Here is the complete summary transcript of the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (SWA) regular meeting held on June 24, 2026.
[00:00] Administrative Business & Minutes Approval
Previous Minutes: The board approved minutes from three previous meetings via 5-0 votes:
The May 27, 2026 regular meeting.
The June 10, 2026 special meeting.
The June 17, 2026 special meeting.
Financials: The financial statements and payment of bills were approved 5-0. It was noted that there was no purchasing card statement for the month.
[02:00] Landfill & Drone Survey Update
Capacity Tracking: An engineer is expected next week to deliver data tracking the leachate flow and a recent drone survey. This paperwork will establish the remaining capacity/space at the landfill.
[02:40] County Commission Request for Information
Data Transfer: In response to Commissioner Rider's request at the last County Commission meeting for details on different operational options, the SWA voted to provide the information on a cleaned-up thumb drive.
[03:32] Procurement Protocol for Engineering Firms (Chapter 5G)
Legal Requirements: Board Attorney Dave Sims presented a legal procurement package required under West Virginia Code Chapter 5G. This law dictates that the SWA must seek Expressions of Interest (EOI) and Request for Qualifications (RFQ) to interview and rank engineering firms for the upcoming transfer station project.
No-Price Certification: Sims emphasized that by law, engineering firms are explicitly barred from presenting cost or pricing estimates during this initial qualifications phase. Price is negotiated only after the board selects and ranks the most qualified firm.
Timeline & Advertising: The board voted 5-0 to authorize Sims to publish a Class 2 legal advertisement next week in the Pocahontas Times and the Charleston Gazette to maximize competitive regional reach. A Director of Purchasing/Contact Person will be designated next.
[11:33] Public Service Commission (PSC) Cases & Billing Delays
Green Box Fee Tariff: Sims reported that the PSC rejected an objection filed by PSC staff that sought to halt the green box fee increase. The PSC officially approved the SWA's new tariff. The updated Green Box fee remains set to take effect July 1, 2026.
Town of Durbin Litigation: SWA legal counsel noted that PSC staff moved to require the Town of Durbin to retain legal representation for its complaint against the SWA, as public entities are legally barred from representing themselves pro se before the commission. If Durbin fails to obtain counsel, the case faces dismissal.
Billing Delays: Due to the absence of an office administrator, the SWA announced it is behind on green box billing. Invoices will not go out on their typical July 15th schedule.
[14:21] Public Comments
Out-of-State Waste Concerns: A citizen volunteer raised concerns about garbage allegedly entering the facility from Lake Moomaw, Virginia without proper declaration, violating DEP reporting laws, and highlighted structural asbestos risks tied to out-of-state Construction and Demolition (C&D) waste. She also questioned why the SWA is pursuing a public transfer station if private operator Mr. McComb is planning to build his own.
Meeting Facilitation: A resident questioned why Board Attorney Dave Sims frequently guides the meeting progression, handles procurement packets, and interacts as an active board figure rather than strictly providing legal counsel. SWA Chair leadership countered that Sims works directly for the board and that navigating Chapter 5G guidelines is explicitly a legal framework.
Board Qualifications: A citizen referenced statements from a prior June meeting where an engineer was promised to be present by June 24th. They argued that the board's heavy reliance on legal counsel to build standard procurement packets indicates a lack of functional solid waste expertise.
Hauler Regulations & Tariffs: A citizen noted conversations with Tygart Valley Sanitation regarding laws on overnight garbage storage in trucks, asserting that Tygart Valley retains valid legal authority and utility certificates to haul out of the Durbin area without interruption.
Jack Mall Property Agreements: A resident inquired if the previous Letter of Intent (LOI) with Jack Mall properties remains active. Board members responded with a definitive "No." The resident further pressed regarding meeting minutes from November 13, 2025, which indicated a transfer station footprint had been previously agreed upon at Green Bank. The Chair explicitly corrected the record, stating that the only location currently approved or designated for a transfer station site is the existing landfill property.
