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Who Did the Deed?

 

 


The purchase of private property by the Pocahontas County Commission details two notable real estate acquisitions involving private sellers, featuring the specific dates and vote counts:

1. Acquisition of the Property Next to the Courthouse

The Pocahontas County Commission voted to purchase a parcel of land directly adjacent to the county courthouse to serve as a potential future site for an annex or an additional parking lot.

  • Private Seller: Debbie Corbin

  • Date of Vote/Transfer Action: November 19, 2024

  • Actual Vote Count: 2 to 1. Commissioners Walt Helmick and John Rebinski voted in favor of the $\$85,000$ purchase, while Commissioner Jamie Walker cast the dissenting vote.

2. The Pocahontas County Landfill Property Acquisition

The County Commission undertook a highly visible transaction to purchase the underlying acreage of the county landfill from private owners on behalf of the Solid Waste Authority (SWA) to prepare for its transition into a solid waste transfer station.

  • Private Seller: The Fertig Family (represented by counsel during final contract rewrites)

  • Date of Final Debate/Resolution: Mid-to-late August 2024 (with final implementations carrying into late November 2024 due to operational disputes over water rights and perimeter fencing).

  • Actual Vote Count: 2 to 1. The Commission initially voted to retain specialized legal counsel to execute the purchase deed. Commissioners John Rebinski and Walt Helmick approved moving forward with the transaction, while Commissioner Jamie Walker voted against the acquisition due to explicit objections regarding state right-of-way fence mandates.

Citizens Model

 


Under West Virginia Code § 6-6-7, a county official can be removed from office by a three-judge panel convened in the local Circuit Court. To initiate this process as citizens, the law mandates strict procedural frameworks, statutory grounds, and an explicit warning layout on every signature page.

Because Pocahontas County has a population of fewer than 10,000 residents, the statutory signature threshold under WV Code § 6-6-7(b)(1)(C)(iii) is the lesser of 100 qualified petitioners or 10% of the total registered voters who cast ballots in the election where the challenged commissioner was chosen.

Below is a formal draft of the petition formatted to meet West Virginia’s statutory requirements, incorporating the legal theories of malfeasance and incompetence surrounding the landfill contract expansion.

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF POCAHONTAS COUNTY, WEST VIRGINIA

IN RE: PETITION FOR THE REMOVAL OF [NAME OF COMMISSIONER], COUNTY COMMISSIONER FOR POCAHONTAS COUNTY, WEST VIRGINIA

CASE NO. ___________

PETITION FOR REMOVAL FROM PUBLIC OFFICE

To the Honorable Judges of the Circuit Court of Pocahontas County, West Virginia:

The undersigned, being qualified registered voter petitioners residing within Pocahontas County, West Virginia, respectfully proffer this Petition pursuant to West Virginia Code § 6-6-7, and move this Court to remove [Name of Commissioner] from the office of County Commissioner for Pocahontas County due to explicit acts of Malfeasance and Incompetence in office, as set forth below.

I. STATUTORY GROUNDS & STANDARD OF REVIEW

  1. West Virginia Code § 6-6-7 provides that any elective county officer may be removed from office for official misconduct, malfeasance in office, incompetence, neglect of duty, or gross immorality.

  2. Under West Virginia jurisprudence, Malfeasance is defined as the doing of an act which is positively unlawful or wrongful, which the officer has no right to perform (State ex rel. Sonner v. Shearin).

  3. Incompetence under West Virginia law denotes a lack of fitness, legal capability, or adequate qualification to discharge the mandatory public duties of the office.

II. STATUTORY CHARGES AND SPECIFIC WRONGFUL ACTS

CHARGE I: MALFEASANCE IN OFFICE

(Ultra Vires Attempt to Waive Sovereign Police and Eminent Domain Powers)

  1. On or about [Date of original contract/negotiation], the Respondent, acting in their official capacity as a Pocahontas County Commissioner, engaged in real estate acquisition negotiations for the Pocahontas County Landfill property.

  2. During said negotiations, Respondent explicitly executed or caused to be executed a contractual provision or deed covenant purporting to permanently waive, surrender, and "negotiate away" the County Commission’s statutory power of eminent domain regarding adjacent lands.

