Stage 1: Immediate effect :The $600 Fee Hike and Delinquency Spiral
- The Funding Gap: To meet its fixed $201,108 annual lease payment to JacMal, LLC and cover the cost of hauling waste out of the county to the Greenbrier County Landfill, the SWA must find a major new revenue stream.
- The Price Spike: If the County Commission continues to refuse the requested $300,000 annual subsidy, the SWA will have no choice but to raise the flat annual Green Box fee to $600 per household to avoid immediate insolvency.
- Socioeconomic Compliance Collapse: A flat $600 fee consumes a staggering 1.67% of the county's median household income ($36,026). In a county with an 18.6% poverty rate, this extreme regressive pressure would cause a massive spike in non-compliance.
- The Legal Dead End: Because West Virginia law prevents the SWA from placing waste fees directly on annual property tax tickets, SWA officials would be forced to sue thousands of non-paying residents individually in Magistrate Court. This process is so slow, expensive, and administratively burdensome that the SWA’s collection system would completely lock up, instantly pushing delinquency past the SWA's critical 40.64% lease default threshold.
Stage 2: SWA Bankruptcy and Private Seizure of Public Infrastructure
- Lease Default: With its residential fee collection crippled by a delinquency spiral, the SWA would default on its fixed monthly payments of $16,759 to JacMal, LLC.
- Private Takeover of the Transfer Station: Because JacMal, LLC (owned by the Mecks of Allegheny Disposal) retains physical ownership of the transfer station under the Option 4 public-private partnership, a SWA default allows the private firm to seize control of the facility and shut its gates to the public.
- Complete Operational Cessation: This seizure would leave Pocahontas County—which generates 7,400 to 8,000 tons of waste annually—without a single functional, lawful waste disposal mechanism.
- Administrative Resignation: SWA administrators have already warned that under these conditions, the SWA would simply file for bankruptcy, dissolving the authority and dumping the entire solid waste disaster onto the County Commission to deal with as "someone else's problem".
Stage 3: Severe Environmental Degradation and Economic Collapse
- Explosion of Illegal Dumping: Deprived of both local landfill access and the Green Box dumpster network, residents and businesses would have no legal outlet for garbage. Roadside litter, open burning of plastics, and illegal dumping would explode across the county's remote public lands, which make up over 60% of the county's acreage.
- Vandalism and Contamination: Unmonitored Green Box sites would be overrun, with commercial, demolition, and hazardous appliance waste piled outside locked gates, polluting local soils and watershed areas.
- Tourism Industry Devastation: Pocahontas County’s local economy depends entirely on its clean environment, which generates over $112 million annually in outdoor tourism through its state parks, state forests, and the Snowshoe Mountain Resort. The visible blight of roadside garbage and burning dump sites would devastate the county's reputation as a pristine outdoor destination, triggering a rapid decline in tourism revenue, local business closures, and county tax receipts.
Stage 4: Emergency Taxpayer Bailout
- Unfunded Liabilities: In the wake of SWA's bankruptcy, the SWA's long-term liabilities would fall directly onto the county taxpayers. This includes the $2.4 million to $3.2 million landfill closure cost and the legally mandated $50,000 to $75,000 annual post-closure environmental monitoring liability that must be maintained for 30 years.
- Hostage Negotiations: To restore basic sanitation and save the tourism economy, the County Commission would be forced to execute an emergency taxpayer-funded bailout. This would likely require paying premium, un-negotiated commercial rates to JacMal, LLC to reopen the private transfer station, effectively forcing county residents to pay twice for the same failed infrastructure.
Administrative Risk Mitigation Brief: Protecting SWA Assets and Solvency
To protect the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (SWA) from a catastrophic lease default, private asset seizure, or administrative bankruptcy, SWA leadership must transition from reactive crisis management to proactive asset insulation.
Below is a step-by-step risk mitigation framework outlining the specific administrative and legal moves the SWA can execute right now using its existing regulatory powers and physical resources.
Step 1: Legal Insulation and Protection of SWA Fleet Assets
The SWA’s most valuable liquid capital assets are the three walking floor waste transfer trailers purchased in September 2025 from Southeast Trailers for $328,149.00. Because these trailers are owned by the SWA and are separate from the JacMal, LLC lease agreement, they represent the SWA's primary physical leverage.
- Action: Ensure that the titles, registration, and any equipment financing agreements for the trailer fleet are held strictly under the SWA's name as an independent public entity.