Evaluating Cost vs. Credentials: A local citizen and contractor expressed concern over evaluating engineering firms solely on qualifications without reviewing up-front costs. He cited estimates from regional sources indicating a wide disparity in engineering project rates. Additionally, he warned that projected local disposal rates could climb excessively high for C&D material, driving tonnage out of the county to nearby facilities like Nicholas County. Dave Sims contested these figures, calling the high price projections entirely inaccurate.
[28:52] Closing Announcements
Next Meeting: The next regular session of the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority is scheduled for Wednesday, July 29, 2026, at 6:00 PM at the county courthouse.
Original Video Source
Channel: Yushono Wimsatt
URL: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8fapw-fp5gQ
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The Hidden Mechanics of Trash: 5 Surprising Takeaways from the June SWA Meeting
Local government meetings are often dismissed as dry, bureaucratic exercises, but for the residents of Pocahontas County, these sessions are the front line of a fiscal and environmental battleground. The decisions made by the Solid Waste Authority (SWA) directly dictate the trajectory of local taxes, the safety of the air and water, and the long-term viability of county infrastructure. The SWA meeting on June 24, 2026, was a pivotal moment that laid bare the high stakes of local waste management: a single misstep in rate-setting could drive vital tonnage to competitors like Nicholas County, leaving local taxpayers to foot the bill for an underfunded system.
1. The "Price-Blind" Engineering Rule (WV Code 5G)
One of the most significant revelations of the meeting involved the rigid legal framework governing how the county must hire professional services for its upcoming transfer station. Under West Virginia Code Chapter 5G, the SWA is mandated to follow a "qualifications-based" selection process—a rule that feels counter-intuitive to any taxpayer accustomed to shopping for the best price.
During the initial phase, engineering firms are strictly prohibited from providing cost estimates. Instead, the board must issue a Request for Qualifications (RFQ) and rank firms based solely on their expertise. As Board Attorney Dave Sims emphasized: "Price is negotiated only after the board selects and ranks the most qualified firm."
To mitigate the risk of being "locked in" to a high-priced firm, the board voted 5-0 to publish Class 2 legal advertisements in both the Pocahontas Times and the Charleston Gazette. This strategic move aims to maximize regional competition, yet the core controversy remains: the board is essentially flying blind on the final project cost until the very end of the selection process.
2. Debunking the Transfer Station Location Myths
Public confusion regarding the proposed transfer station’s location has been a point of friction for months. Rumors suggested the authority was eyeing the Jack Mall property or a specific footprint in Green Bank. During the June 24th session, the Board definitively cleared the air, officially terminating the Letter of Intent (LOI) with Jack Mall properties.
Critically, the Chair corrected the record regarding meeting minutes from November 13, 2025, which some residents believed had already finalized a Green Bank site. The Board stated clearly that the only location currently approved or designated for a transfer station is the existing landfill property. While this transparency is a necessary step in rebuilding public trust, the reversal of previous considerations highlights a reactive rather than proactive approach to site selection.
3. The Virginia Leak and the McComb Conflict
The meeting’s most alarming testimony concerned environmental safety and strategic redundancy. A citizen volunteer raised "The Virginia Leak"—reports of garbage entering county facilities from Lake Moomaw, Virginia, without proper declaration. This isn't just a matter of paperwork; it represents a significant fiscal and health threat. Unreported out-of-state waste, particularly Construction and Demolition (C&D) debris, carries risks of structural asbestos. If the Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) identifies these reporting violations, the resulting fines would fall directly on Pocahontas County taxpayers.
This tension between the county’s desire to be a regional waste hub and its inability to police incoming hazardous materials was compounded by a strategic question: Why is the SWA pursuing a public transfer station when a private operator, Mr. McComb, is already planning his own? This potential "duplication of services" suggests a lack of coordination between public planning and private sector development, raising the specter of a taxpayer-funded facility that might struggle to compete.
4. The Durbin Legal Trap: No "Pro Se" for Public Entities
In a classic "David vs. Goliath" scenario, the Town of Durbin’s ongoing challenge against the SWA has hit a procedural wall. A recent Public Service Commission (PSC) ruling has mandated that the Town of Durbin must hire formal legal counsel, as public entities are legally barred from representing themselves pro se.