  3. Under the constitutional Reserved Powers Doctrine long established in West Virginia law, the power of eminent domain is an inalienable attribute of sovereignty delegated by the Legislature under WV Code § 54-1-1. A political subdivision possesses absolutely no legal capacity to contractually bargain away or limit its future exercise of eminent domain or police powers.

  4. By intentionally executing a contract clause that attempted to strip a future County Commission of its fundamental sovereign obligations, Respondent committed a positive, unlawful, and wrongful act ultra vires (beyond their lawful authority), constituting Malfeasance in Office.

CHARGE II: INCOMPETENCE IN OFFICE

(Waste of Public Assets and Creation of Void, Unenforceable Liabilities)

  1. Respondent demonstrated a gross lack of legal fitness and fundamental competence required to handle public acquisitions by allocating public county funds toward a property transaction based on an inherently void and legally toothless promise.

  2. Respondent's failure to recognize or adhere to the elementary constraints of municipal power has placed Pocahontas County in direct legal and financial jeopardy. By attempting to exercise eminent domain over the adjacent parcels in violation of the prior invalid agreement, the county now faces severe civil exposure, potential breach of contract claims, and heightened "just compensation" residue damages under West Virginia Constitution Article III, Section 9.

  3. Respondent’s inability to properly execute basic public contracts within statutory boundaries constitutes Incompetence in Office under WV Code § 6-6-7.

III. PRAYER FOR RELIEF

WHEREFORE, your Petitioners respectfully pray that:

  1. This Petition be accepted as meeting the statutory criteria of West Virginia Code § 6-6-7;

  2. This Court forward a copy of the charges to the Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia for the immediate designation of a three-judge court to hear this matter;

  3. Upon due notice and hearing, the Respondent be found to have committed malfeasance and incompetence; and

  4. An Order be entered immediately removing Respondent from the office of County Commissioner of Pocahontas County, declaring said office vacant.

Respectfully submitted this ______ day of ______________, 2026.

INFORMED ACKNOWLEDGEMENT OF PETITIONERS

(Every page of signatures must contain this statement or have the charges attached)

NOTICE TO SIGNERS: By signing this document, you are formally petitioning the Circuit Court of Pocahontas County for the removal of [Name of Commissioner] from the office of Pocahontas County Commissioner on the grounds of Malfeasance and Incompetence stemming from unauthorized, void land acquisition contracts and negotiations relating to the county landfill property. Your signature certifies that you are a registered voter living within Pocahontas County, West Virginia.

SignaturePrinted NameResidence AddressDate Signed
1.


2.


3.


STATUTORY VERIFICATION OATH

(To be executed by at least one of the primary petition signers before a Notary Public)

STATE OF WEST VIRGINIA

COUNTY OF POCAHONTAS, TO-WIT:

I, _______________________________, being first duly sworn, upon my oath state that I am a qualified Petitioner and registered voter in Pocahontas County, West Virginia; that I have read the foregoing Petition and know the contents thereof; and that the facts, allegations, and charges stated therein are true to the best of my knowledge, information, and belief.

_______________________________________

Primary Petitioner / Affiant

Taken, subscribed, and sworn to before me this ______ day of ______________, 2026.

My commission expires: ________________________

_______________________________________

Notary Public

Procedural Note for Filing

Once the required number of signatures is collected, the original petition must be filed directly with the Pocahontas County Circuit Clerk's Office at the courthouse in Marlinton. The filing petitioner accepts the responsibility to formally prosecute the action before the three-judge panel.

Removal Time?

 


In West Virginia state law, making a bad deal, executing an unenforceable contract clause, or misinterpreting the limits of municipal power does not, on its face, constitute a criminal offense.

However, West Virginia law draws a strict distinction between a good-faith legal error (which is a civil matter) and willful corruption, self-dealing, or intentional deception (which can cross into criminal or administrative removal statutes).

The application of criminal or removal statutes to this landfill scenario depends entirely on the intent and the underlying circumstances of the negotiation.