- Asset Protection: Under no circumstances should these trailers be commingled, stored, or utilized as collateral for SWA operational lines of credit, nor should they be subjected to cross-collateralization clauses in any secondary service contracts with JacMal, LLC or Allegheny Disposal. This legally prevents private creditors from attaching or seizing the trailer fleet in a contract or leasing dispute.
Step 2: Formalize the "Direct Haul" Emergency Contingency Plan
Under the Option 4 agreement, JacMal, LLC retains ownership of the physical transfer station building; if the SWA defaults on its monthly payments, the private firm can seize the facility. The SWA must establish a operational bypass to prevent a total waste management monopoly.
- Action: Draft and formally adopt a "Direct Haul Contingency Plan" authorizing the SWA to bypass the transfer station entirely in the event of an operational lockout or default.
- Operational Execution: Leverage the SWA's independent trailer fleet. SWA Chairman Dave Henderson and Landfill Manager Chris McComb have already debated the logistics of hauling green box waste directly to the Greenbrier County Landfill. The SWA should finalize emergency tipping agreements with the Greenbrier County SWA to secure guaranteed gate access and commercial rates (historically averaging $48 to $75 per load plus surcharges).
- Legal Protection: Ensure the SWA retains its regulatory authority to transport waste. If the Town of Marlinton or local private haulers attempt to bypass the SWA, SWA leadership can enforce the county's flow-control rules, mandating that all local municipal waste be managed under SWA-authorized routes to protect system revenue.
Step 3: Restructure the GVEDC Land Covenants
The SWA sold the two-acre parcel adjacent to the landfill shop to the Greenbrier Valley Economic Development Corporation (GVEDC) to shield the transfer station project from local property taxes. JacMal, LLC built the facility on this tax-exempt public land.
- Action: SWA legal counsel must review the underlying land transfer agreement and lease covenants executed with the GVEDC.
- Mitigation Move: Secure a written addendum or memorandum of understanding (MOU) with the GVEDC specifying that the underlying real property and public rights-of-way (including access roads, utility lines, and the landfill shop entrance) are dedicated exclusively to public waste services.
- Protection Outcome: In the event of an SWA default, these covenants must prevent JacMal, LLC from restricting SWA access to the adjacent SWA-owned landfill shop, equipment yard, or post-closure monitoring wells, ensuring the SWA can continue its mandatory environmental monitoring obligations without private interference.
Step 4: Formalize the County Subsidy via an Intergovernmental Agreement (IGA)
SWA administrators have requested a $300,000 annual subsidy from the County Commission to offset out-of-county hauling costs and prevent the Green Box fee from escalating to an unsustainable $600. Currently, this funding is subject to annual political debate.
- Action: Negotiate to convert the discretionary annual subsidy into a legally binding Intergovernmental Agreement (IGA) or Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) between the County Commission and the SWA.
- Mitigation Move: Structure the IGA to tie the county's $300,000 contribution directly to the 30-year post-closure environmental monitoring mandate ($50,000 to $75,000 annually) and local public health preservation.
- Financial Security: By legally framing the subsidy as a shared governmental mandate rather than a discretionary operational bailout, the SWA insulates its baseline revenues from annual political shifts on the Commission, guaranteeing the cash flow required to meet the $16,759 monthly JacMal lease.
Step 5: Establish an Administrative Fee Amnesty and Enforcement Program
The SWA is severely compromised by weak revenue collection, holding $264,000 in outstanding unpaid judgments from 529 delinquent individuals. Relying solely on the slow, expensive Magistrate Court system limits the SWA's ability to recover these funds quickly.
- Action: Create a localized, structured "Solid Waste Compliance and Amnesty Program."
- Administrative Moves:
- Amnesty Window: Launch a 60-day window allowing delinquent residents to settle outstanding Green Box debts at a 25% discount, or establish structured, fee-free monthly installment plans to inject immediate liquidity into SWA operating reserves.
- Enforcement Officer Integration: Coordinate with the County Commission to establish a designated county Litter Control Officer. Under West Virginia Code, this officer can work with local law enforcement to enforce proof-of-proper-disposal regulations directly, streamlining the identification of non-payers before the SWA has to incur the costs of formal Magistrate Court litigation.
- PSC Regulatory Defense: Prepare robust legal documentation for the West Virginia Public Service Commission (PSC) proving that SWA residential "Green Box" fee schedules are an administrative utility charge under local statutory control, shielding SWA collection efforts from frivolous local rate protests.