This creates a significant financial hurdle for the small municipality. If Durbin cannot afford the high cost of an attorney, their complaint faces immediate dismissal. This "legal trap" underscores the procedural hurdles that prevent smaller government units from seeking administrative clarity or challenging the decisions of larger county authorities.
5. The Expertise Gap: A Missing Engineer and a Dominant Attorney
A recurring theme of the night was the perceived "expertise gap" on the Board. Residents pointed out a troubling optics issue: Board Attorney Dave Sims frequently directs the flow of the meeting and handles technical procurement packets—roles usually reserved for technical staff or the board members themselves.
The public’s frustration was fueled by a broken promise. At a previous June meeting, an engineer was promised to be present on the 24th to provide functional expertise; however, the engineer was absent, leaving only the attorney to navigate technical questions. This reliance on legal counsel rather than engineering leadership has led many in the community to question whether the SWA possesses the functional knowledge required to manage a project of this scale.
Conclusion: A July 29th Horizon
As Pocahontas County looks toward the second half of the year, several milestones are approaching. The new Green Box fee tariff takes effect on July 1, 2026. However, residents should expect delays; the SWA announced that billing is currently behind schedule due to the absence of an office administrator.
The SWA will reconvene for its next regular session on Wednesday, July 29, 2026, at 6:00 PM at the county courthouse. As the authority begins its regional hunt for an engineering firm, the community is left with a daunting question: Does a "qualifications-based" procurement system truly protect the taxpayer, or does the lack of upfront pricing create an unavoidable fiscal risk for the county’s future?
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Garbage, Guidelines, and Green Boxes: 5 Things You Didn't Know About Pocahontas County’s Waste Management
1. Introduction: The Invisible Machinery of Local Government
Solid waste management is the ultimate "invisible" service. For most residents, the machinery of garbage collection only becomes visible when a bin is missed or a fee increases. Yet, beneath the surface of daily disposals lies a complex web of engineering protocols, strict legal frameworks, and administrative hurdles that dictate how a community handles its refuse.
The machinery of local government began to grind more publicly during the June 24, 2026, meeting of the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (SWA). We saw a glimpse of this shifting toward transparency when the SWA voted to provide Commissioner Rider with a "cleaned-up thumb drive" containing operational data requested by the County Commission. It was a rare moment of digital data-sharing in an agency often defined by slow-moving paperwork. From legal technicalities that prevent the board from knowing a project's price tag to a potential showdown between public and private infrastructure, here are five essential takeaways from the latest proceedings.
2. Takeaway 1: The "Price-Blind" Engineering Rule (Chapter 5G)
When a public entity seeks to hire an engineering firm for a major project—like the proposed transfer station—common sense might suggest shopping for the lowest bid. However, West Virginia Code Chapter 5G mandates a counter-intuitive approach that keeps the board "price-blind" during the initial phase.
Under this law, the SWA is legally forbidden from asking for cost or pricing estimates during the selection phase. Instead, the board must issue a Request for Qualifications (RFQ) and an Expression of Interest (EOI). To start this paper trail, the board authorized Class 2 legal advertisements to be published in both the Pocahontas Times and the Charleston Gazette to attract regional competition. The board’s task is to rank firms based solely on their expertise.
"Price is negotiated only after the board selects and ranks the most qualified firm," explained Board Attorney Dave Sims.
While this "qualifications-based" selection is designed to prioritize expertise over the lowest bidder, it remains a point of heavy public skepticism. One local contractor warned that this process ignores regional price disparities, potentially locking the county into expensive contracts before a single dollar amount is even discussed.
3. Takeaway 2: The Transfer Station Location—Setting the Record Straight
The SWA attempted to clear the fog of rumors regarding where the new transfer station will actually be built. During the meeting, the board moved to clarify the status of two frequently mentioned properties that have dominated local gossip:
- The Jack Mall Property: The board confirmed that the Letter of Intent (LOI) for this property is officially "No" and is no longer active.
