only owed if the deal "falls through" due to a failure by the SWA.

  • The Strategy: By framing the move as "starting over" and "welcoming suggestions," the board is technically keeping the door open for Jacob Meck to participate in a new, competitive RFP process.

  • The Goal: If Meck is allowed to bid again under the new rules, the SWA can argue that the deal hasn't "fallen through," but has simply been "re-formalized." This effectively kicks the $200,000 can down the road.

2. The Stalling Tactic

The board is almost certainly stalling for time. Their financial situation remains dire—evidenced by recent board actions like authorizing a new secretary/treasurer to manage bank accounts that hold very little liquid capital.

  • The "Reset" as a Pressure Valve: The public anger in the circuit courtroom was reaching a boiling point, particularly after the personal attacks directed at Jacob Meck during the meeting. Tabling the project was the only way to clear the room and stop the immediate momentum of a potential lawsuit from the "Concerned Citizens."

  • The Deadline Reality: The December 2026 closure of the landfill is a hard physical limit. The board knows that every month they "stall" makes a private contractor like Meck look more like the only "realistic" option, as a new competitor might not have time to start from scratch.

3. The "Meck" Counter-Move

Jacob Meck’s refusal to respond to your public accusations during the April 29 meeting suggests he is relying on his legal counsel and the existing binding agreement.

  • If the SWA issues an RFP that is so restrictive it effectively bars Meck, or if they choose another partner, Meck will likely demand that $200,000 immediately for his architect drawings and equipment down-payments.

  • The Hard Reality: The board does not have $200,000. Any move they make that triggers this payment would require an emergency appropriation from the Pocahontas County Commission, which has already stated it has "no authority" over SWA decisions.


Verdict: A Strategic Pause

The board hasn't found a way to avoid the payment; they have found a way to suspend the obligation. At the May 27 meeting, watch for the SWA to release an RFP that is "surprisingly" similar to Meck's original Option 4. This would allow them to claim they followed a competitive process while ensuring the "incumbent" bidder—who already has the plans and equipment—is the only one who can actually meet the 2026 deadline.

Do you think the public's "Concerned Citizen" group has the legal stamina to monitor this new RFP process, or is the board betting that the community will lose interest once the "reset" is announced?

 

The Concerned Citizens of Pocahontas County group has shown a level of legal and political stamina that the SWA board likely underestimated. Far from losing interest, the group appears to be treating the "reset" as a hard-won tactical victory rather than a conclusion.

Here is an analysis of the group’s legal standing and why the board’s bet on "community fatigue" might fail.

1. The "Legal stamina" is backed by local representation

The group isn't just making noise; they are actively seeking to replace the very people making the decisions.

  • The Riley Replacement: After member Ed Riley resigned, the group didn't just walk away—they lobbied the County Commission to replace him with Angela Fisher, a member of their own advocacy group. This shows they are playing the "long game" by trying to influence the SWA from the inside.

  • The Sims Factor: Attorney David Sims admitted he attended the group's private meetings before advising the SWA to "start over." This indicates the group’s legal arguments (likely centered on the lack of competitive bidding and potential Open Governmental Meetings Act violations) were strong enough to force the SWA's hand.

2. The Board's Bet: "The December 2026 Wall"

The board is betting on a different kind of stamina: The Physical Deadline.

  • The "Stop-Gap" Fear: Jacob Meck has already stated publicly that any new plan will create a "stop-gap" in service because there isn't enough time to permit and build a new facility by December 2026.

  • The Board's Calculation: They are likely betting that as the landfill gets closer to capacity, the public will become more afraid of "no trash pickup" than they are of "bad financial terms." They hope the "Concerned Citizens" will eventually fold under the pressure of an impending public health crisis.

3. Signs the Community is NOT Losing Interest

The meeting on April 29, 2026, had to be moved to the Circuit Courtroom specifically because the crowd was too large for the standard meeting space.

  • The Hostility Level: Even after the "reset" was announced, the public input session remained heated. You personally challenged Jacob Meck, and another resident (Frank Harris) was ejected. This level of emotional investment usually signals that a group is prepared for a long-term fight.

  • Organizational Infrastructure: The group is holding its own independent meetings to draft alternative proposals (like the $5M landfill cell). This indicates a structured organization that won't simply dissolve now that the initial "Meck Deal" is tabled.


The "New RFP" Battleground

The real test of stamina will occur when the New RFP is released.

  • If the RFP is written broadly: The group wins a moral victory, and we might see a regional partner (like Greenbrier) step in.

  • If the RFP is "Hyper-Specific": (e.g., requiring equipment that only Allegheny Disposal currently has ready), the group will likely pivot to a legal injunction to stop the bidding process entirely.

The Verdict: The board is likely stalling for time, hoping the "December 2026" clock does the work for them. However, the "Concerned Citizens" have already successfully toppled the first agreement and changed the board's membership; they seem to have more than enough stamina to make it to the May 27th meeting and beyond.

Do you think the group's strategy of pushing for a "New Landfill Cell" is their best legal lever, or does it give the board an easy "financially unworkable" excuse to ignore them?

The strategy of pushing for a New Landfill Cell acts as a double-edged sword. While it provides the group with a powerful legal lever to demand an alternative to privatization, it simultaneously hands the SWA board a perfect "financially unworkable" excuse to dismiss the proposal.

Here is a breakdown of why this strategy is both the group's strongest tool and its most dangerous vulnerability.


1. The Legal Lever: Challenging the "Only Option" Narrative

By proposing a new cell, the Concerned Citizens have successfully broken the board's argument that a private transfer station was the only choice.

  • Forcing the "Reasonableness" Standard: In administrative law, a board must show they considered all reasonable alternatives. By submitting a $5 million proposal, the group has created a formal record that an alternative exists. If the SWA ignores it without a rigorous, documented study, they open themselves up to a "capricious and arbitrary" legal challenge.

  • Questioning the Long-Term Math: The group is essentially betting that the cost of building one cell ($5 million) is actually more "workable" for the county than a $6 million, 15-year lease with a private company that doesn't include land ownership.

2. The Board's Counter: The "Excuses" Trap

Attorney David Sims already used the $5 million figure to undermine the group during the April 29th meeting. He effectively turned their own number against them with two key arguments:

  • The "Lifespan" Argument: Sims argued that $5 million only buys one cell. To match the 30-year lifespan of a transfer station or the previous landfill, the county would need five cells. In his math, the group’s "$5 million plan" is actually a $25 million plan, making it look fiscally irresponsible to the public.

  • The "Financial Assurance" Wall: Under WV Title 33, Section 3.13, the SWA must prove they have the cash (or bonds) for closure and 30-year post-closure care before they even break ground. Since the SWA has admitted they don't even have the money for a secretary without a grant, the board can legally dismiss the landfill cell as "financially impossible" due to the state’s bonding requirements.

3. The "Transfer Station" vs. "Landfill" PR War

The board is likely hoping that by focusing on the "expensive" landfill cell, the public will eventually stop fighting the "cheaper" transfer station.

  • The Board's Play: They will use the group's $5 million landfill proposal as a "scare tactic" to justify why a private bidding process for a transfer station is the only way to save the taxpayers from a massive tax hike or debt.


The Verdict: Is it the Best Lever?

It is a political lever, but not necessarily their best legal lever.

  • The Better Legal Lever: The group's strongest legal move is actually their demand for Competitive Bidding (RFP) and the scrutiny of the Jacob Meck $200,000 reimbursement clause. These are based on established state purchasing laws and the Open Governmental Meetings Act, which are much harder for the board to "excuse" away than an expensive engineering project.

The "Concerned Citizens" have a choice: If they stick strictly to the "New Landfill" idea, they risk being branded as "unrealistic dreamers." If they pivot to demanding a publicly-owned transfer station via the RFP process, they might actually trap the board into a solution that keeps the land in county hands without the $25 million price tag.

Do you think the group will double down on the landfill proposal at the May 27th meeting, or will they shift their focus to who gets to bid on the transfer station?

 Do you think the group will double down on the landfill proposal at the May 27th meeting, or will they shift their focus to who gets to bid on the transfer station?

 

The Concerned Citizens of Pocahontas County group is unlikely to "double down" on the landfill proposal as a final solution; instead, expect them to use it as a strategic "Plan B" to force the SWA’s hand in the RFP process.

Based on the recent shift during the April 29th meeting and the group's legal maneuvering, their strategy for May 27th is likely to be a three-pronged attack focused on public ownership rather than a return to landfilling.

1. The Landfill Cell as a "Fair Market" Benchmark

The group knows the $5 million landfill cell is a hard sell due to West Virginia's strict Title 33 environmental bonding requirements. However, they will likely keep it on the table to:

  • Challenge the Math: They will use the $5 million figure to argue that if a whole landfill cell can be built for that much, a transfer station shouldn't cost the $5–$6 million total that the Meck lease-to-buy agreement would have eventually totaled.

  • Force Transparency: By pushing for a "feasibility study" on the cell, they are essentially daring the SWA to prove, with actual data, why a transfer station is better.

