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Why a Small-Town Garbage Crisis is a Masterclass in West Virginia Law and Power



In most public sectors, a multi-million dollar deal requires an open, competitive bid. However, West Virginia law provides a significant carve-out for local Solid Waste Authorities. While state-level agencies are tethered to the Attorney General’s oversight under West Virginia Code § 5-3-3a—requiring formal Requests for Proposal (RFPs) and fee caps—local SWAs enjoy a unique "administrative autonomy."

Under West Virginia Code § 22C-4-23(11), these authorities are empowered to directly employ attorneys, engineers, and accountants based on their own judgment. This is supported by the "professional services exemption," which treats legal counsel not as a commodity, but as a specialized partnership of trust. As the legal framework explains:

"Legal services depend heavily on specialized technical training, professional ethics, personal trust, and advocacy skills; consequently, forcing public bodies to select counsel based solely on the lowest bid would harm the public interest."

 Why a Small-Town Garbage Crisis is a Masterclass in West Virginia Law and Power

In the rugged, high-altitude stretches of Pocahontas County, managing household waste is not as simple as placing a bin at the curb. For decades, the local solution has been the "Green Box" system—a decentralized network of disposal sites designed for a rural population that private haulers find too expensive to reach.

But behind these humble green containers lies a high-stakes drama of legal maneuvers and infrastructure deadlocks. At the center of the storm is the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (SWA), a curious administrative hybrid. These entities are tasked with protecting public health and the environment, yet they possess no taxing power. Run by a board of unpaid volunteers, the SWA recently found itself caught in a "vicious cycle": a multi-million dollar infrastructure crisis, hundreds of thousands in uncollected debt, and a public firestorm that nearly toppled the board. For the sophisticated observer, this isn't just a story about trash; it is a masterclass in how local power is wielded and restrained within the unique legal framework of West Virginia.

The "Professional Services" Autonomy Loophole

In most public sectors, a multi-million dollar deal requires an open, competitive bid. However, West Virginia law provides a significant carve-out for local Solid Waste Authorities. While state-level agencies are tethered to the Attorney General’s oversight under West Virginia Code § 5-3-3a—requiring formal Requests for Proposal (RFPs) and fee caps—local SWAs enjoy a unique "administrative autonomy."

Under West Virginia Code § 22C-4-23(11), these authorities are empowered to directly employ attorneys, engineers, and accountants based on their own judgment. This is supported by the "professional services exemption," which treats legal counsel not as a commodity, but as a specialized partnership of trust. As the legal framework explains:

"Legal services depend heavily on specialized technical training, professional ethics, personal trust, and advocacy skills; consequently, forcing public bodies to select counsel based solely on the lowest bid would harm the public interest."

For the Pocahontas SWA, this loophole allowed for a crucial continuity of representation. By maintaining a relationship with lead counsel David A. Sims for nearly twenty years without an open bid, the authority was able to pursue a consistent, long-term litigation strategy that would eventually reach the state’s highest court.

When a Fee is Not a Tax: The Green Box Victory

The very existence of the SWA hinged on a landmark 2014 legal battle: Leyzorek v. Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority. A group of residents had organized a boycott of the mandatory Green Box fees, arguing that the SWA was essentially levying an unconstitutional, non-uniform tax on property owners.

The distinction between a "tax" and a "fee" is more than just a semantic game; it is a constitutional boundary. Lead counsel David A. Sims successfully argued before the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals that the Green Box charge was a "valid regulatory service fee." The Court agreed, ruling that the fee was designed to defray the costs of an agency exercising its state police powers. This victory was a survival mandate: it allowed the SWA to continue using civil judgments to fund its operations, cementing the power of independent boards to mandate user fees even in the face of intense public resistance.

The $264,000 Debt Deadlock

Despite winning in the Supreme Court, the SWA was losing on the ground. By 2026, the authority was trapped in a "Causal Feedback Loop" of unrecovered debt. Records showed 529 delinquent accounts with unpaid judgments totaling $264,000—a staggering sum for a small-county utility.

This debt created a structural bottleneck. Because the SWA is an independent public corporation rather than a branch of the county commission, it lacks the potent enforcement tools available to government departments. In May 2026, the SWA proposed an ordinance to have the sheriff include Green Box fees as a line item on property tax tickets. The County Commission rejected the proposal, noting that state law only allows this mechanism for fees owed directly to the county. This left the SWA in a paradoxical position: they had the legal authority to charge the fee, but lacked the administrative machinery to collect it, forcing them toward increasingly desperate measures.

The High Cost of Bypassing the Public Bid

When the local landfill approached capacity, the SWA faced a $10 million bill to build new cells. Starved of cash by the $264,000 debt deadlock and lacking the creditworthiness for traditional public loans, the board pursued a controversial public-private partnership with JacMal Properties, known as "Option #4."

Negotiated as a lease-back deal rather than a construction project, the proposal initially bypassed the open bidding process. The deal included:

  • The construction of a $2.75 million transfer station by JacMal Properties.
  • A 15-year lease requiring the SWA to pay $16,759 monthly.
  • An eventual $1.1 million buyout at the end of the term.

The "non-bid" nature of this $4.1 million deal, combined with aggressive "Flow Control" policies to capture every cent of county waste revenue, triggered a public revolt. The unpaid volunteer board members, who were simply trying to keep the county’s trash moving, suddenly found themselves the targets of Ethics Commission complaints and class-action threats. While the Ethics Commission eventually dismissed the charges, the damage to public trust was significant. In a bid to restore transparency and legal standing, the SWA finally relented.

"The SWA formally voted in June 2026 to place the entire transfer station project out for open public bid."