- The Green Bank Footprint: A resident pressed the board regarding meeting minutes from November 13, 2025, which suggested a footprint had already been agreed upon in Green Bank. The Chair explicitly corrected the record, stating that those historical discussions did not constitute a final agreement.
Currently, the only officially approved or designated location for the transfer station is the footprint of the existing landfill property.
4. Takeaway 3: The "Pro Se" Trap—Why the Town of Durbin Must Lawyer Up
A legal technicality has created a procedural "dead end" in the ongoing dispute between the Town of Durbin and the SWA. Durbin recently filed a complaint against the SWA with the Public Service Commission (PSC), but the case is now at risk of total dismissal.
The PSC has moved to require the Town of Durbin to retain professional legal counsel. Under state regulations, public entities are barred from representing themselves pro se (without an attorney) before the commission. This development highlights how technicalities can stall local disputes; if Durbin does not find the budget for an attorney, their complaint effectively disappears regardless of its merits.
5. Takeaway 4: The Administrative Vacancy Impacting Your Mailbox
The administrative health of the SWA directly impacts the timing of residents' bills. While the PSC officially approved the SWA's new Green Box fee tariff—set to take effect July 1, 2026—residents should prepare for a delay in their paperwork.
The SWA is currently operating without an office administrator. This vacancy has caused a direct logjam in the billing cycle, and the board announced that invoices will not be sent out on their traditional July 15th schedule. For the average citizen, this administrative gap means a delay in billing that can lead to "bill shock" later in the summer or localized revenue shortages for the authority.
6. Takeaway 5: The "Border Crossing" Controversy and Private Competition
Serious environmental and policy concerns were raised regarding waste crossing state lines and the very necessity of a public project. A citizen volunteer alleged that garbage from Lake Moomaw, Virginia, is entering the facility without being properly declared, a direct violation of Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) reporting laws. The concern is that out-of-state Construction and Demolition (C&D) waste carries specific structural asbestos risks that the county may not be equipped to monitor.
However, the most significant investigative hook was a question of redundancy: Why is the SWA spending public funds to pursue a public transfer station when a private operator, Mr. McComb, is reportedly planning to build his own? This potential conflict between a state-mandated public utility and private enterprise suggests a looming policy battle over who should control the county’s waste infrastructure—and who should profit from it.
7. Conclusion: A Question of Expertise and Oversight
The June 24 meeting revealed a growing tension regarding the leadership of the SWA. Residents at the meeting questioned why Attorney Dave Sims frequently "guides the meeting progression" and acts as an active board figure rather than a background legal advisor. While the board maintains that Sims is merely navigating the complex "legal framework" of Chapter 5G, the public pushback suggests a desire for more "solid waste expertise" among the board members themselves.
As the county moves forward with regional advertisements for engineers and a potential clash with private operators, a vital question remains: As our local infrastructure evolves, what do we value more: the strict adherence to legal frameworks, or the direct transparency of project costs and leadership from day one?
The conversation continues at the next regular session of the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority, scheduled for Wednesday, July 29, 2026, at 6:00 PM at the county courthouse. Public attendance is encouraged to ensure continued oversight of these essential services.
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Understanding Qualifications-Based Selection (QBS): A Guide to West Virginia Chapter 5G
In the realm of public administration, procuring specialized professional services—such as engineering for the upcoming transfer station project on the existing landfill property—requires a departure from standard commodity purchasing. Unlike the procurement of goods where the "lowest bid" is the primary metric, West Virginia law mandates a process known as Qualifications-Based Selection (QBS). Governed by West Virginia Code Chapter 5G, this framework requires public bodies to prioritize technical competence and professional credentials over cost during the initial selection phase. This ensures that the infrastructure serving the public is designed by the most capable experts rather than the cheapest ones.
Key Insight: Technical Competence Over Financial Commitment The "So what?" of Chapter 5G is the mandatory protection of public safety and fiscal responsibility. By requiring agencies to evaluate and rank firms based on their expertise before discussing fees, the law ensures that high-stakes projects are not compromised by a "race to the bottom" in pricing. Technical quality is the primary filter; cost is a secondary negotiation point.