1. The Statutory Threshold: Criminal vs. Civil Misbehavior

Under West Virginia's criminal code, for public officials to face criminal prosecution for an official action, there must be evidence of a specific statutory violation—such as bribery, fraudulent schemes, or an intentional violation of public trust for personal enrichment.

Willful Malfeasance & "Official Misconduct"

While "official misconduct" is defined broadly in WV Code § 6-6-1 as "any willful unlawful behavior by a public officer in the course of his or her performance of the duties of the public office," it generally requires criminal intent to achieve an unlawful end.

  • The Innocent/Erroneous Scenario (No Crime): If past County Commissioners honestly believed they could legally negotiate away eminent domain to close a land deal for a needed county landfill, their actions are merely an unenforceable legal mistake. The remedy is civil: a court declares the clause void. No crime has been committed.

  • The Criminal Threshold (Potential Crime): If commissioners knew the clause was completely illegal and deliberately used it to deceive a private landowner into selling under false pretenses—or if a commissioner had a hidden financial interest in the surrounding land that would benefit from blocking future condemnation—the behavior shifts from a bad contract to potential fraud or misconduct.

2. Applicable West Virginia Statutes to Examine

If investigative or legal review reveals that the negotiation was tainted by more than a simple misunderstanding of the Reserved Powers Doctrine, several statutes come into play:

A. Official Misconduct and Neglect of Duty (WV Code § 6-6-7)

While this is an administrative removal statute rather than a felony criminal statute, it is the primary tool used in West Virginia to strip public officials of office for unlawful behavior.

  • Citizens or the county prosecuting attorney can file a formal removal petition in the circuit court.

  • "Maladministration" or "incompetence" includes the knowing waste or misappropriation of public funds. If commissioners spent public money to buy land based on a fraudulent or completely unauthorized legal premise, it can ground a formal push for removal from office.

B. Corporate and Public Fraud (WV Code § 61-3-24)

If a public official obtains property or an interest in land by false pretenses, tokens, or representations (meaning they knowingly made a promise they lacked the constitutional authority to keep, with the intent to defraud the landowner), they can face criminal charges for Obtaining Property by False Pretenses. In West Virginia, if the value of the property or the fraud scheme exceeds $1,000, it is prosecuted as a felony.

C. The West Virginia Governmental Ethics Act (WV Code § 6B-2-5)

The Ethics Act carries civil penalties, but willful violations can be referred for criminal prosecution.

  • Self-Dealing: Public officials are strictly prohibited from using their office for private gain. If the "negotiated restriction" on eminent domain was specifically tailored to protect the private property of a commissioner, a family member, or a business associate, it represents a severe violation of the Ethics Act and can trigger criminal misdemeanor charges under WV Code § 6B-2-10.

3. Summary of Criminal Exposure

ScenarioLegal Status in West VirginiaConsequences
Simple Legal Error (Commissioners signed an unenforceable waiver in good faith to secure a landfill site).Civil Matter Only. The clause is struck down as void under the Reserved Powers Doctrine.None for the individuals; the county faces civil exposure or a higher land-valuation payout.
Intentional Deception (Commissioners knowingly used a fake legal promise to induce a property sale).Potential Criminal Fraud.Investigation by state police or local prosecutor; potential charges under false pretense statutes.
Conflict of Interest (The waiver was created to protect a commissioner's private adjacent holdings).Criminal Ethics Violation & Misconduct.Ethics Commission investigation, referral for criminal prosecution, and mandatory removal from office under Chapter 6.

Conclusion for Investigators

To evaluate if a crime occurred, focus on the minutes of the meeting and the contemporaneous correspondence from when the landfill property was purchased. Did the county's legal counsel warn the commissioners at the time that they could not waive eminent domain? Did any commissioner stand to gain personally from ensuring the adjacent land could never be condemned?

Without a paper trail proving self-dealing or conscious fraud, West Virginia courts treat an invalid waiver of sovereign power as a civil contract defect rather than a criminal offense.

Selling Pocahontas Out--Time for some resignations?