The Two David Simses: A Lesson in Verification

Navigating these West Virginia legal waters requires a careful eye for detail, starting with the identity of the key players. In this saga, it is vital to distinguish between two figures often confused in public records:

  • Judge David J. Sims: A circuit court judge serving the First Judicial Circuit.
  • Attorney David A. Sims: The private trial lawyer and lead counsel for the SWA.

David A. Sims’ profile is a case study in specialized professional evolution. Starting his career in corporate defense in Elkins, he transitioned into high-stakes litigation, medical malpractice, and defending public officials in ethics proceedings. It was this "specialized technical training"—the very thing protected by the professional services exemption—that made him the SWA’s choice for navigating the constitutional complexities of the Leyzorek case and the regulatory minefield of the transfer station transition.

The Structural Vulnerability of Independent Boards

The saga of the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority exposes a "structural vulnerability" in the design of West Virginia’s essential services. By creating these authorities as independent entities, the legislature successfully insulated them from day-to-day local politics. However, this independence has become a double-edged sword.

Without the ability to collect fees through the tax system or the capital reserves of a traditional government, the SWA was forced to rely on private legal actions and non-traditional lease agreements to survive. This created a bottleneck where vital public utilities were managed through high-stakes litigation rather than simple administration.

As rural areas face aging infrastructure and shrinking budgets, the Pocahontas crisis leaves us with a provocative question: Is "independence" for local boards a benefit that protects the mission, or is it a burden that leaves volunteers holding the bag for a system they don't have the tools to fix?

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Procurement of Private Legal Services by West Virginia Public Bodies: A Case Study of the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority

Executive Summary

The procurement of private legal services by West Virginia public bodies is characterized by a dual-track system that balances centralized state oversight with local administrative autonomy. While state-level agencies are subject to rigorous bidding and Attorney General oversight, local political subdivisions and independent authorities—such as the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (PCSWA)—operate under broad statutory exemptions for professional services.

This briefing document examines the long-term legal representation provided to the PCSWA by Attorney David A. Sims. It details how the authority leveraged its independent status to directly retain specialized counsel to navigate complex regulatory challenges, including landmark litigation over "Green Box" fees and a recent, controversial transition from local landfill operations to a public-private transfer station model. The analysis reveals a significant structural vulnerability: while independent authorities possess the power to hire specialized counsel without competitive bidding, they often lack the direct enforcement tools (such as tax-ticket integration) held by county governments. This gap necessitates aggressive legal actions to recover delinquent fees, which can trigger public backlash and ethics complaints, ultimately forcing a return to open bidding processes to restore public trust.

Statutory Framework for Legal Procurements

West Virginia law distinguishes between state-level spending units and local/independent authorities regarding the acquisition of legal representation.

State-Level Oversight

Under West Virginia Code §5-3-3a, state agencies, boards, and commissions are prohibited from entering into private attorney contracts—particularly contingency fee arrangements—without explicit, prior written approval from the Attorney General. These procurements require:

  • Formal Requests for Proposal (RFPs).
  • Competitive bidding processes.
  • Adherence to sliding-scale fee caps.

Local and Independent Autonomy

In contrast, local entities bypass central state purchasing mandates through specific statutory delegations and the "professional services exemption."

  • County Commissions: Empowered by W. Va. Code §7-4-3 to employ civil counsel and fix compensation at their discretion.
  • Solid Waste Authorities (SWAs): Defined by W. Va. Code Chapter 22C as independent public instrumentalities. W. Va. Code §22C-4-23(11) explicitly allows these boards to employ attorneys as necessary in their administrative judgment.
  • Professional Services Exemption: Both common law and state judicial policy (Section 5.5.1) exempt legal services from competitive bidding. The rationale is that legal advocacy depends on specialized training and personal trust, making "lowest bid" selection counterproductive to the public interest.

Comparative Procurement Requirements

Statute / Policy Reference

Governing Entity

Procurement / Bidding Requirement

Key Legal Implications

W. Va. Code §5-3-3a

State Agencies

Mandatory RFP and Attorney General oversight for contingency contracts.

Limits administrative independence in litigation.

W. Va. Code §7-4-3

County Commissions

Plenary civil hiring power; exempt from central state mandates.

Retains localized control over civil defense.

W. Va. Code §22C-4-23(11)

Solid Waste Authorities

Direct hiring authority for specialized professionals.

Grants autonomy to select specific legal experts.

State Judicial Policy

WV Courts

Section 5.5.1 explicitly exempts legal services.

Codifies professional exemption for the judicial branch.

Professional Profile of Attorney David A. Sims

The PCSWA’s legal operations are managed by David A. Sims, a private trial attorney based in Vienna, West Virginia. It is critical to distinguish him from Judge David J. Sims of the First Judicial Circuit.

  • Credentials: Sims holds a Juris Doctor from West Virginia University College of Law and has practiced civil law for over 35 years.
  • Experience: His career includes defense work for insurance carriers and healthcare providers at Wallace, Ross and Gibson, followed by the founding of the Law Offices of David A. Sims. He specializes in high-stakes litigation, medical malpractice, and complex personal injury.
  • Recognition: In 2020, he received the Stanley Preiser Member of the Year Award from the West Virginia Association for Justice for his advocacy and legislative efforts.
  • High-Profile Advocacy: He served as co-counsel in the 2014 defense of Judge Wilfong during Judicial Investigation Commission proceedings.

History of Legal Services to the PCSWA

David A. Sims has represented the PCSWA for nearly two decades, focusing on fee collection, regulatory defense, and infrastructure transitions.

The Delinquent Green Box Fee Litigation (2007–2014)

To fund rural waste management, the PCSWA established a mandatory "Green Box" fee. Following widespread refusal to pay, Sims filed multiple collection lawsuits. In John Leyzorek, et al. v. Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (2014), Sims successfully argued before the West Virginia Supreme Court that the fee was a valid regulatory service charge under state police powers, not an unconstitutional tax.