2. The Pivot to the "Publicly Owned" Transfer Station

The group’s most effective strategy—and where they are likely to shift their focus—is demanding that the RFP (Request for Proposals) explicitly includes a Publicly Owned/Privately Operated option.

  • The "GVEDC" Route: As discussed in earlier meetings, the group has advocated for the Greenbrier Valley Economic Development Corporation (GVEDC) to own the land and building, rather than a private LLC like Meck’s JacMal.

  • The May 27th Goal: Expect the group to demand that the SWA’s new "bid package" (which the engineer was previously tasked with drawing up) does not "bake in" requirements that only Allegheny Disposal can meet.

3. Monitoring the "Bidding Committee"

The group’s real focus will likely be on who writes the rules for the new RFP.

  • The Angela Fisher Lever: The group has already asked the County Commission to appoint Angela Fisher (one of their own) to the board. If she is seated by the May meeting, she will be their "insider" to ensure the RFP isn't a formality.

  • The Anti-Monopoly Argument: They will likely push for the RFP to be advertised regionally (outside Pocahontas County) to ensure that Allegheny Disposal isn't the only bidder by default.


The Likely May 27th Outcome

The "Concerned Citizens" are playing a sophisticated game of administrative exhaustion. They know that every time they successfully challenge a "unilateral" decision by the SWA, they force the board to act more like a public body and less like a private partner.

StrategyMay 27th Status
New Landfill CellThe Threat: Used to keep the SWA from claiming they have "no choice."
Transfer Station RFPThe Real Battle: Focused on removing "monopoly" terms and private land transfers.
Personnel ChangesThe Leverage: Pushing for group-aligned members to be appointed to the board.

The Verdict: The group will likely "pivot" to the RFP, but they will keep the landfill proposal in their back pocket as a legal weapon. If the SWA releases an RFP that looks like a carbon copy of the old "Meck Deal," the group will immediately use the landfill cell proposal as proof that the SWA is being "capricious and arbitrary" by ignoring viable alternatives.

Do you think the SWA board will try to rush the RFP through at the May meeting to beat the December 2026 clock, or will they take the time to include the public's suggestions as promised?

The SWA board is currently caught in a "pincer movement" between a legal deadline and a public revolt. While they have promised to "start over" and welcome suggestions, their behavior suggests they will likely attempt a "rushed transparency" model—issuing an RFP quickly while framing it as a response to public demand.

Here is why they are unlikely to take the "scenic route" with public suggestions:

1. The "December 2026" Clock is the Board’s Best Weapon

The board knows that every week spent "taking time" to include suggestions is a week closer to the landfill reaching capacity.

  • The Strategy: By waiting until the May 27th meeting to even begin the "reset," they have already eaten up a month of the timeline.

  • The Outcome: They will likely present a "draft" RFP in May that they claim was "informed by public concern" but is essentially a pre-packaged document. This allows them to say they listened while still moving fast enough to avoid a trash crisis.

2. The "Engineering" Shield

The board has a standing motion from October 2025 for their engineer to "draw up a bid package."

  • The Pivot: Instead of waiting for new public suggestions, they will likely point to this pre-existing engineering work as the "professional" standard.

  • The Result: If the engineer’s specs happen to align with the equipment Allegheny Disposal (Jacob Meck) has already ordered, the board can claim it’s "purely technical" rather than a "rushed" deal.

3. The "Unpaid Volunteer" Fatigue

As seen in the April meeting, the board members are exhausted by the hostility. Chairman Dave Henderson and member David McLaughlin have expressed that they've spent years looking at options (Tucker County, Greenbrier County, etc.) and found them all wanting.

  • The Mindset: They don't believe there are better suggestions out there. They likely view the "Concerned Citizens'" ideas (like the $5M landfill cell) as economically illiterate.

  • The Move: They will fulfill the legal requirement of a public bidding process to protect themselves from lawsuits, but they are unlikely to fundamentally change the "Design-Build-Operate" structure they’ve already decided is best.


What the "Reset" actually looks like for May 27:

The PromiseThe Likely Reality
"Starting Over"Using the old Option 4 technical specs in a new RFP wrapper.
"Welcoming Suggestions"Opening a 15-minute public comment period before voting to approve the RFP.
"Competitive Bidding"Issuing an RFP with a very short response window (e.g., 30 days) that only a local contractor could realistically meet.

The "Stalling" Risk

The only thing that could stop a "rush" is the Pocahontas County Commission. If they appoint Angela Fisher (the group's choice) to the vacant SWA seat before the May meeting, she could act as a "brake," demanding that the board actually deliberate on the suggestions.

Without a new, skeptical voice on the board, the May 27th meeting will likely be a masterclass in "Procedural Compliance"—the board will do exactly what the law requires to be "transparent," but they will do it at a pace that ensures Jacob Meck remains the only viable finish-line runner.

Do you think the "Concerned Citizens" will try to block the RFP itself if it doesn't include their specific landfill or public-ownership ideas?

The Concerned Citizens have already shown they have the organizational stamina to block a deal once, and they are likely to do it again if the new RFP (Request for Proposals) appears to be "rigged" toward a pre-selected outcome.

The group’s strategy has recently shifted from outside protest to institutional pressure, and the upcoming May 27th meeting will likely be their next major battleground for the following reasons:

1. The "Insider" Strategy: Angela Fisher

The group’s most direct way to "block" a bad RFP was to get one of their own on the board. While the County Commission ultimately appointed Darrell Roach (who has "related experience") instead of the group’s nominee, Angela Fisher, the group has not stopped.

  • The New Vacancy: There is still at least one vacancy on the 5-member board (typically appointed by the WVDEP or other state agencies). The Commission President specifically encouraged the candidates not selected—including Angela Fisher—to contact the WVDEP for that seat.

  • The Goal: If the group can get a seat on the board, they won't have to "block" the RFP from the audience; they can vote against it or demand amendments from the table.

2. Legal Leverage: The "Arbitrary and Capricious" Standard

If the SWA board releases an RFP that mimics the old "Option 4" too closely (e.g., requiring specific equipment or 15-year lease terms that only Jacob Meck can meet), the group has a strong legal lever:

  • Procurement Law: West Virginia purchasing laws require fair and open competition. If the "Concerned Citizens" can prove the RFP was written to exclude other bidders, they can file for a stay or injunction in circuit court.

  • The Paper Trail: By proposing the $5M landfill cell, the group has created a formal record of a "reasonable alternative." If the SWA ignores it without a documented feasibility study, the group can argue the board's decision-making process is legally flawed.

3. The Public Ownership Mandate

The group’s primary "blocking" point isn't just about who builds it, but who owns it. * The GVEDC Pivot: They have already suggested that if the landfill property is turned over to anyone, it should be the Greenbrier Valley Economic Development Corporation (GVEDC), not a private LLC like JacMal.

  • The Red Line: If the RFP includes deeding county land to a private entity, expect the "Concerned Citizens" to move from vocal protest to formal legal action.


Summary of the May 27th Conflict

The board is betting that the December 2026 deadline will make the public desperate enough to accept any RFP that promises a working station. The "Concerned Citizens," however, seem to believe that a "bad deal is worse than no deal."

If the RFP Includes...The Group Will Likely...
Private Land OwnershipBlock it via a legal injunction.
Mandatory "Flow Control" FeesBlock it through a petition to the County Commission.
A "Design-Build" with Public OwnershipSupport it, provided it is competitively bid.

The bottom line: The group has the stamina because they are no longer just "protesting"; they are now an organized political force that the board’s own attorney, David Sims, has felt the need to meet with privately. They won't just let the RFP pass if it doesn't include a path to public ownership.

Do you think the SWA board will try to appoint the remaining members before the May 27th meeting to ensure they have a "friendly" quorum for the RFP vote?

The SWA board is currently in a race against time, and while they would certainly benefit from a "friendly" full board, the appointment of the remaining member is largely out of their direct control.

Based on recent developments as of early May 2026, here is the state of the board's membership and why a "friendly quorum" strategy is more complicated than it looks.

1. The Membership Status

The Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (SWA) is a 5-member board, but the appointments are split between four different government entities. As of May 2, 2026:

  • Darrell Roach (New Member): Appointed by the County Commission on April 7, 2026, to replace Ed Riley. Roach was chosen for his "related experience," which the Commission prioritized over the "Concerned Citizens" candidate, Angela Fisher.

  • The DEP Vacancy: There is still one vacant seat specifically reserved for an appointee of the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection (DEP).

  • Existing Members: David Henderson (Chairman, PSC appointee), David McLaughlin (Vice-Chairman, County Commission appointee), and Phillip Cobb (Conservation District appointee).

2. The Quorum Reality

Under West Virginia law, a quorum is three members. Even with one vacancy, the board currently has four seated members (Henderson, McLaughlin, Cobb, and Roach).

  • The "Friendly" Count: With Darrell Roach now on board—and having been selected specifically for his professional background rather than his ties to the protest group—the board likely feels they already have a functional, stable quorum to move forward with an RFP vote on May 27th.