 


Under West Virginia law and established American jurisprudence, the legal validity of this negotiated restriction hinges on a foundational constitutional rule known as the Reserved Powers Doctrine.

Here is a formal legal breakdown of the statement, the structural reality of the negotiation, and the statutory limits governing West Virginia County Commissioners.

1. Statutory Authority of County Commissions

In West Virginia, a County Commission is a corporation created by statute, possessing only the powers expressly granted to it by the State Legislature or the WV Constitution, along with those necessarily implied to execute those express powers (State ex rel. County Court v. Demus).

Under WV Code § 54-1-1 and § 54-1-2, the State of West Virginia delegates the power of eminent domain to political subdivisions, including County Commissions, for clear "public uses." Operating a municipal solid waste facility or county landfill constitutes a legitimate public use under public health and internal improvement mandates.

2. The Legal Ability to "Negotiate Away" Eminent Domain

The core legal defect in the scenario described is that a government entity cannot contract away its sovereign power of eminent domain.

The Reserved Powers Doctrine

Eminent domain is viewed as an inherent, inalienable attribute of sovereignty. Under the Reserved Powers Doctrine, a sitting body of County Commissioners cannot enter into a contract or real estate transaction that binds either themselves or future commissions from exercising their police powers or statutory condemnation duties in the future.

  • The Rule of Law: If a County Commission explicitly signs a contract or deed covenant stating, "We promise never to use eminent domain on the adjacent tracts," that clause is generally considered void ab initio (void from the beginning) as a matter of public policy.

  • Binding Future Boards: One set of commissioners cannot legally tie the hands of future boards regarding sovereign responsibilities. If a future public health emergency or mandatory landfill expansion requires taking that exact adjacent land, the commission retains the legal right to condemn it, regardless of what was previously written into the purchase contract.

3. Legal Analysis of the Negotiation

If such an explicit negotiation occurred during the initial land acquisition, it produces several distinct legal outcomes under West Virginia real estate and municipal law:

A. The Contractual Clause is Unenforceable

If the Commission tries to condemn the neighboring land today, the neighboring landowner cannot force a court to halt the condemnation based solely on that contract. The West Virginia courts would likely rule that the clause attempting to waive eminent domain is legally toothless and cannot block a valid public-use condemnation action.

B. Impact on "Good Faith" Negotiations

Before a County Commission can file an eminent domain petition in a West Virginia Circuit Court, WV Code § 54-1-2a strictly requires that the county make a "reasonable, good faith attempt" to negotiate a purchase with the landowner first.

  • If the county previously promised not to condemn the land, a sudden pivot to condemnation could be leveraged by the landowner's defense counsel.

  • While it will not stop the eminent domain process entirely, the landowner can argue that the county is acting in bad faith, potentially complicating or delaying the valuation process in court.

C. Potential Breach of Contract / Restitution Claims

While the court will allow the eminent domain proceeding to advance to protect the public interest, the county may face financial exposure. If the landowner can prove they dropped their initial purchase price or gave up specific rights because the county promised not to condemn their remaining land, the landowner might sue the County Commission for breach of contract or seek restitution.

  • The court may determine that the "just compensation" owed for the new land must reflect the broken promise, effectively driving up the acquisition costs or damages to the residue property under WV Constitution Article III, Section 9.

Summary of Legal Standing

FactorStatus Under West Virginia Law
Can the Commission negotiate this?They can physically write it into a contract, but they lack the legal capacity to make it permanently binding.
Is the waiver valid?No. It violates the Reserved Powers Doctrine; eminent domain cannot be surrendered by contract.
Can neighboring land still be taken?Yes. If a legitimate public use is proven, the current Commission can file a condemnation petition.
Is there any penalty for the county?Possibly. The county may be liable for contract damages or a higher "just compensation" valuation due to the broken stipulation.

If a local authority is currently attempting to invoke eminent domain on surrounding land despite a past written agreement, the historical contract cannot block the taking itself, but it serves as highly potent leverage for the landowner to maximize the "just compensation" payout in a valuation hearing.