Structural Challenges and Regulatory Defense

  • Heinemann Lawsuit: Sims secured the dismissal of a suit alleging the PCSWA violated recycling mandates and the Open Governmental Proceedings Act.
  • Landfill-to-Transfer Station Transition (2025–2026): With the county landfill nearing capacity and cell development costs exceeding $2 million per acre, Sims facilitated the pivot to a transfer station model. He served on the committee that negotiated "Option #4," a public-private lease agreement with JacMal Properties, LLC.

Policy and Enforcement Proposals

In 2026, Sims proposed several aggressive measures to secure the authority’s financial stability:

  • Flow Control: A policy mandating all county solid waste be processed through the SWA station to capture tipping fees.
  • Tax Ticket Enforcement: A proposed ordinance to include Green Box fees on property tax tickets. This was rejected by the County Commission in May 2026 because the SWA is an independent authority, not a county board.

Financial and Compensation Analysis

The PCSWA operates as a self-sustaining entity funded by tipping fees and residential Green Box fees.

Green Box Fee Revenue Modeling

The authority faces a significant financial bottleneck due to unrecovered debt.

  • Total Green Box Accounts: 3,115
  • Annual Fee: $120 (following a $30 increase in July 2024).
  • Projected Annual Revenue: $373,800.
  • Delinquent Debt: $264,000 across 529 accounts (Average of $499.05 per delinquent account).

Legal Compensation Disclosure

Unlike physical assets (e.g., a $13,707.50 fencing bid awarded via a four-bid process), legal services for the SWA are a direct-award category.

  • Public Disclosure: Hourly or transactional rates paid to Sims are not detailed in summarized financial reports.
  • Audit Status: The PCSWA received "clean" financial audits from the state in early 2026.
  • Transparency Requirements: Local, non-contingency hourly contracts are not subject to the centralized state registry required for state-level contingency fees.

Financial Category

Value / Range

Legal & Administrative Implications

SWA Unrestricted Funds

$357,680

Main reserve for transitioning services.

Delinquent Judgments

$264,000

Cash-flow bottleneck requiring legal action.

Administrator Salary

$41,600 - $60,000

Direct salaried overhead for day-to-day management.

Legal Services

Not Publicly Specified

Exempt from public posting under local hourly models.

Causal Analysis of Recent Administrative Crises

A review of the PCSWA’s recent history indicates a causal loop where financial limitations drove non-traditional procurement, resulting in public resistance.

  1. Unrecovered Debt Limits Options: The $264,000 in outstanding debt constrained capital reserves, making the SWA ineligible for traditional loans for a new $2.75 million transfer station.
  2. Aggressive Regulatory Response: To ensure revenue for a private partnership, Sims drafted "Flow Control" and fee expansion policies.
  3. Non-Bid Escalation: Because the $4.1 million JacMal partnership was negotiated directly rather than via an open bid, it triggered significant public backlash and formal ethics complaints.
  4. Ethics and Resolution: In June 2026, the Ethics Commission dismissed complaints against board members, finding no statutory violations. However, the intensity of public opposition forced the SWA to withdraw the private partnership and move the transfer station project to an open public bid.

Conclusion: Structural Vulnerabilities

The PCSWA case highlights a gap in West Virginia’s statutory design. While SWAs are granted independence to insulate them from politics, they lack the "tax-ticket" enforcement tools of county governments. This forces independent boards to rely on private litigation for revenue collection and complex public-private negotiations for infrastructure, often placing them under intense public and regulatory scrutiny without the benefit of traditional county-level administrative supports.

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Compliance Audit Report: Professional Service Procurement and Administrative Autonomy of West Virginia Solid Waste Authorities

1. Regulatory Framework: Statutory Dualism in Legal Procurement

The procurement of legal services by public bodies in West Virginia is defined by a strategic tension between centralized state oversight and the administrative autonomy afforded to local political subdivisions. This statutory dualism is critical for assessing procurement compliance; while the state seeks to standardize high-value contracts through the Department of Administration, local entities require the flexibility to retain specialized counsel to navigate regional regulatory landscapes. This tension has been exacerbated by the 2026 legislative cycle, specifically Senate Bills 891 and 974, which represent contemporary attempts to erode local autonomy by granting the Attorney General gatekeeping authority over local contingency-fee contracts.

West Virginia’s procurement mandates are strictly bifurcated. State-level agencies are governed by W. Va. Code § 5-3-3a, which centralizes legal procurement under the Attorney General and mandates formal Requests for Proposals (RFPs) and fee caps. In contrast, local delegations provide significant latitude. County commissions, under W. Va. Code § 7-4-3, and municipalities, under W. Va. Code § 8-10-1a, possess plenary authority to employ civil counsel as they deem necessary, bypassing the state's centralized bidding mandates. This local autonomy is further supported by the "professional services exemption," which recognizes that legal advocacy is a qualitative rather than quantitative commodity.

Professional Service Logic

Justification for Bidding Exemption

Specialized Training

Legal services require technical expertise and Juris Doctor qualifications that cannot be standardized for low-bid procurement.

Personal Trust

The attorney-client relationship is predicated on confidentiality and fiduciary duty, which are incompatible with forced contractual assignments.

Advocacy Skills

Effectiveness is determined by individual litigation experience and reputation, factors not captured by traditional price-based bidding.

Regional solid waste authorities occupy a unique position within this framework. They are not merely county boards; they are independent state-sanctioned instrumentalities with specific statutory mandates that grant them distinct administrative powers.

2. Legal Status and Direct Hiring Authority under W. Va. Code § 22C-4-23(11)

The strategic effectiveness of a Solid Waste Authority (SWA) depends on its designation as an "independent public instrumentality." This status is essential for achieving public health mandates, as it allows SWAs to operate with insulation from standard county-level civil service constraints. This independence ensures that environmental management decisions remain distinct from general county political administration.