This legal theory necessitates a rigid, step-by-step practical process that public boards, such as the Solid Waste Authority (SWA), must execute to remain in compliance with state mandates.
2. The Tools of the Trade: EOI and RFQ
To initiate the procurement of professional services, a public body must use specific instruments designed to solicit qualifications rather than price. These instruments allow the SWA to identify a pool of candidates based on their ability to perform the specific technical requirements of the project.
Term | Purpose/Action |
EOI (Expression of Interest) | A formal document where firms state their interest in a project; used by the SWA to interview and rank firms based on preliminary interest and experience. |
RFQ (Request for Qualifications) | A detailed inquiry into a firm's specific credentials, staff expertise, and past performance; these qualifications form the evidentiary basis for the ranking process. |
To ensure a fair and competitive process, the law requires a Class 2 legal advertisement. This is not a mere formality but a mechanism for "regional reach" to ensure the public body has access to the best possible talent. Per the source context, the SWA utilizes two specific publications for this purpose:
- The Pocahontas Times (Ensuring local notice)
- The Charleston Gazette (Ensuring statewide and regional competitive reach)
Once these advertisements are published and responses are received, the "No-Price" rule becomes the absolute legal boundary for the selection process.
3. The "No-Price" Barrier: Why Cost Comes Last
The most critical—and often most misunderstood—component of Chapter 5G is the No-Price Certification. Engineering firms are explicitly barred from including any cost estimates, hourly rates, or price bids in their initial submissions.
The law mandates a strict three-stage sequence:
- Submission of Qualifications: Firms submit EOIs and RFQs focused strictly on technical ability.
- Interviewing and Ranking: The Board interviews the firms and ranks them in order of preference based on merit.
- Price Negotiation: Only after the top-ranked firm is selected does the Board enter price negotiations. (Note: Under general Chapter 5G standards, if a fair price cannot be reached with the #1 firm, negotiations are formally terminated and the Board moves to the #2 ranked firm).
Learning Moment: Public Friction vs. Legal Framework
This process often creates tension between standard business intuition and government law. During the SWA proceedings, a local contractor raised concerns regarding a "wide disparity in rates" between firms and argued that up-front costs should be a factor. Board Attorney Dave Sims provided a vital legal counter-argument, contesting the contractor’s figures as "entirely inaccurate."
In a public administration context, this friction highlights a key truth: the law assumes that "quality" prevents the long-term costs of engineering failures or "new tariffs" caused by inefficiency. In the eyes of Chapter 5G, the technical merit of the firm trumps initial rate disparities to protect the long-term public interest.
With the mechanics of selection established, we must examine the specific individuals responsible for safeguarding this rigid legal structure.
4. The Role of Legal Counsel in Public Works
In public meetings, the presence of legal counsel—such as Board Attorney Dave Sims—is an essential safeguard for ensuring the government body follows state codes and avoids procedural errors. In the context of Chapter 5G and the Solid Waste Authority, legal counsel performs two primary functions:
- Guiding Meeting Progression: Ensuring all discussions, votes, and interactions regarding procurement adhere to open meeting laws and the specific mandates of Chapter 5G.
- Handling Procurement Packets: Managing the "legal procurement packages" that contain the EOI and RFQ instructions to ensure they are legally defensible and meet the standards for utility certificates and DEP reporting.
The Necessity of Legal Safeguards: The importance of this oversight is underscored by current litigation, such as the Town of Durbin's complaint against the SWA. Because public entities are barred from representing themselves pro se (without a lawyer), the Town of Durbin faces dismissal of its case if it fails to obtain counsel. This underscores that legal management is not just administrative—it is a requirement to maintain standing and prevent the procedural errors that lead to Public Service Commission (PSC) intervention or the loss of project viability.
5. Summary Checklist for Students
When evaluating whether a public engineering project is in compliance with Chapter 5G, use the following "Procurement Master Checklist":
- [ ] Was an EOI or RFQ issued? (The focus must be on qualifications first).