Administrative Risk Mitigation Brief: Protecting SWA Assets and Solvency
To protect the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (SWA) from a catastrophic lease default, private asset seizure, or administrative bankruptcy, SWA leadership must transition from reactive crisis management to proactive asset insulation.
Below is a step-by-step risk mitigation framework outlining the specific administrative and legal moves the SWA can execute right now using its existing regulatory powers and physical resources.
Step 1: Legal Insulation and Protection of SWA Fleet Assets
The SWA’s most valuable liquid capital assets are the three walking floor waste transfer trailers purchased in September 2025 from Southeast Trailers for $328,149.00. Because these trailers are owned by the SWA and are separate from the JacMal, LLC lease agreement, they represent the SWA's primary physical leverage.
- Action: Ensure that the titles, registration, and any equipment financing agreements for the trailer fleet are held strictly under the SWA's name as an independent public entity.
- Asset Protection: Under no circumstances should these trailers be commingled, stored, or utilized as collateral for SWA operational lines of credit, nor should they be subjected to cross-collateralization clauses in any secondary service contracts with JacMal, LLC or Allegheny Disposal. This legally prevents private creditors from attaching or seizing the trailer fleet in a contract or leasing dispute.
Step 2: Formalize the "Direct Haul" Emergency Contingency Plan
Under the Option 4 agreement, JacMal, LLC retains ownership of the physical transfer station building; if the SWA defaults on its monthly payments, the private firm can seize the facility. The SWA must establish a operational bypass to prevent a total waste management monopoly.
- Action: Draft and formally adopt a "Direct Haul Contingency Plan" authorizing the SWA to bypass the transfer station entirely in the event of an operational lockout or default.
- Operational Execution: Leverage the SWA's independent trailer fleet. SWA Chairman Dave Henderson and Landfill Manager Chris McComb have already debated the logistics of hauling green box waste directly to the Greenbrier County Landfill. The SWA should finalize emergency tipping agreements with the Greenbrier County SWA to secure guaranteed gate access and commercial rates (historically averaging $48 to $75 per load plus surcharges).
- Legal Protection: Ensure the SWA retains its regulatory authority to transport waste. If the Town of Marlinton or local private haulers attempt to bypass the SWA, SWA leadership can enforce the county's flow-control rules, mandating that all local municipal waste be managed under SWA-authorized routes to protect system revenue.
Step 3: Restructure the GVEDC Land Covenants
The SWA sold the two-acre parcel adjacent to the landfill shop to the Greenbrier Valley Economic Development Corporation (GVEDC) to shield the transfer station project from local property taxes. JacMal, LLC built the facility on this tax-exempt public land.
- Action: SWA legal counsel must review the underlying land transfer agreement and lease covenants executed with the GVEDC.
- Mitigation Move: Secure a written addendum or memorandum of understanding (MOU) with the GVEDC specifying that the underlying real property and public rights-of-way (including access roads, utility lines, and the landfill shop entrance) are dedicated exclusively to public waste services.
- Protection Outcome: In the event of an SWA default, these covenants must prevent JacMal, LLC from restricting SWA access to the adjacent SWA-owned landfill shop, equipment yard, or post-closure monitoring wells, ensuring the SWA can continue its mandatory environmental monitoring obligations without private interference.
Step 4: Formalize the County Subsidy via an Intergovernmental Agreement (IGA)
SWA administrators have requested a $300,000 annual subsidy from the County Commission to offset out-of-county hauling costs and prevent the Green Box fee from escalating to an unsustainable $600. Currently, this funding is subject to annual political debate.
- Action: Negotiate to convert the discretionary annual subsidy into a legally binding Intergovernmental Agreement (IGA) or Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) between the County Commission and the SWA.
- Mitigation Move: Structure the IGA to tie the county's $300,000 contribution directly to the 30-year post-closure environmental monitoring mandate ($50,000 to $75,000 annually) and local public health preservation.
- Financial Security: By legally framing the subsidy as a shared governmental mandate rather than a discretionary operational bailout, the SWA insulates its baseline revenues from annual political shifts on the Commission, guaranteeing the cash flow required to meet the $16,759 monthly JacMal lease.
Step 5: Establish an Administrative Fee Amnesty and Enforcement Program
The SWA is severely compromised by weak revenue collection, holding $264,000 in outstanding unpaid judgments from 529 delinquent individuals. Relying solely on the slow, expensive Magistrate Court system limits the SWA's ability to recover these funds quickly.