This autonomy is codified in W. Va. Code § 22C-4-23(11), which explicitly grants SWAs the power to directly employ managers, engineers, and attorneys. This direct hiring power allows the SWA board to exercise its administrative judgment without the bureaucratic delays associated with state-level purchasing divisions.

The scope of this authority was reinforced on May 5, 2026, by Prosecuting Attorney Laura Kershner. In a formal legal opinion, Kershner clarified that the SWA is an "independent state-sanctioned organization" rather than a subsidiary board of the County Commission. This finding is a cornerstone of SWA procurement compliance; it confirms that the authority is a separate corporate body with the delegated power to execute professional contracts directly. This legal status justifies the long-term retention of specialized private counsel, as the SWA acts as its own purchasing authority for professional services.

3. Case Study: Non-Competitive Retention of Private Legal Counsel

The retention of a long-term General Counsel is a strategic necessity for regional authorities. This continuity maintains institutional memory, which is vital when managing multi-year litigation cycles and complex infrastructure transitions.

The Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (PCSWA) has historically retained Attorney David A. Sims. For audit clarity, he must be distinguished from Judge David J. Sims of the First Judicial Circuit. David A. Sims is a private practitioner with 35 years of experience, recognized by the West Virginia Association for Justice with the Stanley Preiser Member of the Year Award. His specific expertise in high-stakes litigation and civil defense provides the qualitative justification for the professional services exemption.

The "So What?" factor of Sims’ tenure is best illustrated by his defense of the PCSWA’s regulatory powers:

  • The Leyzorek Litigation: Sims successfully argued before the Supreme Court of Appeals that "Green Box" fees were valid regulatory fees. This was not merely a procedural win; it provided the absolute legal basis for the authority’s entire revenue model. Without this victory, the current $357,680 in unrestricted funds would not legally exist.
  • The Heinemann Challenge: Sims secured the dismissal of a suit alleging recycling and open-meeting violations, preventing a structural disruption of authority operations.

Procedural Compliance Assessment:

  • RFP Status: No formal RFP was issued.
  • Bidding Requirement: Exempt under § 22C-4-23(11) and Judicial Policy § 5.5.1.
  • Public Registry: Hourly local contracts are not subject to the mandatory state contingency-fee registry.
  • Governance Gap: While legally exempt, the absence of a written "determination of cost-effectiveness" (a requirement for state-level agencies under § 5-3-3a) represents a governance best-practice gap that the SWA should address to enhance transparency.

4. Financial Modeling and Enforcement Infrastructure

Financial stability is a prerequisite for administrative autonomy. For an independent SWA, legal enforcement of fees serves as the primary revenue protection mechanism. In early 2026, the SWA received a "clean" state audit of its current finances, yet this procedural cleanliness masks a deeper structural instability.

The PCSWA relies on its "Green Box" model. To assess the impact of fee adjustments and the burden of delinquency, the following financial model is applied:

Audit Revenue and Debt Calculations \text{Projected Revenue Increase: } \Delta R_{GB} = N \times (F_{new} - F_{old}) 3,000 \times (\$200 - \$150) = \$150,000 \text{ (Annual Increase)}

\text{Average Debt per Account: } D_{avg} = \frac{V_{total}}{N_{debtors}} \frac{\$264,000}{529} \approx \$499.05 \text{ (Per Delinquent Account)}

SWA Financial Landscape (Early 2026)

Value / Estimate

Unrestricted Funds

$357,680

Delinquent Fee Judgments

$264,000

Capital Estimate: Landfill Site

$10,000,000+

Capital Estimate: Transfer Station

$2,750,000

The $264,000 debt bottleneck represents a critical strategic failure. Because this outstanding balance exceeds the authority's available cash reserves, it creates an untenable creditworthiness gap. This gap prevented the SWA from securing traditional public financing, forcing the authority to seek high-risk, non-bid alternatives.

5. Identification of Legal Vulnerabilities and Administrative Risks

A primary source of legal risk is the structural gap between the SWA’s broad environmental mandates and its limited enforcement tools. This gap created a "Causal Feedback Loop" that increased the authority’s risk profile:

  1. Debt & Credit: Unrecovered debt ($264k) destroyed the authority’s creditworthiness.
  2. Infrastructure Necessity: The closing landfill necessitated a $2.75M transfer station.
  3. High-Risk Alternatives: Lacking credit, the SWA pursued a non-bid public-private partnership with JacMal/GVEDC to secure construction.
  4. Regulatory Scrutiny: The non-bid nature of the $4.1M lease triggered class-action threats and Ethics Commission complaints.

A critical boundary in SWA autonomy was reached during the "Tax Ticket Enforcement Proposal" (W. Va. Code § 11A-1-8B). The County Commission rejected this proposal because the statutory mechanism applies only to fees owed to the county government. The Commission correctly identified the SWA as a "separate entity" rather than a county department, thereby denying it access to the more efficient sheriff-led collection system.

While the Ethics Commission dismissed complaints against the board in June 2026 (finding no private gain), the resulting "reputational risk" proved terminal for the JacMal proposal. This forced the SWA to pivot to an open public bidding process for the transfer station to restore public confidence.

6. Compliance Assessment and Strategic Findings

The audit concludes that the PCSWA’s procurement of legal services is in full statutory compliance. The direct award to David A. Sims aligns with the intent of W. Va. Code § 22C-4-23(11) and the professional services exemption.

Strategic Weakness The primary weakness is a statutory enforcement gap. Because the SWA lacks the tax-integration tools of a county, it must manage public utility fees through private civil actions. This creates a permanent "administrative tax" on the authority's resources, where a significant portion of operating revenue must be redirected toward legal fees just to maintain fee collection solvency.