  • The DEP Wildcard: The board cannot "rush" the DEP appointment. The state agency has its own timeline. If the DEP appoints a new member before May 27th, it is just as likely to be a technical expert or a state official as it is a "friendly" local.

3. The Strategy for May 27th

Instead of waiting for a fifth member, the board will likely use the May 27th meeting to demonstrate their new "legitimacy" with Darrell Roach in the seat.

  • The Goal: By having a "fuller" board (4 out of 5), they can argue that the RFP is being vetted by a broader group of experts than the three who originally leaned toward the Meck deal.

  • The "Protest" Prevention: The board is likely betting that Darrell Roach’s presence will act as a buffer. Since he was a "neutral" hire by the Commission, it makes it harder for the public to claim the board is a closed "insider" circle.


The Verdict

The SWA board doesn't need to "appoint" a fifth member to win the RFP vote—they only need a majority of the current quorum. With Roach replacing Riley, the board has essentially restored its baseline stability.

The real question is whether Darrell Roach will act as a rubber stamp for the previous plan or if he will push for the "competitive bidding" transparency that the public is demanding. If Roach sides with Henderson and McLaughlin, the "friendly" quorum is already locked in, regardless of what the DEP does.

Do you think Darrell Roach’s "related experience" will lead him to support a private contractor, or will he be the one to finally look seriously at the group’s "public ownership" suggestions?

Darrell Roach’s 22 years of experience with the Prince William County (Virginia) Water and Sewer Department suggests he will likely be a pragmatist who leans toward publicly-led infrastructure, but with a heavy focus on professional, large-scale standards rather than experimental community ideas.

His background creates a unique "third path" for the board that could either validate the private contractor or fundamentally shift the project toward a public utility model.

1. The "Public Utility" Mindset

Working for a major county water and sewer department in Virginia means Roach is accustomed to public ownership and operation.

  • Institutional Knowledge: He likely views essential services (like trash, water, and sewer) as public utilities that should be managed for long-term stability rather than short-term private profit.

  • The Pivot: This could make him much more sympathetic to the "Concerned Citizens'" demand for public ownership. He knows how a county-run department handles debt, maintenance, and state compliance—things the current board has claimed are too "complicated" for them to manage.

2. The High Standard for Engineering

Prince William County is a massive, highly regulated jurisdiction. Roach’s "related experience" means he won't be easily intimidated by technical drawings or state regulations.

  • Core Drilling & Geotechnical: He will likely be the first person on the board to truly understand the technical necessity of the core drilling and soil stability reports we discussed.

  • Skepticism of "Handshake" Deals: If the previous Jacob Meck proposal lacked detailed engineering or long-term environmental contingency plans, Roach will be the first to spot the holes. His presence makes a "rushed" or "watered-down" RFP much harder for the board to pass.

3. The Professional Realist (The "Hard Sell" for the Group)

While he may favor public ownership, he is also a realist who understands capital costs.

  • Landfill Skepticism: Given his experience with environmental regulations, he is the most likely member to agree with attorney David Sims that the $5 million landfill cell is a financial "black hole." He understands the sheer scale of the bonding and post-closure liability required by the state.

  • Efficiency Focus: If a private contractor (like Allegheny Disposal) can prove they can run the station more efficiently than a small, underfunded county crew, Roach’s professional background might lead him to support a Privately Operated/Publicly Owned hybrid—the "middle ground" the board has been missing.


The Verdict: The "Tie-Breaker"

Darrell Roach wasn't appointed by the "Concerned Citizens," but he wasn't a "crony" appointment either. He was hired for his resume.

  • On May 27th: Watch if Roach asks for more detailed technical specs in the RFP. If he pushes for the SWA to hold the Certificate of Need (which the board just applied for on April 29th), it is a clear sign he wants the public to maintain control, even if a private company does the heavy lifting.

His appointment is the biggest threat to the "formality" of the reset. If he takes his role seriously, he will be the one to force the board to act like a professional utility board rather than a volunteer committee.

Do you think Roach's background in "Water and Sewer" makes him more likely to push for a regional partnership with Marlinton’s existing utility staff, or will he see that as an administrative mess to avoid?

 

Darrell Roach’s background suggests he is far more likely to see a partnership with Marlinton as an administrative necessity rather than a mess to avoid, provided it is structured as a professional utility agreement.

His 22 years in Prince William County means he has operated in an environment where water, sewer, and waste are often integrated at a regional level to achieve economies of scale. For a man with his resume, the "mess" isn't the partnership—it's the current lack of a professional, long-term operational plan.

1. The "Infrastructure" Lens

In a large Virginia county, water and sewer departments often share billing systems, maintenance crews, and heavy equipment.

  • The Logic: Roach likely sees Marlinton’s existing utility staff not as a "competitor," but as a latent asset. If the SWA needs personnel to operate a transfer station, partnering with a town that already manages specialized waste and utility staff is a standard "best practice" in public administration.

  • The "Mess" He Will Avoid: He is unlikely to support a partnership based on loose handshakes. If he pushes for a Marlinton deal, expect him to demand a formal Intergovernmental Agreement (IGA) that clearly defines who pays for what, who covers the insurance, and how the "Flow Control" revenues are split.

2. Validating the "Public Ownership" Model

Roach’s experience makes him the board's most credible voice for publicly owned infrastructure.

  • Skepticism of Private Monopoly: He has likely seen how private-sector "partners" can use their leverage to hike rates once a municipality is locked into a 15-year lease.

  • The Middle Ground: He might propose a model where the SWA owns the land and building (potentially through the Economic Development Authority) but contracts with Marlinton's utility department for the labor. This keeps the $4 million in "lease payments" discussed in the March 25 statement within the public sector.

3. The "Financial Reality" Check

While he understands utilities, Roach is also a pragmatist. If Marlinton’s sanitation system is underfunded or lacks the equipment to handle the county-wide tonnage, he will be the first to call it out as unworkable.

  • The Decision Point: He will likely look at the April 29 "reset" as an opportunity to perform a "gap analysis." If a partnership with Marlinton can't meet the December 2026 deadline, he may reluctantly support a private contractor, but he will likely demand a much stricter, more "utility-style" contract than the one the board previously approved.


Summary of the "Roach Factor"

Previous Board ViewPotential Roach View
Marlinton is a competitor.Marlinton is a potential service provider.
Direct operation is too hard.Direct operation is a standard utility function.
Let Meck handle the engineering.The SWA must own and verify the engineering.

The Verdict: Darrell Roach is the board's best chance at finding a "middle ground." He has the technical "stamina" to look at a regional partnership without being intimidated by the paperwork.

If Roach pushes for a joint study with Marlinton at the May 27th meeting, do you think the "Concerned Citizens" will see it as progress, or will they view it as another delay that puts the December 2026 deadline at risk?

If Darrell Roach pushes for a joint study with the Town of Marlinton at the May 27th meeting, the Concerned Citizens will likely view it as a major strategic victory, provided it focuses on public ownership and competitive transparency.

While the group is acutely aware of the December 2026 landfill closure deadline, they have already demonstrated that they believe a "bad deal is worse than no deal." Here is why they would likely embrace a study—and the specific conditions under which they would turn against it.

1. Why it looks like "Progress" to the Group

The "Concerned Citizens" have spent months arguing that the SWA was rushing into a "monopoly" deal without considering public alternatives.

  • Validation of their Claims: A joint study with Marlinton would be the first formal acknowledgment by the board that a public-public partnership is a viable alternative to the private JacMal lease.

  • The GVEDC Connection: The group has already suggested that the Greenbrier Valley Economic Development Corporation (GVEDC) should hold the property. If Roach’s "joint study" includes the GVEDC as a mediator or property holder, the group will see it as the SWA finally adopting their proposed blueprint.

2. The "Stall" Risk vs. The "Bad Deal" Risk

The board is currently using the December 2026 deadline as a "scare tactic" to justify rushing. The Concerned Citizens, however, have a different perspective on the timeline:

  • The "Stop-Gap" Solution: The group likely believes that if a study takes a few months, the county can utilize a temporary transfer permit or a "roll-off" system at the current landfill site to bridge the gap.

  • The Financial Stamina: They would rather wait six months for a study that results in a publicly owned facility than rush into a 15-year lease that they believe overcharges the taxpayers by millions.

3. When the Study Becomes a "Delay Tactic"

The group will only support the study if it has teeth and transparency. They will view it as a "delay" if:

  • The Scope is Narrow: If the study only looks at why a partnership won't work rather than how to make it work.

  • Closed Doors: If the study is conducted in executive sessions without public updates.

  • Exclusion of the SWA "Insider": If the group's preferred candidates (like Angela Fisher) are kept away from the study's oversight, they will suspect the board is just "studying" the project until it's too late to do anything but return to the original private contractor.


The "Roach" Factor as a Bridge

Because Darrell Roach was appointed for his 22 years of utility experience rather than political ties, the "Concerned Citizens" are currently giving him the benefit of the doubt.