- [ ] Was a Class 2 legal advertisement published? (Check for notices in both The Pocahontas Times and The Charleston Gazette).
- [ ] Did the firms withhold pricing? (Confirm that "No-Price Certification" was maintained in the initial submissions).
- [ ] Did the Board rank the firms before negotiating? (Technical ranking must be finalized before the first price discussion occurs).
- [ ] Is legal counsel overseeing the procurement packet? (Professional legal guidance is required to navigate the complexities of the West Virginia Code).
The Big Picture
Adhering to this rigid legal framework is the "ground truth" for specialized professional services in a public setting. While the process may seem counterintuitive to those accustomed to private sector bidding, Chapter 5G is designed to remove the risk of hiring the "cheapest" option when the safety and success of public infrastructure—like a waste transfer station—are at stake. By prioritizing credentials over cost, the law ensures that competence is the foundation of every public project.
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Civic Insider: Deconstructing the Solid Waste Authority Meeting
1. Introduction: The Anatomy of Local Governance
A Solid Waste Authority (SWA) is a public entity tasked with the vital mission of managing a community’s waste stream, recycling programs, and landfill operations. Far from being a simple matter of "garbage collection," an SWA meeting is a complex intersection of administrative law, environmental engineering, and fiscal oversight. During the June 24, 2026, meeting of the Pocahontas County SWA, three primary groups interacted to move the county’s infrastructure forward.
Learning Objective: To analyze how standardized administrative procedures and state laws govern the decision-making process of local utility authorities.
Group | Primary Function | Key Responsibility |
The Board | Decision-Making | Voting on motions, approving financials, and setting the strategic direction for waste facilities. |
Legal Counsel | Regulatory Guidance | Ensuring compliance with West Virginia Code (e.g., Chapter 5G) and representing the SWA before the PSC. |
The Public | Accountability | Providing local feedback, raising environmental concerns, and questioning the use of public funds. |
These players do not act in a vacuum; their interactions are governed by standardized procedures designed to ensure transparency and legality in every decision made.
2. The Paper Trail: Administrative Business & Financial Accountability
The opening of a public meeting often centers on "Minute Approval" and "Financial Statements." To the untrained eye, this is mere paperwork; to a governance specialist, it is the creation of a legal record that protects the authority from liability.
- Approval of Previous Minutes (May 27, June 10, June 17): By passing these with unanimous 5-0 votes, the board validates the official history of past decisions. This "paper trail" is the first line of defense in legal audits.
- Financial Statements and Bill Payments: The 5-0 approval of these documents ensures that the SWA is meeting its financial obligations and that public money is being spent as authorized by the board.
- Purchasing Card Statement Note: The specific mention that no purchasing card statement existed for the month is a form of "negative reporting." It demonstrates rigorous oversight by documenting that no unauthorized or hidden credit usage occurred, even when no spending took place.
This administrative foundation provides the stability necessary to manage the highly technical and data-driven requirements of modern landfill operations.
3. Technical Operations: Landfill Capacity and Data Transparency
Landfills are finite resources, and managing them requires precise measurements of "remaining airspace"—a term of art representing the volume of waste a facility can legally hold before it must close. The SWA relies on specialized data to track this capacity.
- Leachate Flow: Tracking the contaminated liquid that drains from the landfill to ensure environmental safety and treatment compliance.
- Drone Survey: Utilizing aerial technology to create precise 3D topographic maps to calculate exact landfill volume.
- Capacity Planning: Synthesizing drone and leachate data to establish the remaining "airspace" available for future waste disposal.
In a move toward inter-governmental cooperation, the SWA responded to a specific request from Commissioner Rider for operational data. The board voted to provide this information via a "cleaned-up" thumb drive, ensuring that the County Commission and the SWA are operating from a shared set of facts. While data drives these technical decisions, state legal statutes strictly dictate how the SWA must implement them.
4. The Legal Guardrails: Procurement and Chapter 5G
A core component of educational governance is understanding West Virginia Code Chapter 5G. This law governs how public agencies procure professional services, such as engineering firms for the SWA's proposed transfer station. A critical safeguard is the "No-Price Certification" rule, which mandates that qualifications must be ranked before cost is ever mentioned.