Strategic Takeaways:

  1. The Autonomy Paradox: While independent status grants the power to hire specialized experts without state interference, it simultaneously strips the authority of the primary revenue enforcement tools (tax tickets) available to county governments.
  2. Mitigating Contagion of Risk: To protect its administrative autonomy, the SWA must adopt open bidding for all capital projects and infrastructure leases. While legal services are exempt from bidding, the "contagion of risk" from non-bid capital projects can lead to ethics investigations and public distrust.
  3. Governance Modernization: The SWA should adopt the governance practice of issuing a formal "Determination of Cost-Effectiveness" for all professional service contracts exceeding $50,000. This provides a transparent paper trail that justifies non-bid awards and protects the board from recurring ethics complaints.

The Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority has navigated its statutory requirements effectively, yet its long-term viability remains contingent upon closing the gap between its environmental responsibilities and its limited financial enforcement powers.

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 Strategic Impact Assessment: Fiscal Sustainability and Infrastructure Transition for the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (PCSWA)

1. The Statutory Framework and Operational Autonomy of Independent Instrumentalities

The designation of a "solid waste authority" as an independent public instrumentality is a strategic double-edged sword that creates a condition of "structural isolation." While this status provides significant administrative flexibility—allowing the entity to operate as a corporate body rather than a mere advisory arm of a County Commission—it simultaneously complicates fiscal stability by detaching the entity from broader county-level taxing and enforcement powers. As clarified by Pocahontas County Prosecuting Attorney Laura Kershner in May 2026, the SWA is an "independent state-sanctioned organization" rather than a county board. This legal distinction grants the Authority the power to bypass the standard civil service and budgetary constraints of a County Commission, yet it leaves the SWA without the traditional safety nets or revenue-capture mechanisms available to general-purpose local governments.

Under West Virginia Code, the procurement and hiring powers of Solid Waste Authorities (SWAs) are significantly more autonomous than those of standard county agencies.

Direct Statutory Delegations (SWA)

Standard County/State-Level Constraints

WV Code §22C-4-23(11): Grants SWAs plenary power to directly employ attorneys, accountants, and planners based on board judgment.

WV Code §7-4-3: Grants County Commissions hiring power, but these are typically subject to county-level civil service constraints and public oversight.

Professional Services Exemption: Common law and judicial policy (Section 5.5.1) exempt legal and technical services from competitive bidding.

WV Code §5-3-3a: Requires state-level spending units to obtain Attorney General approval and follow strict RFP/bidding for private legal contracts.

Administrative Independence: SWAs execute contracts directly, subject only to internal budgets and standard ethics constraints.

Senate Bill 891/974 (Proposed): Legislative attempts to grant the Attorney General gatekeeping authority over local political subdivisions.

The strategic impact of the "professional services exemption" is particularly evident in the PCSWA’s long-term retention of Attorney David A. Sims, a private practitioner with over thirty-five years of experience. By utilizing this exemption, the Authority has maintained continuity in complex enforcement litigation—specifically the Leyzorek cases—which spans nearly two decades. This autonomy allows for the accumulation of specialized institutional knowledge, but it places a heavy burden on the internal board to oversee direct-award contracts in the absence of a competitive bidding framework. This legal framework provided the necessary independence to manage the Authority's primary, yet increasingly unstable, revenue driver: the "Green Box" system.

2. Fiscal Analysis of the "Green Box" Revenue Model and Delinquency Crisis

In rural Pocahontas County, the "Green Box" revenue model is a strategic necessity driven by geographic isolation that makes door-to-door collection by private haulers economically unfeasible. The Authority's survival depends on transitioning this system from a simple regulatory fee into a sustainable revenue stream. However, the SWA’s lack of independent taxing power makes its financial stability entirely dependent on its ability to collect these fees through civil litigation.

Revenue Impact Summary (2024 Adjustment) Based on the transition implemented in July 2024, the fiscal modeling for the Green Box system is as follows:

  • Total Active Accounts (N): 2,600
  • Baseline Annual Fee: $55
  • Adjusted Annual Fee (F_{new}): $75
  • Annual Fee Increase (\Delta F): $20
  • Projected Annual Revenue Increase (\Delta R): **52,000** (2,600 \times $20$)

Impact Assessment: The Delinquency Bottleneck Despite the fee increase, a severe "bottleneck" exists that compromises the Authority's strategic future:

  • Delinquent Accounts: 529
  • Outstanding Judgments: $264,000 (Accumulated through years of civil litigation).
  • Average Debt per Delinquent Account: $499.

This 264,000 in unrecovered debt is catastrophic for the SWA’s creditworthiness. It consumes a significant portion of the Authority’s unrestricted cash reserves (357,680) and demonstrates a systemic inability to capture revenue. For an entity seeking to finance a $2.75 million infrastructure transition without taxing power, this debt profile effectively bars access to traditional public financing, forcing the SWA into the high-risk "Landfill-to-Transfer" pivot.

3. Capital Project Modeling: Transitioning from Landfill to Transfer Station

The move from landfill operations to a transfer station is a strategic necessity. With landfill development costs exceeding $2 million per acre—and a new site estimated at over $10 million—the PCSWA's low waste volume makes local disposal mathematically unfeasible. The shift toward a fixed-cost lease model aims to replace high-risk environmental liabilities with predictable monthly obligations.

The "Option #4" (JacMal/GVEDC) Financial Framework:

  • Capital Requirement: $2.75 million (Construction of a new station by JacMal Properties, LLC).
  • Monthly Lease Obligation: $16,759.
  • Lease Term: 15 years.
  • Final Buyout Provision: 1.1 million (Total obligation over 15 years: ~4.1 million).