  • If he says a study is necessary for professional due diligence, the group will likely trust his technical judgment.

  • If the old board members (Henderson or McLaughlin) were the ones pushing for a study, the group would almost certainly view it as a stall tactic to quiet the crowd.

The Bottom Line: On May 27th, a push for a joint study with Marlinton will likely be greeted with "claps and cheers" similar to the April reset—but only if the SWA explicitly states that the December 2026 deadline will be managed through a temporary public solution while the study is completed.

Do you think the Town of Marlinton is actually prepared to take on the administrative "headache" of a county-wide transfer station, or are they just as hesitant as the SWA?

The Town of Marlinton is likely just as hesitant as the SWA, but for a different set of "headaches." While the SWA’s hesitation is driven by a lack of funds and technical staff, Marlinton’s hesitation stems from a fear of financial contamination and loss of autonomy.

Based on the recent council actions and public statements through early 2026, here is the breakdown of why the "Town Partnership" is a difficult sell for both sides.

1. The Financial Firewall

Marlinton has been aggressively pursuing its own infrastructure projects, including a $2 million downtown trailhead and significant water and sewer bond series (Series 2025 A).

  • The "Headache": Mayor Sam Felton and the Town Council are hyper-focused on keeping the town's credit rating clean to secure low-interest grants.

  • The Risk: Taking on a county-wide transfer station—which carries massive environmental liabilities and a potential $5–$6 million debt—could jeopardize the town's ability to fund its own municipal priorities. Marlinton recently increased garbage fees by 35% just to keep up with current landfill costs; they are unlikely to want to "subsidize" a county-wide operation that could force another hike.

2. The "Flow Control" Power Struggle

The SWA’s main "solution" for the transfer station is Mandatory Flow Control, which would force Marlinton to send its waste through the county facility.

  • Marlinton’s Stance: The town currently manages its own sanitation collection. Being forced into a county system removes their power to negotiate their own tipping fees or seek cheaper regional alternatives.

  • The Administrative Mess: For Marlinton, a partnership might feel like an "annexation" of their sanitation department by the SWA. They would be taking on the administrative burden of collection for the county while losing the authority to set their own rates.

3. Capacity and Personnel Limits

While Darrell Roach might see Marlinton's staff as an asset, the town likely sees them as overextended.

  • Staffing Reality: Marlinton has spent much of late 2025 and early 2026 dealing with personnel changes, including pay rate adjustments and a search for a new Police Chief. Adding "Manager of a Regional Waste Facility" to their list of duties is a massive administrative leap for a small municipal office.

  • The Equipment Gap: The town is geared for municipal pickup, not the heavy-duty industrial processing of a transfer station. They would need significant capital investment—the very thing the SWA says they don't have—to scale up to county-wide volume.


The Verdict: Mutual Hesitation

The Town of Marlinton is currently playing defense. They want to ensure their residents aren't overcharged, but they have shown no public appetite to "rescue" the SWA from its administrative crisis.

EntityPrimary "Headache"
SWAFears they lack the technical skill to even start the project.
MarlintonFears the project will bankrupt their municipal utility budget.

The "Middle Ground" Potential: The only way Marlinton likely steps in is if the Greenbrier Valley Economic Development Corporation (GVEDC) acts as the financial "buffer." If the GVEDC owns the facility and Marlinton simply provides the labor under a contract-for-service, the town might consider it. But as for taking it on directly? They are likely just as hesitant as the SWA, if not more so.

Do you think the "Concerned Citizens" realize that pushing for a Marlinton partnership might actually lead to higher fees for the town's residents, or is their focus strictly on stopping the private land transfer?

The "Concerned Citizens" are far from naive about the costs, but their strategy is a calculated trade-off. They are operating on the principle that a transparent, publicly-owned "expensive" system is safer for the community than a private "unpredictable" one.

Here is the breakdown of why the group is pushing for a Marlinton or GVEDC partnership despite the risk of higher fees.

1. Stopping the "Private Seizure" of Land

For many in the group—and notably for you in your public statements—the private ownership of county land is the "red line."

  • The Principle: The group views the deeding of public landfill acreage to JacMal LLC (Jacob Meck) as a permanent loss of a public asset.

  • The Realization: They are aware that a public partnership (Marlinton or GVEDC) might not be "cheap," but they see it as a way to ensure that every dollar paid in fees builds equity for the county rather than profit for a private contractor.

2. Fees: "Known Cost" vs. "Blank Check"

The group isn't ignoring the potential for higher fees; they are specifically protesting the structure of the fees in the Meck deal.

  • The "Blank Check" Fear: The previous deal included a 15-year lease with a $960,000 to $1.1M buyout and annual CPI-linked increases. The group argues that this "unvetted" cost is what would truly skyrocket the green box fees (potentially to $310+ per year).

  • The Comparison: They believe a public partnership would be more accountable. If fees have to go up under a Marlinton/SWA deal, the public can at least audit the books at a town council meeting. Under a private lease, those costs are locked in by a contract they can't easily change.

3. The "Unfair" Fee Expansion

A major driver for the "Concerned Citizens" is the rejection of the "Every Parcel" Tax.

  • The SWA previously considered charging the green box fee on every deeded lot, regardless of whether it had a house or generated trash.

  • The Focus: The group is hyper-focused on stopping this specific "unfair" expansion. They believe that a more efficient public partnership could avoid this "land tax" approach, even if the base fee for actual trash-generators has to rise slightly.


The Group's Financial "Gamble"

The "Concerned Citizens" are essentially betting on Economic Transparency over Private Convenience.

FeaturePrivate Deal (Meck)Public Partnership (Marlinton/GVEDC)
Land OwnershipPrivate (JacMal LLC)Public (County/Town/GVEDC)
Fee ControlContractual (Fixed increases)Political (Board/Council oversight)
Buyout Cost$960k–$1.1M$0 (Facility is public from day one)
RiskFixed debt for 15 years.Administrative "headache" for the town.

The Verdict

The group realizes that a Marlinton partnership could lead to higher fees, but they consider that a "honest" cost compared to what they view as an "over-charged" and "monopolistic" private agreement. Their focus is on preventing a 15-year financial anchor that they believe was designed more for private benefit than public service.

Do you think the SWA board's recent decision to apply for their own "Certificate of Need" is a sign that they are finally preparing to cut the private contractor out of the loop?

The decision to apply for a Certificate of Need (CON) is a significant strategic shift, but it’s more of a "legal insurance policy" than an immediate sign that the private contractor is being cut out.

By applying for the CON themselves, the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (SWA) is finally positioning itself as the primary authority over the county's waste future, rather than a passenger in a private company's plan. Here is how this move impacts the "Meck loop."

1. Breaking the Monopoly Argument

Before this move, the SWA argued they had to work with Allegheny Disposal (Jacob Meck) because only a few entities in the county held the PSC Certificate of Need required to lawfully transfer and haul trash.

  • The Pivot: By obtaining their own CON, the SWA removes that specific "necessity." They can now legally hire any trucking company or operate the station themselves.

  • The Leverage: This gives the SWA much more power in the upcoming RFP process. They are no longer "hostage" to a single contractor’s legal credentials.

2. Preparing for the "GVEDC" Middle Ground

One of the major "Concerned Citizen" suggestions was to have the Greenbrier Valley Economic Development Corporation (GVEDC) own the facility instead of a private company.

  • The Legal Requirement: Even if the GVEDC or the county owns the building, the entity operating it must hold a CON.

  • The Move: By securing the CON now, the SWA is making the "Publicly Owned / Privately Operated" model a legal possibility. It allows the SWA to own the "right" to process trash while merely contracting out the labor.

3. A "Plan B" Against Jacob Meck

The $200,000 reimbursement clause in the previous Meck agreement is triggered if the SWA fails to fulfill its side of the deal.

  • The Strategy: If the SWA holds the CON, they are in a much stronger position to dictate terms in the new RFP. If Meck refuses to bid on those new, more transparent terms, the SWA can argue that it wasn't their failure that ended the deal, potentially protecting them from having to pay out that $200,000 "anchor."

4. The Tabled Reality (April 29th Update)

While the SWA voted to apply for the CON, it's important to note that at the April 29, 2026 meeting, this item was technically tabled along with the rest of the agenda to allow for the "reset."

  • The Interpretation: The fact that it was on the agenda at all shows the board is finally listening to their attorney, David Sims, about the need for independent authority. However, tabling it suggests they are still figuring out how to frame this application so it doesn't look like a declaration of war against their former partner.


The Verdict

Applying for the CON is a sign that the SWA is preparing to be independent, but they haven't "cut the cord" just yet. They are building a legal foundation that allows them to walk away if a better public or competitive private bid emerges.

At the May 27th meeting, the fate of this CON application will be the ultimate "tell":

  • If they approve it: They are serious about public control and competitive bidding.

  • If they table it again: They are likely still hoping to revive a version of the private Meck deal that doesn't require them to take on the administrative "headache" of the CON.