- Action: Create a localized, structured "Solid Waste Compliance and Amnesty Program."
- Administrative Moves:
- Amnesty Window: Launch a 60-day window allowing delinquent residents to settle outstanding Green Box debts at a 25% discount, or establish structured, fee-free monthly installment plans to inject immediate liquidity into SWA operating reserves.
- Enforcement Officer Integration: Coordinate with the County Commission to establish a designated county Litter Control Officer. Under West Virginia Code, this officer can work with local law enforcement to enforce proof-of-proper-disposal regulations directly, streamlining the identification of non-payers before the SWA has to incur the costs of formal Magistrate Court litigation.
- PSC Regulatory Defense: Prepare robust legal documentation for the West Virginia Public Service Commission (PSC) proving that SWA residential "Green Box" fee schedules are an administrative utility charge under local statutory control, shielding SWA collection efforts from frivolous local rate protests.
I have designed and published a formal, ready-to-negotiate swa_county_commission_mou_template.md in your Studio panel.
This document serves as a legally structured framework that the Solid Waste Authority (SWA) can present to the Pocahontas County Commission to secure the vital $300,000 annual subsidy. It is specifically drafted to align with West Virginia's municipal solid waste statutes (W. Va. Code § 22C-4-3) and incorporates robust structural protections to insulate SWA public assets from private seizure or operational lockout.
Key Protections and Clauses Built into the MOU
- Establishing Joint Responsibility for the March 2025 Purchase: The Preamble frames the county commission's March 2025 purchase of the 40.6-acre site from Renee Fertig-Hill for $129,900 using federal COVID-19 relief funds (ARPA and LATCF). Because the deed was placed directly in the SWA's name, the county's action legally transferred 30 years of post-closure environmental monitoring and maintenance liabilities (estimated at $50,000 to $75,000 annually) directly to the SWA. The MOU leverages this transition to establish that a general fund operating subsidy is a shared intergovernmental mandate to manage these long-term public liabilities, not a discretionary bailout.
- Reciprocal Rate Cap (SWA's Leverage): Under Section II, Paragraph 1, the SWA agrees to cap the residential Green Box fee at a maximum of $300 to $310 annually per household. This protects county residents from a regressive rate hike that could reach $600 annually. It demonstrates to the Commission that funding the $300,000 subsidy directly keeps public service fees manageable for the county's vulnerable populations, where the poverty rate is 18.6%.
- Insulation of the SWA Trailer Fleet: Section III, Paragraph 2 legally shields the SWA’s newly purchased tractor-trailers (ordered for $328,149.00) from commercial liens or private attachment in the event of a dispute. This protects the SWA's primary physical assets from being targeted by private contractors if SWA revenues fall short.
- Emergency Operational Bypass (Direct-Haul Clause): Section III, Paragraph 3 formalizes a contingency plan allowing the SWA to bypass the JacMal, LLC transfer station entirely if JacMal (owned by the Mecks of Allegheny Disposal) attempts to restrict access or shut the gates. Using its independent trailer fleet, the SWA can transport waste directly to the Greenbrier County Landfill using the county’s operating subsidy, preventing a private monopoly from halting basic county sanitation.
- Coordinated Litter Control Officer Integration: Under Section III, Paragraph 1, the Parties agree to establish a designated county Litter Control Officer pursuant to W. Va. Code § 7-1-3ff. This officer will cooperate directly with SWA administrative staff to identify and ticket non-payers of the Green Box fee, streamlining collection and recovering a portion of the $264,000 in outstanding unpaid judgments without relying entirely on slow Magistrate Court litigation.
- Funding Interruption Protection: Section IV, Paragraph 3 stipulates that if the Commission fails to appropriate or disburse the quarterly $75,000 payments, the SWA is immediately released from its rate cap and can adjust local fees to avoid defaulting on its fixed $16,759 monthly commercial lease.
I have drafted and published the formal Board Resolution, swa-board-resolution.md, in your Studio panel.
This document serves as the official legal instrument that SWA board members can vote on during a public session to formally adopt the intergovernmental MOU and authorize SWA Chairman David C. Henderson to present it at the next County Commission meeting.