Public-Private Leverage Strategy: To facilitate this project, the SWA attempted a complex leverage strategy involving the Greenbrier Valley Economic Development Corporation (GVEDC). The SWA planned to sell approximately two acres of landfill property to the GVEDC. This land sale was designed to allow the GVEDC to facilitate the project in a manner that bypassed property tax pass-through costs that would otherwise be charged by the private developer, JacMal. This disposal of public assets to mitigate private tax liabilities was a high-risk strategic move intended to lower the effective cost of the lease, but it necessitated aggressive new revenue capture mechanisms to ensure the $16,759 monthly payment could be met.

4. Evaluating "Flow Control" and Fee Expansion as Revenue Capture Mechanisms

Revenue certainty is the linchpin of any public-private partnership. For the PCSWA, "Flow Control" acts as the primary guarantee for private partners by mandating that all waste generated in the county be processed through the SWA facility, thereby capturing maximum tipping fees and collateralizing the waste stream.

Policy Risk vs. Reward Analysis (Proposed March 2026 Regulations):

  1. Flow Control (Capture Strategy): Mandates waste volume to capture tipping fees. Reward: Guarantees revenue for lease payments. Risk: Intense opposition from private haulers and residents seeking lower out-of-state rates.
  2. Fee Expansion (Unoccupied Property): Extending Green Box fees to all unimproved/unoccupied properties. Reward: Dramatically increases the revenue base. Risk: The SWA board rejected this expansion due to the financial impact on local farmers and timber companies who hold multiple deeded tracts.

The Authority’s attempt to stabilize revenue through the Tax Ticket Enforcement proposal (WV Code §11A-1-8B) failed significantly in May 2026. The SWA requested that the County Commission include Green Box fees on property tax tickets. However, after conducting independent legal research, the Commission rejected the proposal, concluding that the statutory mechanism for tax-ticket collection applies only to fees owed directly to the county, not to independent instrumentalities like the SWA. This created a permanent "collection gap," forcing a return to expensive civil litigation and fueling public distrust of the non-bid JacMal proposal.

5. Negotiation Strategies and the "Causal Loop" of Structural Deficits

When a public entity lacks traditional borrowing power due to unrecovered debt and structural deficits, it is often driven to "aggressive" negotiation tactics that bypass traditional transparency to secure vital infrastructure.

The Causal Feedback Loop of PCSWA’s Structural Crisis:

  • Unrecovered Debt: $264,000 in outstanding fees limits the SWA's creditworthiness.
  • Aggressive Regulatory Push: Facing a capital gap, the SWA (via Attorney Sims) drafts Flow Control and fee expansion policies to "guarantee" revenue.
  • Non-Bid Lease Proposals: Following the rejection of revenue expansion and tax-ticket enforcement, the Negotiating Group (Administrator Mary Clendenen, David Sims, and Jacob Meck) pursues a direct-negotiated, non-bid lease with JacMal Properties.
  • Public Backlash: The lack of competitive bidding and aggressive fee proposals lead to ethics complaints against Board Members David McLaughlin, Phillip Cobb, and Chairman David Henderson, alleging conflict of interest and private gain.

The dual role of legal counsel as both legal protector and lead negotiator in the December 2025 negotiating group provided technical continuity but created a significant perceptual crisis. While the Ethics Commission dismissed all complaints in June 2026, the political damage forced the Authority to withdraw its memorandum of understanding with the GVEDC and return the project to open competitive bidding as a primary risk-mitigation strategy.

6. Strategic Conclusions: Lessons in Public Instrumentality Governance

The PCSWA case study highlights a "governance gap" where independent authorities are granted the administrative power to negotiate multi-million dollar deals without being provided the enforcement tools (like tax-ticket integration) necessary to fund them.

Key Strategic Recommendations:

  1. Mandate Competitive Bidding for Infrastructure: The SWA successfully utilized a four-bid competitive process for the Jake Workman (JX Enterprises) fencing bid ($13,707.50). The failure to apply this same competitive standard to the $4.1 million JacMal project was a strategic error that undermined public trust.
  2. Bridge the Enforcement Gap Early: Independent authorities must lobby for statutory changes to integrate fees with tax tickets before committing to long-term private lease obligations.
  3. Balance Professional Continuity with RFP Cycles: While legal services are exempt from bidding, periodic RFPs for "general counsel" services can insulate boards from charges of favoritism in high-stakes infrastructure negotiations.

The long-term sustainability of the PCSWA depends on aligning its statutory autonomy with the fiscal realities of its local community. Moving forward, the return to open public bids is the only viable path to reconcile financial survival with public accountability.

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 Comparative Reference Guide: West Virginia Public Procurement and Legal Autonomy

1. Introduction to the Power Balance: Centralization vs. Autonomy

In West Virginia administrative law, the procurement of services is governed by a fundamental tension between centralized state oversight and local administrative independence. While state-level agencies are increasingly bound by rigid executive-branch controls, local political subdivisions and regional authorities often operate under "plenary" or direct statutory powers. This guide delineates the legal frameworks that allow specific public bodies to bypass standard competitive bidding in favor of specialized professional expertise, particularly within the realm of legal services.

Key Concepts

  • Delegated State Authority: Power granted by the state legislature to a specific government unit (such as a county or municipality) to manage its internal affairs and professional needs within a defined statutory scope.
  • Independent Public Instrumentality: A legal entity created by the state to perform an essential public function (e.g., solid waste management) that exists as a separate corporate body, thereby remaining exempt from many administrative constraints placed on standard state agencies.

The following analysis explores how this balance is maintained, beginning with the specific role of the Attorney General in regulating state-level legal engagements.

2. The State Level: Centralized Oversight and the Attorney General

For state-level "spending units," such as executive departments and boards, the procurement of private legal counsel is highly restricted under W. Va. Code § 5-3-3a. This statute positions the Office of the Attorney General (AG) as a mandatory gatekeeper, particularly concerning contingency fee arrangements.