Do you think the board’s recent budget and regulation tabling is a sign they are waiting for a specific financial "green light" before they commit to the CON application?

The tabling of the budget and the mandatory disposal regulations at the April 29, 2026 meeting was a strategic maneuver rather than just a financial "green light" delay. By halting these items, the board effectively froze the legal and economic machinery that was designed to support the now-tabled "Meck Proposal."

Here is why the board is holding off on these specific pillars before committing to the Certificate of Need (CON) application:

1. The "Flow Control" Stalemate

The proposed updates to the Solid Waste Disposal Regulations included the controversial "Flow Control" provision—a rule that would mandate all trash in the county (including from Marlinton) be sent to the county facility.

  • The Financial Link: The board cannot finalize a budget or a CON application without knowing their projected revenue. The CON application, specifically, requires a "statement of financial feasibility" for the Public Service Commission (PSC).

  • The "Green Light": The board is likely waiting to see if they can survive the political fallout of these regulations. If they can’t pass "Flow Control," the revenue for the transfer station disappears, making the CON application technically "unfeasible" to the PSC.

2. Modernizing the Terminology

Attorney David Sims noted that the regulations need to move away from the term "garbage" to the more modern "solid waste."

  • While this seems like a minor edit, it has major legal implications for the CON. The PSC issues certificates for "Solid Waste Facilities." Applying for a CON while your county's own local laws still use outdated 1960s "garbage" terminology creates a legal mismatch that could delay the state-level approval.

3. The "Emergency" Grant Buffer

The SWA is operating on a razor-thin margin. As of late April, they had just appointed Ashley Moore as the temporary Secretary/Treasurer and authorized her signature on bank accounts that are currently being bolstered by a small $6,055 grant from the state.

  • The Delay: Applying for a CON costs money—not just in filing fees, but in the legal and engineering testimony required to prove the "need." The board is likely stalling to ensure they have the cash flow to actually finish the PSC process once they start it.

4. Avoiding the $200,000 Trigger

If the board passed a new budget that excluded the lease payments to JacMal (Jacob Meck), it could be seen as a "breach of intent" before the project was officially reset. By tabling the budget, they avoid creating a paper trail that Meck’s lawyers could use to demand that $200,000 reimbursement immediately.


The Outlook for May 27th

The board is essentially keeping all the "puzzle pieces" (the budget, the regulations, and the CON) on the table but not putting them together.

  • The "Tell": If the board un-tables the CON application on May 27th but keeps the budget tabled, it means they are moving toward public control but still haven't figured out how to pay for it without the private partner.

  • The "Pivot": If they un-table the regulations but keep the CON tabled, they are likely preparing to force Marlinton into a deal before they commit to the state-level paperwork.

Do you think the board's decision to appoint a temporary Secretary/Treasurer is a sign they expect more administrative turnover before the final RFP is issued?

The appointment of Ashley Moore as the temporary Secretary/Treasurer is a practical, procedural necessity rather than a direct omen of further mass turnover.

In the wake of Ed Riley's resignation and the "reset" of the transfer station project, the board found itself in an administrative vacuum that needed immediate filling to keep the authority functional. Here is the logic behind this specific move:

1. The "Bank Account" Necessity

The most immediate reason for Moore's appointment was the bank account resolution.

  • The "Green Light": As noted in the April 29 meeting, the board authorized Moore's signature on their financial accounts. Without a designated Secretary/Treasurer, the SWA literally cannot pay its utility bills, process "Green Box" fees, or manage the $6,055 grant they recently received.

  • Temporary Status: Labeling her as "temporary" suggests the board is keeping their options open as they wait for the WVDEP to fill the final vacancy on the 5-member board.

2. Stabilizing the "New" Board

With Darrell Roach newly seated, the board is trying to project an image of stability to the Public Service Commission (PSC).

  • The Turnover Reality: The board has already experienced significant turnover with Riley leaving and the public push for Angela Fisher to be seated. By appointing an administrative officer now, Chairman Dave Henderson is trying to ensure that the "paperwork" side of the upcoming RFP process doesn't stall while the political side is being debated.

3. Separation of Powers

Traditionally, the Secretary/Treasurer handles the records and the money, while the Board Members make the policy.

  • The "Hands-Off" Goal: If the board truly wants to be "hands-off," they need a reliable administrative professional to handle the FOIA requests and financial audits that the Concerned Citizens are generating. Moore’s appointment allows the volunteers (the board) to focus on the "Design-Build" decisions while she manages the day-to-day administrative "headache."


The Outlook for the RFP

While Moore's appointment stabilizes the office, the administrative turnover may not be over.

  • The May 27th Factor: If the board continues to face intense public pressure, or if the WVDEP appoints a "reformer" to the final seat, we could see further friction among the long-standing members (Henderson and McLaughlin).

  • The Secretary's Role: Ashley Moore will be the one physically handling the incoming bids for the RFP. Her appointment ensures there is a clear, legal "point of contact" for contractors, which is a requirement for a formal bidding process to even begin.

The Verdict: The board isn't necessarily expecting more turnover, but they are insulating themselves against it. By having a designated officer for the money and the minutes, they ensure that the SWA doesn't grind to a halt even if another member decides they've had enough of the public's "stamina."

Do you think the group will now pivot to scrutinizing Ashley Moore’s administrative filings, or will they stay focused on the board members' voting records?

The Concerned Citizens are likely to keep their primary focus on the board members' voting records, but they will use Ashley Moore’s administrative role as a functional leverage point to ensure transparency.

Because the group’s ultimate goal is to stop the private land transfer and the $6 million lease, they view the board members as the "decision-makers" and the staff as the "gatekeepers." Here is how they will likely divide their scrutiny:

1. Scrutiny of Ashley Moore: The "FOIA" Gatekeeper

As the new Secretary/Treasurer, Moore is now the legal point of contact for all records. The group will likely scrutinize her filings not to attack her personally, but to verify the integrity of the "reset."

  • The Paper Trail: The group will be watching to see if Moore records the minutes of the "new" suggestions accurately. If the May 27th minutes don't reflect the public's alternative proposals (like the GVEDC ownership or the $5M landfill cell), they will challenge her administrative record-keeping.

  • The CON Application: As Moore is now authorized on the bank accounts, the group will monitor the SWA’s spending to see if they are actually paying the filing fees for the Certificate of Need. If the money moves toward private engineering fees instead of public permitting, the group will use her financial reports as evidence.

2. Focus on Board Members: The "Policy" Targets

The group’s "stamina" is currently fueled by a lack of trust in Chairman Dave Henderson and David McLaughlin. They will remain focused on the voting records for three reasons:

  • The "Friendly Quorum" Watch: They are waiting to see how Darrell Roach votes. If he aligns with the "old guard" on the first RFP vote, the group will pivot their pressure back to the County Commission.

  • The "Backroom Deal" Suspicion: The group’s main grievance is the perceived lack of competitive bidding. They will be looking for any vote that "fast-tracks" an RFP or restricts it to a 15-year lease term, which they believe is a proxy for the Jacob Meck deal.

  • The Legal Injunction: Any future lawsuit from the "Concerned Citizens" would be filed against the SWA Board, not the Secretary. Therefore, they must maintain a meticulous record of every "Motion" and "Second" to prove that the board is acting in a "capricious" manner.

3. The "Financial Integrity" Pivot

One area where Moore and the Board overlap is in the reimbursement of Jacob Meck.

  • If Moore processes a payment to Meck for the $200,000 reimbursement without a public vote or a finalized "Design-Build" contract, the group will likely descend on both. Moore would be scrutinized for the execution of the payment, while the board would be hammered for the authorization.


The Outlook for May 27

The group will likely treat Ashley Moore with professional distance but will be "hawks" regarding her minutes. Their real energy will be directed at the board members' faces, waiting for the moment the RFP is introduced.

The Verdict: The group knows that Moore is a "temporary" administrative fix. They won't waste their primary legal stamina on her unless she appears to be "sanitizing" the public record to favor the board’s previous narrative. Their eyes remain firmly on the three votes needed to pass or block the next contract.

Do you think the group’s focus on the "GVEDC" ownership will actually gain traction with Darrell Roach, or will he see that as an unnecessary middle-man in a utility project?

 

The GVEDC ownership model is likely to gain significant traction with Darrell Roach, not as a middleman, but as a professional infrastructure stabilizer.

Given his 22 years of utility experience in a high-growth area like Prince William County, Roach is trained to prioritize asset security and institutional longevity—two things a private land transfer to a local LLC lacks.

1. Why Roach Won’t See GVEDC as a "Middleman"

In professional public works, using an Economic Development Authority (EDA) as a holding entity is a standard "best practice" for complex projects.

  • The "Firewall" Effect: Roach knows that an EDA like the GVEDC acts as a financial shield. It allows a project to secure grants (like the $2.1 million in "Ready Sites" grants GVEDC has experience with) that are often unavailable to private contractors or small, debt-strapped authorities like the SWA.