The $4.1 Million Garbage Gamble

 


The $4.1 Million Garbage Gamble: Why Pocahontas County’s Trash Future is More Complicated Than You Think

Introduction: The Looming Landfill Crisis

Pocahontas County is facing a definitive expiration date on its most essential service: the local landfill is reaching its capacity. This reality has thrust the Solid Waste Authority into a complex financial and investigative battleground where there are no easy answers. While the immediate problem is space, the underlying challenge involves balancing astronomical infrastructure costs against the legal and economic realities of rural waste management.

The community currently stands at a crossroads, weighing the necessity of a new transfer station against a $4.1 million price tag. Local officials must navigate a landscape of high-stakes engineering requirements and mounting public frustration regarding transparency. As the clock ticks down, the solutions being proposed are far more intricate than simply hauling trash to the next county.

The "Common Sense" Solutions That Don't Work

Many residents initially pointed to truck leasing as a simpler alternative, but the fiscal picture for "Option 1" is bleak. Leasing just two trucks to prevent overflow would cost $17,000 monthly, but the true cost swells to $73,000 per month when accounting for $24-per-hour drivers and overhead. Maintenance alone—including $38,000 for fuel, $12,000 for tires, and $3,000 for DEF fluid—makes this option an operational deficit.

Logistically, hauling waste out-of-county is a non-starter because neighboring landfills close at noon on Saturdays and remain shuttered on Sundays and Mondays. For a county generating waste seven days a week, this creates an impossible bottleneck. Furthermore, this plan only addresses household "green box" waste, leaving the municipal debris from Marlington and Durbin with nowhere to go.

The proposal for localized compactors (Options 2 and 3) is equally fraught with hidden expenses. The county only owns one of its five collection sites; acquiring the others would cost $400,000 in land costs alone, while infrastructure for power and reinforced concrete pads would push the total to $4 million. Operationally, liquid waste settles in these units and freezes solid during the winter, and the required site attendants would add $143,000 in annual labor costs.

 


The Legal Trap: Why the County Can't Say "No" to Out-of-State Trash

A major point of contention for residents is the influx of waste from Virginia, which many feel is accelerating the landfill's closure at their expense. Attorney David Sims clarified that the county’s hands are legally tied by U.S. Supreme Court precedents regarding Interstate Commerce Law. Because waste is legally defined as commerce, the county is prohibited from banning out-of-state materials or charging "punitive" fees to outsiders.

"As long as the landfill remains an active, permitted facility, it must accept all legally permissible incoming solid waste."

This "open door" policy feels like a betrayal to residents who are essentially subsidizing the wear and tear caused by commercial interests from Virginia. Investigative scrutiny suggests this is a major driver of local frustration, as the county's resources are depleted by outside waste they are legally mandated to accept. This makes the transition to a transfer station a legal escape hatch as much as a logistical necessity.

The High-Efficiency Transfer Station: 21 Tons at a Time

The recommended path forward is "Option 5," a public-private partnership (PPP) to build a regional transfer station utilizing a "truck-to-truck" design. This system features a log-loader style setup where collection vehicles dump directly into large aluminum walking-floor trailers positioned inside the building. By keeping waste entirely off the floor, the design mitigates the odor and rodent issues common in older facilities.

The engineering specifications are built for extreme industrial durability, featuring a 10-to-12-inch thick tipping floor made of 8,000 PSI concrete. This facility would allow the county to move 21-ton loads instead of the current 15-ton limit, significantly increasing transit efficiency. This shift in capacity would reduce regional transit from 533 to 380 trips per year, saving 153 truckloads of fuel and road wear annually.

The $4.1 Million Price Tag and the Monopoly Debate

The proposed solution involves a 15-year lease-to-own agreement with Jack Properties, with full ownership transferring to the county at the end of the term. While this provides a turnkey solution, the lack of an open, competitive bidding process has raised red flags among taxpayers. Many are concerned that using the Greenbrier Valley Economic Development Corporation (GVEDC) to facilitate the project bypasses public oversight and ignores 1% low-interest state loans.