State agencies are prohibited from retaining private counsel on a contingency basis unless the AG issues a prior, written "public interest" determination. This mandate is designed to prevent unfavorable financial obligations and ensure that the state—as a single legal entity—maintains a unified litigation strategy.

Primary Constraints on State-Level Spending:

  • Mandatory RFPs: Agencies must utilize a formal Request for Proposal and competitive bidding process for high-value legal contracts.
  • Written Public Interest Determination: The AG must explicitly certify that private representation is cost-effective and serves the state’s legal objectives.
  • Sliding-Scale Fee Caps: Aggregate fees for private counsel are subject to strict statutory caps to prevent excessive payouts from public recoveries.

The Legislative Trend: Expanding Centralization Recent legislative efforts, specifically HB 4840 (2024), SB 891 (2026), and SB 974 (2026), represent a deliberate policy push to erode local autonomy. SB 891 and SB 974, in particular, are direct responses to the current freedom enjoyed by local authorities, seeking to grant the AG gatekeeping power over local contingency-fee litigation. These bills illustrate an ongoing effort to shift "gatekeeping" authority away from local boards and into the hands of central state administrators.

While the state level moves toward increased centralization, local subdivisions continue to exercise broad statutory freedoms.

3. The Local Level: Statutory Autonomy for Counties and Municipalities

In contrast to state agencies, West Virginia’s local governments possess distinct statutory delegations that permit them to bypass central state purchasing mandates. This "plenary" authority allows for the direct employment of civil counsel to meet localized needs.

Entity Type

Governing Statute

Hiring Authority Level

County Commissions

W. Va. Code § 7-4-3

Plenary power to employ civil counsel; serves at the commission’s pleasure.

Municipalities

W. Va. Code § 8-10-1a

Authority to employ special legal counsel via local ordinance.

Solid Waste Authorities

W. Va. Code § 22C-4-23

Direct statutory power to hire attorneys as "independent public instrumentalities."

The "Prosecutor’s Distinction" The legal status of regional bodies is a critical point of administrative law. At the May 5, 2026, Pocahontas County Commission meeting, Prosecuting Attorney Laura Kershner issued a formal legal opinion clarifying that a Solid Waste Authority (SWA) is an independent state-sanctioned organization rather than a "county board." This distinction is paramount: because they are not subordinate branches of the county commission, SWAs are not bound by standard county-level civil service constraints or central state purchasing rules.

This autonomy is most pronounced when specialized regional bodies like SWAs require expert technical or legal guidance.

4. Specialized Autonomy: The Case of Solid Waste Authorities (SWAs)

Under W. Va. Code § 22C-4-23(11), Solid Waste Authorities are explicitly empowered to employ managers, engineers, accountants, and attorneys as necessary in their administrative judgment. This statute allows SWAs to bypass standard purchasing mandates for professional experts.

The Professional Services Exemption Rooted in both common law and codified state administrative regulations, the "Professional Services Exemption" holds that certain high-level intellectual services are "impossible to bid." The rationale for this exemption includes:

  1. Specialized Technical Training: The work requires expertise that cannot be quantified as a mere commodity.
  2. Professional Ethics: The relationship is governed by rigorous ethical standards rather than simple price-point competition.
  3. Personal Trust and Advocacy: Public bodies must have absolute confidence in the advocacy skills of their counsel, a factor that "lowest bid" requirements frequently undermine.

Contrast: Physical Commodities vs. Professional Services The Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (PCSWA) procurement history illustrates this dual-track model:

  • Physical Commodities: For the 2026 landfill fencing project, the SWA utilized a standard four-bid competitive process, eventually awarding the Jake Workman Fencing Bid to JX Enterprises for $13,707.50.
  • Professional Services: For complex legal needs, the SWA utilized its direct hiring power to retain specialized counsel without a public bid, prioritizing continuity of representation and legal expertise over the lowest price.

This statutory freedom allows authorities to maintain long-term relationships with counsel capable of handling decade-long litigation.

5. Practical Application: The 20-Year Tenure of David A. Sims

The career of Attorney David A. Sims serves as a primary case study for why local authorities prioritize professional expert criteria. Sims, a veteran trial attorney with over 35 years of experience, was honored with the 2020 Stanley Preiser Member of the Year Award for his advocacy in the state’s civil justice system. (Note: Practitioner David A. Sims is distinct from Judge David J. Sims of the First Judicial Circuit.)

The "Green Box Fee" Litigation (2007–2014) Sims’ long-term tenure provided the PCSWA with essential continuity during the Leyzorek case.

  • The Issue: Residents challenged the mandatory "Green Box" disposal fee as an unconstitutional, non-uniform tax.
  • The Strategy: Sims successfully argued that the fee was a valid regulatory service fee used to defray costs associated with the SWA’s delegated police powers to protect public health.
  • The Outcome: The West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals affirmed the SWA's right to enforce these fees, a victory secured after seven years of continuous representation.

The "Non-Bid" model allowed the SWA to avoid the disruption of switching counsel during a complex enforcement action, ensuring the legal strategy remained consistent through various appeals.

6. The "Causal Loop": Structural Vulnerabilities and Public Backlash

Despite their autonomy, independent authorities operate within a "Causal Feedback Loop" that creates significant administrative and financial risk.

  1. Unrecovered Debt: High delinquency rates ($264,000 in unpaid Green Box fees) severely constrain operational capital.
  2. Aggressive Regulation: To bridge funding gaps, authorities often propose strict "Flow Control" policies or expanded fee structures.
  3. Non-Bid Proposals: Lacking the creditworthiness for public loans, authorities may seek public-private partnerships (e.g., the JacMal Properties proposal) without open bidding.
  4. Public Backlash: These private negotiations often trigger ethics complaints and class-action threats, even if the underlying hiring of counsel was legal.