  • Property Tax Savings: GVEDC representative Ruthanna Beezley explicitly noted that their involvement is designed to eliminate property taxes on the site. A utility professional like Roach will immediately see this as a way to lower the "per ton" operational cost, making the project more "workable."

2. The Professionalism Factor

Roach was appointed specifically for his "related experience." He is used to dealing with formal government entities rather than the "handshake-and-lease" culture that has characterized the SWA's previous negotiations.

  • Standardized Leasing: A lease agreement between the SWA and the GVEDC is a "Public-to-Public" contract. This is much easier for a utility professional to vet and audit than a 15-year private lease with a $1.1 million buyout clause at the end.

  • Land Control: Roach likely understands that once public land is deeded to a private entity (like JacMal), the county loses its primary leverage. Keeping the land under GVEDC control ensures the county can swap operators in the future without losing the facility itself.

3. A Strategic "Bridge" to the Public

For Roach, the GVEDC model is the perfect "middle ground" to quiet the room.

  • The "Concerned Citizens" Win: The group’s biggest grievance is the "seizure" of county land. By supporting GVEDC ownership, Roach can hand the public a major victory without having to adopt their more expensive "new landfill" ideas.

  • The Board’s Win: It allows the "old guard" (Henderson and McLaughlin) to still have a private company build and run the station, but removes the "cronyism" optics of the land transfer.


What to Watch for on May 27th

If Roach is the one to bring up the GVEDC, pay close attention to his phrasing.

  • The "CON" Connection: If he links GVEDC ownership to the Certificate of Need (CON) application, he is signaling a move toward a "Municipal Landlord" model. This is where the county owns the "right" to the trash and the "building," but merely hires a contractor to do the work.

The Verdict: Darrell Roach is the most likely person on the board to understand the GVEDC’s actual utility. To him, they aren't a middleman; they are the legal foundation needed to turn a controversial project into a professional public utility.

Do you think the SWA’s attorney, David Sims, will push Roach toward the GVEDC model as a way to "bulletproof" the project against future lawsuits?

David Sims is likely to view the GVEDC (Greenbrier Valley Economic Development Corporation) model as a legal "gold mine" for bulletproofing the project, and he will almost certainly use it to steer Darrell Roach and the rest of the board toward a more defensible position.

Sims is an experienced attorney who has already seen the previous "Option 4" agreement nearly trigger a massive lawsuit. He knows that a Public-Public partnership (SWA + GVEDC) is much harder to overturn in court than a private lease for four specific reasons.

1. Immunizing Against "Arbitrary and Capricious" Claims

In administrative law, the "Concerned Citizens" could sue the SWA by claiming their decision to deed land to a private entity was "arbitrary and capricious."

  • The Sims Strategy: By shifting to GVEDC ownership, Sims can argue that the board is following a standard, government-approved model for economic development.

  • The Benefit: Since GVEDC is a non-profit quasi-governmental entity, its involvement automatically creates a "presumption of public benefit" that private LLCs (like Meck’s JacMal) do not enjoy. This effectively raises the legal bar for anyone trying to stop the project.

2. Safeguarding the CON (Certificate of Need)

As we discussed, the SWA is finally applying for its own CON. Sims knows that the Public Service Commission (PSC) scrutinizes private-public leases very heavily to ensure the public isn't being "over-charged."

  • The Sims Strategy: If the GVEDC owns the land, the lease terms are likely to be much more transparent and "at cost."

  • The Benefit: This makes the PSC approval process much smoother. Sims will likely tell Roach that the GVEDC model is the fastest way to get the "green light" from the state before the December 2026 deadline.

3. Grant Eligibility and "Free" Money

Sims is acutely aware of the SWA's empty bank account. Under WV Code § 54-5-3, many state grants for "Solid Waste Facility construction" are strictly prohibited if the property is not owned by a public authority.

  • The Sims Strategy: He will likely explain to Roach that by using the GVEDC (which has already secured millions in "Ready Sites" grants), the SWA can access state funds to build the station that a private contractor like Jacob Meck simply cannot touch.

  • The Result: This removes the "we have no money" excuse the board has been using and provides a legal path to funding the project without the "unfair" fee increases.

4. Defusing the "Private Seizure" Narrative

Sims saw the hostility in the courtroom on April 29th. He knows that the "Concerned Citizens" are primary focused on the land transfer.

  • The Sims Strategy: He will push the GVEDC model as the ultimate compromise. It allows the board to keep its "Design-Build" contractor while giving the public exactly what they want: Public Land in Public Hands.


The Outlook for the May 27th Executive Session

The agenda for April 29th included an Executive Session with Sims to discuss "pending litigation." That session was essentially a strategy meeting to figure out how to stop the "Concerned Citizens" from suing.

The Verdict: David Sims is the one who likely invented the idea of "starting over" as a way to escape the legal trap of the first deal. He will use Darrell Roach’s professional background to validate the GVEDC model, effectively telling the board: "If you want this built by 2026 without ending up in front of a judge, this is your only path."

Do you think Jacob Meck's legal team will counter this by arguing that the SWA still owes him for the "pre-development" work he did under the GVEDC's previous involvement?

Jacob Meck’s legal team will almost certainly argue that the SWA remains financially responsible for the "pre-development" work already completed, but they are likely to frame this as a "vested interest" in the property rather than a simple bill for services.

As of early May 2026, the legal leverage Meck holds against the SWA—and any potential GVEDC partnership—rests on three specific pillars.

1. The Binding Nature of the "Option 4" Letter of Intent

While Attorney David Sims "tabled" the project, he did not legally dissolve the Binding Letter of Intent (LOI) that was signed in February 2026.

  • The Argument: Meck's team will argue that based on that LOI, he has already made significant capital outlays—including architectural drawings from the Podesta engineering firm and down payments on specialized trash cranes.

  • The Leverage: They will claim that the SWA cannot simply "reset" the project to a new partner (like the GVEDC) without making Meck whole for the work that was done under the assumption of the previous board's approval.

2. The GVEDC as a "Historical Partner"

It is important to remember that the GVEDC was already part of the conversation before the reset. In the March 25th statements, it was noted that the SWA might turn the property over to the GVEDC, who would then lease it to Meck.

  • The Trap: If Meck’s legal team can prove that his "pre-development" work was done in coordination with both the SWA and the GVEDC, he could argue that any new partnership between those two entities is a "successor agreement" that must honor his previous expenses.

  • The Risk: This is likely why Sims is pushing for a "total reset." If the new project looks too much like the old one, Meck has a stronger claim that they are just trying to cut him out of a deal he’s already invested in.

3. The "Stop-Gap" Threat as Legal Pressure

Meck has already publicly warned that the SWA's "reset" has created a service stop-gap.

  • The Strategy: His legal team may argue that by "starting over," the SWA is being grossly negligent with public health, given the December 2026 landfill closure.

  • The Purpose: This pressure is designed to force the SWA back to the table. By making the "reset" look like a legal and logistical nightmare, they hope the board will decide that paying Meck’s "pre-development" costs is more expensive than just finishing the original deal.


The "Sims" Counter-Strategy

Attorney David Sims’ recent "welcoming of suggestions" is the board’s shield against these arguments. By inviting the public to suggest things like a $5 million landfill cell, the board is building a record that the "Option 4" deal was not the only viable choice—which makes it harder for Meck to sue for "Expectation Damages" (the profit he would have made).

The Verdict: Meck’s legal team will likely present a bill for the architectural and engineering work (the $200,000 cap) the moment the SWA issues an RFP that favors a different builder. They won't just walk away; they will treat that $200,000 as a "breakup fee" that the SWA must pay before they can legally hand the keys to the GVEDC.

Do you think the SWA is prepared to use that $6,055 grant money to pay for their own legal and engineering counter-study, or will they be forced to rely on the GVEDC’s existing data?

The $6,055 grant is a double-edged sword: it is essentially "pocket change" in the world of engineering and legal fees, but its presence on the SWA’s books is a crucial legal marker.

Given the SWA’s history and the specific constraints of the West Virginia Solid Waste Management Board (SWMB) grants, here is how that money will likely be used and why the GVEDC’s data remains their only real path forward.

1. The Grant's Strict "Handcuffs"

State grants for SWAs are rarely a "blank check." The $6,055 figure is consistent with the standard SWMB operating/administrative grants rather than a "Project Development" grant.

  • The Restriction: These funds are typically restricted to "approved grant budget forms." If the SWA applied for this money to cover "administrative costs" (like Ashley Moore’s salary or basic office utilities), they cannot legally spend it on a $10,000–$20,000 engineering study or legal counter-arguments.

  • The Budget Gap: A professional "counter-study" for a landfill cell or a regional transfer station would cost significantly more than $6,055. Using that money for a study would be a "misappropriation of funds," which would jeopardize all future state funding.

2. Why They are Forced to Rely on GVEDC Data

The board's sudden pivot to "starting over" while their bank account is nearly empty means they have no choice but to leverage GVEDC’s existing research.

