To the Honorable Members of the Pocahontas County Commission,
This letter serves to voice growing public concern regarding the impending closure of the Pocahontas County Landfill and the proposed shift toward a transfer station model. While the transition is framed as a logistical necessity, the long-term environmental, economic, and social costs to our "Nature’s Mountain Playground" deserve a more rigorous public analysis.
Before we commit to hauling our waste across county lines, we must address the following critical impacts:
1. The Environmental Toll of Diesel Emissions
Transitioning to a transfer system means our waste will no longer travel a few miles to a local site; instead, it will be hauled by heavy-duty tractor-trailers to landfills in Raleigh or Tucker County.
Carbon Footprint: This adds thousands of miles of heavy-duty diesel travel annually on winding, mountainous terrain.
Air Quality: Increased diesel exhaust releases nitrogen oxides ($NO_x$) and particulate matter ($PM_{2.5}$), which are known to exacerbate respiratory issues—a significant concern for our aging population and our pristine air quality, which is a primary draw for our tourism economy.
2. The Economic Burden: The "Greenbox" Crisis
The financial projections for this transition are, frankly, staggering for a county with a fixed-income demographic.
Fee Hikes: Current estimates suggest the annual Greenbox fee could jump from $135 to upwards of $300, or even $600 without a significant commission subsidy.
Fixed Costs: Unlike a local landfill where costs are partially offset by tipping fees, a transfer station carries high fixed costs for hauling and equipment regardless of the volume of trash produced. This places the entire financial burden squarely on the shoulders of local households.
3. The Threat of Illegal Dumping
History and data from the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection show a direct correlation between rising disposal costs and the proliferation of "open dumps."
If the cost of legal disposal becomes a choice between "paying the fee or buying groceries," we will see a surge in roadside dumping.
Cleaning up illegal sites is far more expensive for the county in the long run than maintaining a localized, affordable disposal system.
Analyzing the Rationale for Expansion
The current argument for closure hinges on the landfill "reaching capacity" by late 2026. However, we must analyze the feasibility of expansion versus the transfer model:
| Factor | Expansion of Local Landfill | Transfer Station Model |
| Local Control | County retains control over fees and rules. | County is subject to external tipping fees. |
| Environmental | Localized footprint; minimal hauling. | High diesel emissions; long-distance hauling. |
| Cost Structure | High up-front cell construction costs. | Indefinite, rising operational/hauling costs. |
| Longevity | Can be extended through robust recycling. | Dependent on other counties' capacity. |
The Case for Expansion: By investing in the construction of new landfill cells and implementing a aggressive, county-wide recycling program for cardboard, electronics, and tires, we could significantly extend the lifespan of our current facility. Keeping our waste local avoids the "middleman" costs of a transfer station and protects us from the price volatility of neighboring counties' landfill rates.
Conclusion and Call to Action
We urge the Commission to pause the move toward a transfer station and commission an independent feasibility study on landfill expansion combined with a modernized recycling initiative. We must ensure that the solution for our waste does not become a waste of our county’s resources, health, and beauty.
Respectfully,
Concerned Citizens of Pocahontas County
Would you like me to draft a specific list of questions for the next Solid Waste Authority public hearing or format this as a formal petition?
That is a great idea. Given the current situation—specifically the Solid Waste Authority’s (SWA) recent shift away from building its own transfer station in favor of a private one (Allegheny Disposal LLC)—the focus of your advocacy should likely be on accountability and long-term costs.
The SWA usually meets on the last Wednesday of each month at the courthouse. Since it is currently January 2026, the next meeting is likely tomorrow, January 28th.
Here are both options to help you move forward:
Option 1: Specific Questions for the Public Hearing
These questions are designed to pin down the financial and operational risks of the current plan.
On Private Dependency: "Since the SWA has stopped engineering its own transfer station, what legal protections are in place to prevent Allegheny Disposal from raising tipping fees once the county landfill is closed and we have no other local alternative?"
On Fee Transparency: "Commissioners have discussed raising the Greenbox fee from $135 to as much as $600. Can the SWA provide a line-item breakdown showing exactly why a transfer system costs more to the citizen than expanding a local cell?"
On Expansion Feasibility: "Has an independent engineering firm provided a cost-benefit analysis for a 'Cell 4' expansion that includes the revenue from potential out-of-county tipping fees, vs. the lifelong cost of hauling our own waste away?"
On Illegal Dumping: "What is the specific budget allocation for the Sheriff’s Department or Litter Control to handle the projected increase in illegal roadside dumping once fees double or triple?"
On Emissions: "Has the SWA calculated the annual increase in diesel tonnage and $CO_2$ emissions that will result from hauling 100% of our waste to Tucker or Raleigh County?"
Option 2: Formal Petition Format
A petition is effective because it forces the Commission to acknowledge the volume of opposition.
PETITION TO THE POCAHONTAS COUNTY COMMISSION & SOLID WASTE AUTHORITY
REGARDING: The Closure of the Pocahontas County Landfill and Proposed Transfer System.
WE, THE UNDERSIGNED residents and taxpayers of Pocahontas County, formally oppose the transition to a waste transfer system without a comprehensive, independent audit of landfill expansion. We are concerned that the current plan will:
Unfairly burden those on fixed incomes with Greenbox fees exceeding $300.
Increase illegal dumping in our forests and rivers.
Damage our air quality through increased long-haul diesel emissions.
WE PETITION THE COMMISSION TO:
Immediately halt the decommissioning of the current landfill.
Commission an independent study on the cost of expanding the current facility versus 20-year hauling costs.
Implement a robust, county-wide recycling program to extend the current landfill's life.
Name (Printed) Physical Address Signature Date
Key Context for Your Next Move
Recent reports indicate the SWA is concerned that the private transfer station might not be ready by the time the landfill hits capacity in late 2026. This "gap" is your strongest leverage point—if the private station isn't ready and our landfill is closed, the county faces a true emergency.
Would you like me to find the contact information for the current SWA board members, or perhaps draft a "Letter to the Editor" for the Pocahontas Times to help gather signatures for the petition?