Step-by-Step Guide to Procurement (per Attorney Dave Sims):
- Solicitation: The SWA issues an Expression of Interest (EOI) and Request for Qualifications (RFQ).
- Interviewing/Ranking: The board evaluates firms based strictly on expertise and performance. At this "No-Price phase," firms are legally barred from presenting cost estimates.
- Negotiation: The board negotiates price only with the top-ranked firm. If an agreement cannot be reached, they move to the second-ranked firm.
- Advertising: To ensure a competitive regional reach, the process must be advertised as a Class 2 legal ad in the Pocahontas Times and the Charleston Gazette.
This mandated process transitions from state-wide rules to the specific regulatory cases and local disputes currently facing the authority.
5. Regulatory Oversight: The Public Service Commission (PSC) and Invoicing
The SWA is overseen by the Public Service Commission (PSC), which ensures that fees are fair and procedures are lawful. However, administrative gaps can often undermine public trust during times of regulatory change.
Entity/Issue | Current Status/Resolution |
Green Box Fee Tariff | Approved by PSC; increase effective July 1, 2026. |
Town of Durbin Litigation | Pending; Durbin is legally barred from representing themselves pro se as a public entity and must retain counsel. |
Green Box Billing | Delayed; invoices will miss the July 15th schedule due to administrative staffing shortages. |
Governance Insight: The lack of an office administrator has created a direct operational vulnerability. This human resource gap not only delays billing but also compounds public skepticism during a fee increase, illustrating how administrative capacity is linked to public confidence. These official actions are often the primary focus of community members during the public comment period.
6. The Public Voice: Identifying Concerns and Official Responses
The public comment section highlights the friction between administrative procedure and community skepticism. Citizens raised specific concerns regarding environmental risks and the board's reliance on legal counsel.
Citizen Concern vs. Authority Response
- Out-of-State Waste & Asbestos:
- Concern: A citizen raised alarms about garbage from Lake Moomaw, Virginia, potentially entering the facility undeclared, and the risk of asbestos in out-of-state Construction and Demolition (C&D) waste. She also questioned why the SWA is pursuing a public transfer station if private operator Mr. McComb is planning his own.
- Response: The SWA is moving forward with its own transfer station to ensure better waste flow management and strict adherence to DEP reporting laws.
- Property/Location (The Jack Mall Agreement):
- Concern: Inquiries were made regarding an old agreement with Jack Mall and whether a transfer station site was previously agreed upon for Green Bank, citing minutes from November 13, 2025.
- Response: The Chair corrected the record, stating the Jack Mall agreement is inactive and that the only approved site for a transfer station is the existing landfill property.
- Attorney's Role:
- Concern: Residents questioned why Attorney Dave Sims was so active in guiding meeting progression and procurement.
- Response: The Chair defended this as a necessity, noting that Sims works for the board specifically to navigate the complex legal frameworks like Chapter 5G.
- Qualifications vs. Cost:
- Concern: A contractor argued that ignoring cost initially could lead to excessive disposal rates, potentially driving tonnage out of the county to competitors in Nicholas County.
- Response: Legal counsel noted that the "qualifications-first" approach is a state law requirement and contested the accuracy of high price projections provided by the public.
This dialogue underscores the tension between the public’s demand for immediate cost-efficiency and the authority's requirement to follow a rigid, state-mandated legal procedure.
7. Conclusion: The Path Forward
The June 24th meeting illustrates that local governance is a delicate balancing act. It requires the integration of strict legal codes (Chapter 5G), environmental science (drone surveys and leachate tracking to monitor airspace), and public accountability (navigating PSC disputes and citizen skepticism). For the SWA, the path forward involves filling administrative gaps while strictly adhering to the "legal guardrails" that define public service.
Quick Info: Next Meeting
- Date: Wednesday, July 29, 2026
- Time: 6:00 PM
- Location: Pocahontas County Courthouse