  • The "Ready Sites" Data: The GVEDC has already done the heavy lifting, including site surveys and potentially environmental assessments for the Pocahontas County area. By partnering with the GVEDC, the SWA gets access to this data for "free" (or as part of the partnership), allowing them to fulfill the Certificate of Need (CON) requirements without spending their limited grant money.

  • The "Meck" Data Trap: The SWA is in a dangerous spot regarding the Podesta engineering drawings that Jacob Meck already paid for. If they use any part of Meck's drawings in their "new" study without paying him, his legal team will immediately sue for copyright or "unjust enrichment." Relying on GVEDC-sourced data is their only "clean" way to build a new RFP.

3. The Grant as a "Functional Shield"

While the $6,055 won't pay for an engineer, it serves a vital purpose: Keeping the lights on for the RFP.

  • The board needs that money to pay for the legal advertisements required by state law to notice the new bidding process.

  • It pays for the Secretary/Treasurer to physically process the bids and manage the public record.


The Verdict: The GVEDC "Life Raft"

The SWA is not prepared—and physically cannot afford—to fund their own independent study. They are 100% dependent on the GVEDC to provide the technical data needed for the May 27th "reset."

At the May 27th meeting, watch for the board to propose a "Motion to utilize GVEDC technical data for the draft RFP." This is their way of moving forward without spending a dime they don't have.

Do you think the "Concerned Citizens" will trust the GVEDC's data if it turns out to be similar to Meck's, or will they demand a third-party audit that the SWA clearly cannot afford?

 Do you think the "Concerned Citizens" will trust the GVEDC's data if it turns out to be similar to Meck's, or will they demand a third-party audit that the SWA clearly cannot afford?

 

The Concerned Citizens will likely view any GVEDC data with extreme skepticism if it mirrors Jacob Meck’s "Option 4," and yes, they will almost certainly demand a third-party audit—one they know the SWA cannot currently afford.

Their goal in demanding an audit isn't necessarily to get the document itself, but to use it as a legal and procedural blockade. Here is why they won't simply trust the GVEDC.

1. The "Successor Agreement" Suspicion

The group already suspects that the GVEDC and Jacob Meck have been in quiet negotiations for months. Because the GVEDC was mentioned as a potential "landlord" for Meck's project as early as March 2026, the public views the GVEDC not as a neutral party, but as the "legal wrapper" for the same deal.

  • If the data matches: The group will argue that the GVEDC simply "rubber-stamped" Meck’s private engineering to give it a public face.

  • The Response: Expect the group to use your personal observation about the lack of core drilling and geotechnical data. If the GVEDC data doesn't include these expensive, missing pieces, the group will dismiss it as "incomplete" and "biased."

2. The Third-Party Audit as a "Veto"

Demanding an audit is a classic strategy for a group that wants to stall for time.

  • The Financial Trap: By demanding a third-party audit, they put the SWA in a no-win situation. If the SWA says they can't afford it (which is true, given the $6,055 budget), the group can argue that the board is "grossly negligent" for moving forward without a formal peer review.

  • The Legal Trigger: A refusal to conduct an audit can be used in a future "arbitrary and capricious" lawsuit. The group’s attorney can claim the SWA board "willfully ignored" reasonable requests for oversight.

3. Trust is Tied to "Public Ownership"

The group’s trust in the GVEDC isn't about the data—it’s about the land.

  • The Minimum Requirement: The only way they might accept GVEDC data is if it comes with a guarantee that the land will never be deeded to a private LLC.

  • The "Audit" Leverage: If the SWA refuses to move the land to the GVEDC, the group will double down on the audit demand. If the SWA does move the land to the GVEDC, the group might be willing to "waive" the audit demand in exchange for that permanent public asset security.


The Outlook for the May 27th Conflict

The SWA board is likely hoping the GVEDC's "professional" reputation will act as a shield. The "Concerned Citizens," however, are now too well-informed to be swayed by a different logo on the same blueprint.

The Board's HopeThe Public's Likely Reaction
GVEDC data = Instant legitimacy.GVEDC data = A "re-branded" Meck deal.
No money for audit = Public must accept.No money for audit = Board must wait.
December 2026 = Deadline pressure.December 2026 = A "made-up" emergency.

The Verdict: Expect the "Concerned Citizens" to arrive with a formal demand for an independent financial and engineering audit. When the SWA board inevitably says they can't afford it, the group will likely counter by asking why the County Commission can't use some of its ARPA or general funds to pay for it—effectively putting the ball back in the Commissioners' court.

Do you think the County Commission will finally break their "no authority" stance and fund an audit just to bring peace to the northern part of the county, or will they continue to let the SWA take the heat?

 

The Pocahontas County Commission is likely to maintain its "no authority" stance regarding the SWA's specific operational decisions, but they are increasingly being backed into a corner where funding an audit may become their only "peace-making" tool.

The Commission's current strategy is a delicate balance of distance and control. Here is why they are likely to keep letting the SWA take the heat, while secretly preparing for a financial intervention.

1. The "Legal Shield" Strategy

The Commissioners (Rebinski, Helmick, and Walker) have repeatedly stated they have no authority over the SWA’s internal votes.

  • The Benefit: This "shield" protects the County’s general fund from being legally liable for the SWA’s debts. If the Commission funds an audit, they are essentially "piercing the corporate veil," which could make the county liable for the $200,000 Meck reimbursement or the $5 million landfill closure costs.

  • The Reality: They will continue to let the SWA members (Dave Henderson and David McLaughlin) stand at the podium and take the public's anger, as it keeps the heat off the Commission’s own 2026-2027 budget.

2. The Darrell Roach Appointment: A "Non-Financial" Intervention

The Commission already "intervened" without spending a dime by appointing Darrell Roach on April 7th.

  • The Message: By choosing a candidate with 22 years of utility experience over the "Concerned Citizens" pick (Angela Fisher), the Commission signaled that they want professionalism, not activism.

  • The Gamble: They are betting that Roach can stabilize the SWA from the inside, potentially making an expensive third-party audit "unnecessary" in the eyes of the state.

3. Why they might finally fund an audit

Despite their stance, two factors could force the Commission to break their silence and pay for a third-party review:

  • The GVEDC Connection: If the board pivots to the Greenbrier Valley Economic Development Corporation (GVEDC) model, the Commission may be asked to fund a "feasibility study" as a condition of the land transfer. It is much easier for them to justify spending county money on an "Economic Development Study" than a "Solid Waste Audit."

  • State Auditor Pressure: Under W. Va. Code § 22C-4-9a, the State Auditor's office already conducts examinations of the SWA every three years. If the "Concerned Citizens" successfully lobby the State Auditor to declare the SWA "seriously impaired," the Commission might be legally compelled to fund an emergency audit to prevent a total shutdown of the county’s trash system.


The Outlook for May 2026

The Commission will likely wait until after the May 27th SWA meeting to see if the "reset" actually works.

Commission ActionLikely Result
Continued "No Authority" StanceThe public remains focused on the SWA board; Commission avoids financial liability.
Funding an Independent AuditImmediate peace in the northern end, but creates a "precedent" that the Commission will pay for SWA mistakes.
ARPA/Grant PassthroughThe most likely "middle ground"—using leftover funds to pay the GVEDC to conduct the study.

The Verdict: The Commission will let the SWA take the heat as long as possible. However, if the May 27th meeting ends in another courtroom shouting match or a lawsuit, the Commission will likely "discover" a small pot of funds for a "Regional Utility Study" (a polite name for an audit) just to stop the northern part of the county from revolting.

Do you think the "Concerned Citizens" will view Darrell Roach as a Commission "plant" designed to ignore them, or are they willing to give him a chance to prove his independence?

The "Concerned Citizens" are currently in a state of guarded skepticism. While there is a sliver of willingness to see if his 22 years of utility experience translates into actual independence, the prevailing sentiment is that his appointment was a tactical maneuver by the County Commission to sideline their advocacy.

Here is how that perception is likely to play out at the May 27th meeting.

1. The "Angela Fisher" Comparison

The group sees Roach not necessarily as a "bad" candidate, but as the "Safe" candidate.

  • The Snub: By choosing Roach over Angela Fisher—who was the group's vetted choice—the Commission sent a clear message: they want technical competence without the "activist" headaches.

  • The "Plant" Narrative: Because the Commission prioritized "related experience" (Roach) over "community representation" (Fisher), the group naturally suspects he was brought in to provide a professional veneer to the board's existing goals. They fear he is there to "fix" the project’s technical flaws rather than question its fundamental necessity.

2. The "Independence" Test

The group is likely willing to give him one meeting to prove he isn't a rubber stamp. They will be watching for specific behavioral "tells" on May 27th:

  • Does he ask about the $200,000? If Roach questions the legality or necessity of the Meck reimbursement clause, the group will start to trust him.

  • Does he engage with the GVEDC? If he pushes for the GVEDC to own the land, it proves he isn't just following the old script.

  • Does he ignore public comment? If he sits silently while Chairman Henderson and McLaughlin dismiss the group's landfill cell proposal, he will be branded a "Commission plant" by the end of the night.