The financial burden of this $4.1 million deal may fall directly on residents, with projections suggesting "green box" fees could double to $260 annually. This represents a regressive policy for citizens on fixed incomes who may generate very little waste. Furthermore, residents have documented undocumented out-of-state commercial vehicles dumping waste, noting that failure to declare waste origins is a misdemeanor under West Virginia Code.

"The GVEDC involvement creates a $250,000 tax exemption that strips funding away from local emergency services and schools," noted resident Nancy Harris during the public comment period.

The Capping Countdown: 12 to 24 Months to Act

The timeline for action is no longer a matter of theory; the landfill has entered its final stage of life. Recent engineering updates, focusing on a precise terracing plan to maximize the existing lined footprint, project a remaining lifespan of only 12 to 24 months. Once these capacity thresholds are hit, the county is legally required to begin formal, permanent closure procedures.

To manage these costs, the board has approved a $66,000 withdrawal from escrow for a specialized "turf landfill cover" system. This alternative capping method is expected to save the county hundreds of thousands of dollars compared to traditional topsoil capping. However, while these savings help the backend of the crisis, they do not alleviate the immediate $4.1 million requirement for a post-landfill future.

Conclusion: A Community at a Crossroads

Pocahontas County is moving toward a highly efficient infrastructure solution, but the process has left many feeling sidelined by a "monopoly" arrangement. The tension between engineering necessity and public affordability is at an all-time high. While the 15-year partnership offers a clear mechanical path forward, the social cost to residents on fixed incomes remains a significant point of contention.

Because the Public Service Commission has not yet issued a final "Certificate of Need," a small window for public discourse and legal challenge remains open. The community must now decide: is this $4.1 million private partnership a necessary evolution for a rural county, or is it a missed opportunity for transparent, public-sector innovation?

Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority Briefing: May 27, 2026

Executive Summary

The Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority met on May 27, 2026, to address the impending closure of the county landfill and evaluate long-term waste management strategies. Current projections estimate the landfill has between 12 and 24 months of remaining capacity. After analyzing five distinct proposals, the Board has prioritized a Public-Private Partnership (PPP) to construct an enclosed, regional transfer station at a projected cost of $4.1 million over a 15-year lease-to-own agreement.

While the Authority maintains a stable financial position—reporting a year-to-date operating gain of $113,970.89—the transition involves significant fiscal and legal challenges. Public opposition has intensified, focusing on the lack of competitive bidding for the PPP, potential tax exemptions for private partners that could impact local services, and the prospect of annual residential green box fees doubling to $260.

Financial Status and Budgetary Actions

The Authority is currently 83% through its budget year. The following financial metrics were reported:

  • Operating Performance: A fiscal year-to-date operating gain of $113,970.89 is reported, though these funds are earmarked for May and June operating expenses.
  • Revenue Streams: Income from green box collections is projected to exceed budget targets, compensating for lower-than-expected tipping fees and grant funding.
  • Expenditure Management: Total expenses are at 76.53% of the budget. Overages occurred in postage, advertising, engineering, and site maintenance, while payroll remains at 82%.
  • 2026–2027 Budget: The Board approved the upcoming fiscal year budget (4–0 vote), which includes provisions for a six-month transition period into the new transfer station system.
  • Closure Escrow: The Board authorized a request to the Public Service Commission to withdraw $66,000 for engineering and permit modifications. This will fund an alternative turf landfill cover system, which is significantly cheaper than traditional topsoil capping.

Evaluation of Waste Management Proposals

The Board reviewed five options to manage the county’s waste stream following the landfill's closure.

Rejected Proposals

Option

Description

Primary Reasons for Rejection

1. Remote Hauling

Leasing trucks to haul waste to landfills in Greenbrier or Tucker County.

Cost-prohibitive (~$73,000/month); logistical hurdles with landfill hours; ignores municipal/construction debris.

2 & 3. Site Compactors

Installing compactors at the five existing green box sites.

High infrastructure costs (2M–4M); operational issues (freezing mechanisms); security risks (theft/vandalism).

4. Small Transfer Station

A localized facility with basic hauling operations.

High transport logistics costs (~$360,672/year) excluding labor and maintenance.

Preferred Path: Public-Private Partnership (Option 5)

The Board evaluated a proposal for an enclosed regional transfer station designed for high-capacity logistics.