Core Elements of the SWA Board Resolution
- Statutory Foundation: Grounded under West Virginia Code § 22C-4-3 (SWA establishment) and § 22C-4-23 (rulemaking, mandatory disposal, and flow-control powers) to establish the SWA's clear legal standing to negotiate and enforce intergovernmental agreements.
- Recital of Liabilities: Incorporates the precise chain of historical liabilities that created the current crisis, including:
- The Renee Fertig-Hill land purchase on March 17, 2025, for $129,900.00.
- The legal transfer of 30 years of post-closure monitoring liabilities (estimated at $50,000.00 to $75,000.00 annually) directly to the SWA.
- The Option 4 JacMal, LLC lease agreement committing the SWA to $16,759.00 monthly ($201,108.00 annually) for 15 years.
- Insulation of SWA Fleet Assets: Formally binds the SWA to keep its newly acquired three walking floor transfer trailers ($328,149.00) free and clear of all private commercial liens or cross-collateralization clauses. This protects the SWA's primary physical leverage from private attachment during any leasing or operational disputes.
- Residential Rate Protection: Legally binds the SWA to cap the annual residential Green Box fee at a maximum of $300.00 to $310.00 per household in exchange for the Commission's general fund operating subsidy. This mathematically proves to the Commission that the $300,000.00 annual county supplement is what stands between local residents and a regressive $600.00 annual rate spike.
- Administrative Integration: Authorizes SWA Office Administrator Mary Clendenen and Landfill Manager Chris McComb to integrate SWA administrative efforts with local municipalities and the newly established county Litter Control Officer to enforce mandatory waste disposal compliance and recover unpaid fees.
- Recording of the Roll Call Vote: Features a structured board roll-call table so the official vote of SWA board members (including Chairman David C. Henderson, Gail Siers, Darrell Roach, Phillip Cobb, and Greg Hamons) can be recorded and filed with the County Clerk.
I have drafted and published the formal Board Resolution, swa-board-resolution.md, in your Studio panel.
This document serves as the official legal instrument that SWA board members can vote on during a public session to formally adopt the intergovernmental MOU and authorize SWA Chairman David C. Henderson to present it at the next County Commission meeting.
Core Elements of the SWA Board Resolution
- Statutory Foundation: Grounded under West Virginia Code § 22C-4-3 (SWA establishment) and § 22C-4-23 (rulemaking, mandatory disposal, and flow-control powers) to establish the SWA's clear legal standing to negotiate and enforce intergovernmental agreements.
- Recital of Liabilities: Incorporates the precise chain of historical liabilities that created the current crisis, including:
- The Renee Fertig-Hill land purchase on March 17, 2025, for $129,900.00.
- The legal transfer of 30 years of post-closure monitoring liabilities (estimated at $50,000.00 to $75,000.00 annually) directly to the SWA.
- The Option 4 JacMal, LLC lease agreement committing the SWA to $16,759.00 monthly ($201,108.00 annually) for 15 years.
- Insulation of SWA Fleet Assets: Formally binds the SWA to keep its newly acquired three walking floor transfer trailers ($328,149.00) free and clear of all private commercial liens or cross-collateralization clauses. This protects the SWA's primary physical leverage from private attachment during any leasing or operational disputes.
- Residential Rate Protection: Legally binds the SWA to cap the annual residential Green Box fee at a maximum of $300.00 to $310.00 per household in exchange for the Commission's general fund operating subsidy. This mathematically proves to the Commission that the $300,000.00 annual county supplement is what stands between local residents and a regressive $600.00 annual rate spike.
- Administrative Integration: Authorizes SWA Office Administrator Mary Clendenen and Landfill Manager Chris McComb to integrate SWA administrative efforts with local municipalities and the newly established county Litter Control Officer to enforce mandatory waste disposal compliance and recover unpaid fees.
- Recording of the Roll Call Vote: Features a structured board roll-call table so the official vote of SWA board members (including Chairman David C. Henderson, Gail Siers, Darrell Roach, Phillip Cobb, and Greg Hamons) can be recorded and filed with the County Clerk.