3. The "Professional" vs. "Political" Divide

There is a risk that Roach’s own professionalism will alienate the group.

  • Technical Pragmatism: If Roach uses his experience to explain why the group’s ideas (like the $5M landfill cell) are technically unfeasible, the group will view him as an enemy.

  • The "Utility" Language: If he speaks in the language of "administrative necessity" and "regulatory compliance," the group may feel he is just another bureaucrat protecting the status quo rather than a neighbor protecting their land.


The Verdict

The "Concerned Citizens" are not yet calling for his resignation, but they are treating him as guilty until proven innocent. If Roach behaves like a neutral arbiter who demands a transparent, competitive RFP, he could become the group's unexpected ally. However, if his first major vote is to "fast-track" a new version of the Meck deal, the "plant" narrative will become the group's primary talking point for the rest of 2026.

Do you think Roach will realize that his "professional" dismissal of the group's ideas might actually be what triggers a lawsuit, or will he stick to his engineering "truth" regardless of the political fallout?

Darrell Roach is likely to stick to his "engineering truth," but his professional background makes him uniquely equipped to realize that how he delivers that truth is exactly what will determine if the SWA ends up in court.

In his 22 years of utility management, he has likely faced "Concerned Citizen" groups before. He knows that a lawsuit rarely stems from a technical disagreement; it stems from a failure of process. Here is how Roach will likely navigate this "truth vs. fallout" tension:

1. The "Process" over the "Project"

Roach likely understands that the SWA’s greatest legal vulnerability isn't whether a transfer station is better than a landfill cell—it's that the previous board failed to follow West Virginia competitive bidding laws and the Open Governmental Meetings Act.

  • The Realization: He will likely realize that even if he thinks the group's landfill cell is a bad idea, he must treat it with procedural respect.

  • The Action: Instead of a "professional dismissal," expect him to push for a formal, documented review of the group’s suggestions. By putting their ideas through a "technical filter" (even if he knows they will fail it), he creates a legal paper trail that proves the board was not being "arbitrary or capricious."

2. The Danger of "Engineering Arrogance"

There is a high risk that Roach’s background will lead him to speak "down" to the public. If he uses his 22 years of experience to essentially tell the room, "I’m the expert, and you don’t understand the bonding requirements," he will hand the "Concerned Citizens" the emotional fuel they need to file a lawsuit.

  • The "Truth" Trap: If he treats his engineering truth as an objective fact that doesn't require public consensus, he will be viewed as a "Commission plant" by the end of the May 27th meeting.

  • The Political Fallout: This group has already shown they are willing to litigate. If they feel Roach is just a more articulate version of the old board, they will pivot their legal strategy to target his "expert" conclusions as biased.

3. Will he be the "Peacekeeper" or the "Target"?

Roach has a choice: he can use his "truth" to bridge the gap or to build a wall.

  • The Bridge: He could say, "Based on my experience, a landfill cell is financially risky, but the group is right that the county must own the land. Let's look at a publicly-owned transfer station through the GVEDC."

  • The Wall: He could say, "The landfill cell is impossible, and the Meck deal was the only one on the table. We need to move forward with the RFP immediately to beat the 2026 deadline."


The Verdict

Roach will likely stick to his engineering truth because he views his professional reputation as his primary asset. However, he is smart enough to know that in a county this small, an "engineering truth" that results in a $100,000 legal bill is a failure of leadership.

He won't "ignore" the political fallout; he will try to engineer his way out of it by making the process so technically and legally rigid that a lawsuit has nowhere to "stick."

Do you think the "Concerned Citizens" will recognize this "procedural rigidity" as progress, or will they see it as a more sophisticated way of telling them "no"?

The "Concerned Citizens" are far too deep in the trenches to be won over by a slicker, more "professional" way of being told "no." They have already proven they can smell a pre-determined outcome from a mile away, and any attempt at procedural rigidity that doesn't fundamentally change the deal's architecture will likely be met with an immediate lawsuit.

Here’s why they won’t see "process" as progress unless it includes a major structural pivot:

1. The "Paper Trail" as a Weapon

The group isn't just attending meetings to be heard; they are attending to build a legal record.

  • The Trap: If Darrell Roach uses his engineering background to create a rigid, highly technical RFP, the group will scrutinize it for "lock-out" specifications—requirements that only Allegheny Disposal (Jacob Meck) can meet (e.g., specific equipment types or a mandatory 15-year lease structure).

  • The Reaction: If they find even one technical "thumb on the scale," they will use that procedural rigidity as evidence of "constructive fraud" or a rigged bidding process. To them, a more sophisticated "no" is just a more expensive "no" for the taxpayers.

2. The "Land Ownership" Litmus Test

No amount of engineering logic will change the group's stance on the land.

  • The Conflict: If Roach’s "procedural truth" involves deeding the landfill property to a private entity (even for a "fair market price"), the group will view it as a betrayal.

  • The Only "Yes": The only way they recognize progress is if the procedural rigidity results in Public Ownership. If Roach uses his experience to advocate for a GVEDC or county-owned facility, the group will likely drop the "plant" narrative and work with him.

3. The "Expertise" vs. "Representation" Divide

The April 29th meeting proved the group is already at war with "experts." When SWA Attorney David Sims dismissed their $5 million landfill cell as financially unworkable, the room devolved into yelling and personal attacks.

  • The Risk for Roach: If he relies solely on his resume to dismiss the group's suggestions, he becomes the new face of the "arrogant board."

  • The "Sophisticated No": The group has already seen the board "study" things for three years, only to end up back with Meck. To them, more "study" and "process" are just stalling tactics designed to wait out the December 2026 clock.


The "Moment of Truth" (May 27th)

The "Concerned Citizens" are looking for a "System Reset," not a "System Update." | If Roach Offers... | They Will See... | The Result... |

| :--- | :--- | :--- |

| A rigid RFP for the same lease-to-buy plan. | A sophisticated "No." | A Lawsuit. |

| A technical study on a new public ownership model. | Actual Progress. | Cautious Cooperation. |

| Engineering dismissal of the landfill cell. | A "Commission Plant." | More Shouting Matches. |

The Verdict: The group is looking for substance, not just protocol. If Darrell Roach uses his "engineering truth" to defend the old plan under a new process, the "Concerned Citizens" will stop being citizens and start being plaintiffs.

Do you think the group's threat of "criminal prosecution" at the April meeting was a heat-of-the-moment bluff, or are they actually preparing a "misconduct in office" filing?

The threat of "criminal prosecution" at the April 29th meeting was a high-stakes moment, but current evidence suggests it is part bluff and part legal foundation for a formal "official misconduct" filing.

While the shouting and the threat of jail time (specifically directed at Chairman Dave Henderson) were born from raw frustration, the "Concerned Citizens" are moving with a calculated legal strategy that aligns with West Virginia Code § 6-6-7.

1. The "Heat of the Moment" Element

The threats were issued during a meeting that had to be moved to the Circuit Courtroom because of the size and hostility of the crowd.

  • The "Jail" Threat: One individual specifically threatened to put Henderson "in jail" over the contract. This is technically a bluff—citizens cannot unilaterally "jail" officials—but it serves to signal that the group no longer views this as a policy dispute, but as a criminal breach of public trust.

  • The Personal Attacks: The vitriol directed at Jacob Meck (accusing him of "seizing land") and the board (accusing them of personal profit) forced Henderson to eject attendees. This level of aggression often precedes a move toward formal removal petitions.

2. The "Official Misconduct" Filing: The Real Threat

The group's real power doesn't lie in "jail," but in WV Code § 6-6-7, which allows citizens to petition for the removal of county officers for "maladministration, neglect of duty, or official misconduct."

  • The Evidence Hunt: The group has been meticulously documenting what they call a "lack of competitive bidding." They believe that bypassing W. Va. Code § 5G-1-3 (the procurement code for professional services) constitutes a "willful unlawful behavior."

  • The "Angela Fisher" Factor: By lobbying the County Commission to replace Ed Riley with their own member, the group was attempting to gain an "insider" who could provide the testimony needed for a misconduct filing.

3. Why the "Reset" Changed the Math

The board’s decision to "start over" and "go back to the drawing board" was likely a direct result of their attorney, David Sims, warning them that a misconduct petition was imminent.

  • Sims' Role: He admitted to meeting with the opposition group. He likely told the board that if they didn't "reset" the process, the "Concerned Citizens" would have enough evidence of a "rigged" process to file a petition with the circuit court.

  • The Shield: By starting over, the board has "cured" the immediate legal defect. It makes it much harder for the group to prove current misconduct if the board is now following a new, transparent RFP process.


The Verdict

The threat of "jail" was a bluff, but the threat of removal was very real.

The "Concerned Citizens" are likely keeping a "misconduct in office" filing in their back pocket as a nuclear option. If the May 27th meeting produces another RFP that looks like the old deal, expect them to stop shouting and start collecting the required signatures for a formal removal petition under Section 7 of the Code.


 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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