  • Design Specifications: The facility will be fully enclosed to protect waste from weather and manage leachate runoff. It utilizes a log-loader style setup, allowing collection vehicles to dump directly into walking-floor trailers.
  • Financial Terms: The $4.1 million all-in cost covers design, high-durability construction (8,000 PSI concrete tipping floor), financing, and maintenance over 15 years. The county assumes full ownership at the end of the term.
  • Efficiency Gains: Transitioning to 21-ton capacity aluminum walking-floor trailers will reduce regional transit requirements from 533 to 380 trips annually, a reduction of 153 loads.

Operational Constraints and Legal Realities

Board attorney David Sims provided critical clarifications regarding the landfill’s final months of operation:

  • Interstate Commerce Law: Based on U.S. Supreme Court precedent, the county cannot legally ban or charge higher fees for out-of-state waste (e.g., from Virginia). As a permitted facility, it must accept all legally permissible waste.
  • Closure Timeline: Consulting engineers are developing a terracing and fill plan to maximize the existing footprint. A definitive report is expected shortly, with current estimates placing the remaining lifespan at 12 to 24 months. Formal closure notices will be issued once capacity thresholds are reached.

Public Commentary and Concerns

The meeting included a period of public comment characterized by significant tension regarding the Board’s transparency and fiscal choices.

  • Competitive Bidding and Monopolies: Citizens raised objections to the lack of an open bidding process for the transfer station, characterizing the private arrangement as a monopoly.
  • Tax and Funding Impacts: Concerns were raised that the Greenbrier Valley Economic Development Corporation (GVEDC) involvement creates a $250,000 tax exemption. Critics argue this strips funding from local emergency services and schools and suggested the Board pursue 1% low-interest state loans instead.
  • Fee Increases: Residents on fixed incomes expressed alarm at reports that annual green box fees could double to $260. There is a perception that residents are subsidizing commercial waste operations.
  • Legal Standing: Public advocates noted that according to Public Service Commission files, a final "Certificate of Need" for the transfer station has not been issued. This suggests the property transfer is not finalized, potentially leaving a window for residents to challenge the current plan.
  • Waste Origins: Claims were made regarding undocumented commercial vehicles from Virginia dumping waste. Under West Virginia Code, failure to declare waste origins in writing is a misdemeanor.

Structured summary transcript of the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority meeting from May 27, 2026.

 


Here is the structured summary transcript of the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority meeting from May 27, 2026.

Meeting Overview & Financial Report

The meeting opens with the approval of past minutes and a review of the financial status [00:00].

  • Budget Tracking: The authority is 83% through the fiscal year [00:49].

  • Revenue & Expenses: Green box collections are exceeding budget projections, though tipping fees and grant funds are running low. Total expenses sit at 76.53% of the budget [00:49].

  • Operating Funds: There is a current operating gain of $113,970.89, much of which will be reserved for May and June expenses [00:49].

Analysis of Solid Waste Disposal Options

Authority Attorney David Sims and Landfill Manager Chris McComb present an analysis of options submitted by the public to manage the county’s waste, ahead of the impending landfill closure [04:20].

Option 1: Leasing Trucks to Haul Waste to Out-of-County Landfills

  • The Plan: Lease trucks to haul green box waste directly to Greenbrier or Tucker County landfills [05:08].

  • Financial Breakdown:

    • Truck leases cost $8,500/month per truck. Safety and operational demands require two trucks ($17,000/month total) [06:58].

    • Annual fuel estimate: $38,000; oil changes: $4,400; tires: $12,000; DEF fluid: $3,000 [08:11].

    • Estimated operational baseline (excluding landfill tipping fees) is roughly $73,000 per month [09:55].

  • Verdict: The option is deemed cost-prohibitive. Furthermore, external landfills close at noon on Saturdays and remain closed Sundays, creating severe waste storage and overflow violations locally over weekends [10:29]. It also completely neglects a third of the county's waste, such as municipal and construction debris [14:23].