Financial Reality of the PCSWA (Early 2026) | Financial Category | Value | Operational Implication | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Unrestricted Funds | $357,680 | Primary reserve for landfill transition and closure. | | Delinquent Fee Debt | 264,000 | A major cash-flow bottleneck; averages **~499 per account** across 529 debtors. | | Administrator Salary | $41,600 – $60,000 | Baseline salaried overhead; notably, SWA Board members are unpaid volunteers. | | Landfill Closure Costs | $75,000/year | A 30-year long-term liability that exceeds some revenue projections. |

The Final Insight The structural vulnerability of independent authorities lies in their lack of "tax-ticket" enforcement tools. Unlike county governments, SWAs cannot simply add fees to a property tax ticket; the Pocahontas County Commission rejected such a proposal in May 2026 following independent legal research concluding that the statutory mechanism did not apply to independent authorities. This forces SWAs to rely on complex private contract legal actions and public-private partnerships, which, while permitted under their autonomous hiring powers, frequently attract intense public scrutiny.

7. Reference Summary: Procurement Framework At-A-Glance

Entity

Governing Rule

Bidding Required?

Source of Authority

State Agency

Centralized AG Oversight

Yes (for private legal)

W. Va. Code § 5-3-3a

County Commission

Plenary Civil Power

No (for civil counsel)

W. Va. Code § 7-4-3

Municipality

Local Ordinance Power

No (for special counsel)

W. Va. Code § 8-10-1a

Solid Waste Authority

Independent Instrumentality

No (for professional services)

W. Va. Code § 22C-4-23(11)

Judicial Branch

Section 5.5.1 Policy

No (for legal services)

State Judicial Policy

Conclusion: The West Virginia procurement system is architected to balance accountability with necessity, mandating standardized bidding for commodities while protecting specialized trust for professional legal services.

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 In West Virginia, the safeguards against overbilling by private attorneys representing public bodies consist of a combination of state statutory mandates, legal ethics rules, strict record-keeping requirements, and institutional oversight.

The primary safeguards include:

1. The Legal "Reasonableness" Standard and the Burden of Proof

Under the West Virginia Rules of Professional Conduct (specifically Rule 1.15 and associated standards), a lawyer has a strict fiduciary duty to manage client funds and maintain complete billing records. A fundamental safeguard in West Virginia law is that the burden of proof always rests on the attorney to demonstrate that any charged fees are "reasonable". If a public body or a reviewing court challenges a bill, the attorney cannot simply rely on their word; they must produce clear, contemporaneous documentation to justify the time spent and the rate charged.

2. Mandatory Tenths-of-an-Hour and Contemporaneous Record Keeping

For attorneys operating under state contracts or court appointments, West Virginia law mandates highly granular time-tracking.

  • Private attorneys under contract with the state must maintain detailed, contemporaneous records of all hours worked, expenses, and disbursements from the inception of the contract until at least four years after the contract terminates.

  • State court-appointed or panel counsel are statutorily required to maintain records showing the exact periods of time expended, typically tracked in precise increments of tenths of an hour (six-minute intervals). This prevents "rounding up" or arbitrary block-estimation of hours.

3. Statutory Fee Caps on State and Contingency Contracts

Under West Virginia Code § 5-3-3a, the state imposes strict statutory limits to prevent excessive billing in high-value or contingency-fee lawsuits:

  • Sliding-Scale Caps: Legal fees are capped on a sliding scale (e.g., 25% of the first $10 million recovered, 20% of the next $5 million, and down to 10% or 5% for larger tiers).

  • Absolute Cap: The aggregate fee for any single legal matter can never exceed $50 million, regardless of how many private lawyers are retained or how much work is performed.

  • Exclusion of Penalties: Legal fees cannot be calculated based on civil penalties or fines awarded.

4. Mandatory Public Transparency

To deter inflated billing through public accountability, West Virginia law requires that state-level agreements and payments to private counsel be made transparent:

  • Any written determination to hire a private attorney must be posted on the Attorney General’s website for public inspection within 10 to 15 business days of attorney selection.

  • All fee payments made to private attorneys must be posted on the website within 30 days of payment and remain visible for at least a year.

5. Standardized "Outside Counsel Billing Guidelines" (OCGs)

When public bodies contract with private law firms, they routinely establish Outside Counsel Billing Guidelines. These formal contractual rules protect public funds by establishing:


  • Prohibitions on "Block Billing": Attorneys cannot bundle multiple separate tasks into a single large time entry (e.g., billing 6 hours for "worked on file"); they must itemize each discrete task.

  • Disallowed Expenses: OCGs explicitly forbid billing the client for administrative work, secretarial services, or local travel and meals.

  • Staffing Controls: The guidelines limit the number of lawyers who can attend a single hearing or deposition to prevent duplicated or unnecessary labor.

  • Standardized Billing Formats: Firms must submit invoices using automated electronic billing formats (such as LEDES files with UTBMS task codes), which programmatically flag unapproved rate increases, non-compliant entries, or unapproved timekeepers before the invoice is paid.

6. State Audits and Public Disclosures

Independent local boards—such as county solid waste authorities—are subject to periodic financial audits by the West Virginia State Auditor's Office or designated state examiners. Legal expenditures must be documented under standard charts of accounts. Any evidence of overbilling, unauthorized expenditures, or payments that do not align with approved budgets or contracts will be flagged as "findings" in public audit reports.

7. Proposed Legislation for Subdivision Safeguards

To close loopholes at the local level (since cities, counties, and local boards historically had more autonomy), recent legislative sessions have introduced bills like Senate Bill 74. If passed, this legislation would extend strict AG oversight to all political subdivisions, requiring:

  • Mandatory daily written time-tracking for any private firm retained by a local body.

  • Strict rules that all billing records are public information subject to disclosure under the West Virginia Freedom of Information Act (FOIA).

  • Legal review and veto power by the Attorney General over local contingency arrangements.


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