Options 2 & 3: Installing Compactors at Local Green Box Sites

  • Site Management Challenges: The authority only owns one of the five green box sites [21:03]. Buying the other four sites and making infrastructure improvements requires heavy investment [21:29].

  • Infrastructure Needs: Heavy-duty compactors require three-phase electrical power grid installations, reinforced concrete pads, grading, and drainage [21:51].

  • Equipment Costs: Industrial compactors suited for these sites cost approximately $60,000 per unit, plus an additional $30,000 per receiver box (requiring two boxes per site) [23:51].

  • Operational Overhead: Unlike standard green boxes, compactors cannot be operated by the public due to safety and improper waste dumping risks. Staffing attendants for the 5,700 combined yearly operational hours at $25/hour totals $143,000 annually [33:50].

  • Total Estimated Cost: The capital entry cost ranges from $875,000 to $1.25 million at a bare minimum, scaling up to $2 million when factoring in land acquisition, title fees, and environmental reviews [32:05].

Option 4: Repurposing Buildings or Smaller Scale Facilities

  • This approach shares identical hauling friction hurdles, requiring roughly 59 driver hours per week to run out-of-county [37:02]. Running the county’s localized waste haul solely to a primary home facility costs roughly $360,672 annually in pure transport friction [38:25].

Option 5: Constructing a New Landfill

  • The Legal Barrier: When the County Commission initially purchased the landfill property, they explicitly negotiated away the right to claim surrounding land via eminent domain [59:24].

  • Capital and Tipping Projections: Engineering a single new 1-acre cell costs $5 million to $8 million [01:01:35]. Safely operating a localized landfill space for 15 years would easily exceed $10 million [01:01:50]. To break even, the tipping fee would have to skyrocket to $275 per ton, pushing consumer green box fees up to $500 [01:02:42].

Public-Private Partnership (PPP) Proposal

Jacob Meck of Jack Properties and Jacob Meck Construction gives a presentation detailing a proposed public-private partnership for a "truck-to-truck" transfer station [01:20:49].

  • Structure of the Partnership: Jack Properties will design, build, finance, own, and maintain the facility under a 15-year lease agreement [01:22:51]. The Solid Waste Authority will handle the permitting and daily operation of the site [01:23:06]. At the end of the 15 years, the entire facility transfers completely to the county [01:22:51].

  • All-In Financial Cost: The total contract cost over 15 years—covering construction, compound financing interest, long-term specialized equipment overhauls, and structural tipping floor repairs—is set at $4.1 million [01:23:34].

  • Facility Design: Unlike traditional "truck-to-floor" models that leave raw garbage sitting openly on the floor (like the Petersburg facility example) [01:41:20], Meck proposes a perpendicular design. Smaller collection vehicles back up directly over a walking floor trailer, reducing handling labor, minimizing heavy equipment costs, and keeping waste off the floor [01:42:13].

Public Comments & Resident Objections

The meeting shifts to highly contentious public comments where citizens express frustration over the handling of the project [01:59:47].

  • Bidding Integrity Concerns: Residents repeatedly demand to know why the transfer station contract was negotiated directly as a private partnership instead of being put out for a standard competitive open public bid [01:57:14].

  • Out-of-State Waste Dumping: Citizens highlight that commercial garbage trucks are frequently hauling waste into the county landfill from Virginia [02:05:23]. Attorney Sims notes that under U.S. Supreme Court interstate commerce rulings, the county cannot legally discriminate against or reject out-of-state solid waste at a public facility [55:11].

  • Economic Strain: Residents on fixed incomes strongly object to the green box fees doubling to cover future transfer costs, arguing they create minimal personal trash but carry an unfair financial burden [02:09:58].

  • Alternative Ideas: Commenters point out that the property transfer has not been completely finalized with the Public Service Commission [02:15:12]. They urge the board to stop the current process to explore cheaper grants, localized compactor systems, or seeking land use agreements with the Monongahela National Forest [02:16:20].

The meeting video cuts out during ongoing citizen discussion [02:17:15].


Who Did the Deed?

    The purchase of private property by the Pocahontas County Commission details two notable real estate acquisitions involving private sell...

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