POCAHONTAS COUNTY SOLID WASTE AUTHORITY
900-H Tenth Avenue
Marlinton, West Virginia 24954
Phone: (304) 799-6262 | Fax: (304) 799-6272
July 10, 2026
Pocahontas County Commission
Pocahontas County Courthouse
900 Tenth Avenue
Marlinton, West Virginia 24954
Attn:
- The Honorable John Rebinski, Commission President
- The Honorable Jesse A. Groseclose, Commissioner
- The Honorable Thane Ryder, Commissioner
RE: Request for Agenda Placement – Presentation of SWA Board Resolution and Intergovernmental Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) for Solid Waste Program Funding
Dear Commissioners:
On behalf of the Board of Directors of the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (SWA), I am formally requesting a slot on the agenda for the next scheduled meeting of the Pocahontas County Commission. The purpose of this request is to present SWA Board Resolution No. 2026-02 and a proposed Intergovernmental Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) to legally secure a $300,000.00 annual general fund operating subsidy.
As this Commission is aware, the physical exhaustion and inevitable closure of our local county landfill by late 2026 represents the most critical public sanitation and fiscal challenge facing Pocahontas County in decades. The SWA is actively managing the transition to an out-of-county hauling and transfer station model to ensure uninterrupted waste disposal services for our 4,300 households and local businesses. However, this structural transition has imposed severe capital and operational liabilities that the SWA cannot carry alone:
- Shift of Long-Term Post-Closure Liabilities: The Commission’s purchase of the 40.6-acre landfill site on March 17, 2025, from Renee Fertig-Hill for $129,900.00 (utilizing federal ARPA and LATCF allocations) was a vital first step. However, by placing the deed directly in the SWA’s name, this transaction legally transferred 30 years of mandated post-closure environmental monitoring, groundwater testing, and leachate mitigation liabilities (estimated at $50,000.00 to $75,000.00 annually) directly onto the SWA. These long-term costs must be paid from SWA operating funds, which are already depleted by landfill closure construction expenses estimated between $2.4 million and $3.2 million.
- The Private Lease Burden: Having been denied county general fund guarantees to secure a low-interest 1% Solid Waste Management Board loan for a self-operated facility, the SWA was forced to enter into a public-private partnership lease (Option 4) with JacMal, LLC. This agreement commits the SWA to a fixed, non-negotiable payment of $16,759.00 monthly ($201,108.00 annually) for 15 years, culminating in a final buyout of $1,103,495.24.
- Preventing a Regressive Fee Emergency: To meet these fixed liabilities and fund out-of-county hauling and tipping fees at the Greenbrier County Landfill (budgeted at $550,000.00 annually), the SWA has had to double the mandatory residential Green Box fee to $260.00 for the 2026 fiscal year. SWA modeling indicates that once out-of-county hauling begins, the residential fee must rise to $310.00. Without the requested $300,000.00 annual county subsidy, the flat household fee will be forced to escalate to $600.00 annually. In a county with an 18.6% poverty rate and a median household income of $36,026.00, a flat $600.00 fee is unsustainably regressive and would consume 1.67% of our median household income.
A $600.00 rate spike carries an extreme risk of systemic non-payment. The SWA is already owed $264,000.00 in outstanding unpaid judgments from 529 delinquent individuals. Because state law prevents us from placing waste fees directly on property tax tickets, our only enforcement mechanism is slow, expensive Magistrate Court litigation. A widespread delinquency wave exceeding 40.64% would starve the SWA of the cash flow needed to pay the JacMal lease, triggering a structural default, private seizure of the transfer station, SWA bankruptcy, and a total collapse of county sanitation services.
Such a failure would directly threaten Pocahontas County's pristine public lands—which make up over 60 percent of our acreage—and devastate our local tourism economy, which generates over $112 million annually.
The proposed MOU establishes a legally structured, cooperative framework to avert this crisis:
- The SWA will legally cap the annual residential Green Box fee at $300.00 to $310.00, protecting our elderly and fixed-income residents from a $600.00 rate spike.
- The County Commission will commit to a $300,000.00 annual operating subsidy (disbursed in quarterly installments of $75,000.00) to offset out-of-county hauling and tipping costs.
- The SWA will legally insulate its newly acquired three walking floor transfer trailers ($328,149.00) from commercial liens, ensuring the public retains its primary physical waste transit assets free and clear.
- The SWA and County Commission will coordinate to establish a county Litter Control Officer under W. Va. Code § 7-1-3ff to aggressively enforce proper disposal compliance and recover outstanding judgments.
We look forward to presenting this resolution and the MOU template to the Commission to finalize a durable, public-sector solution that protects both our taxpayers and our environment. SWA Office Administrator Mary Clendenen and Landfill Manager Chris McComb will accompany me to answer any administrative or operational questions.
Thank you for your ongoing leadership and your prompt consideration of this agenda request.
Sincerely,
David C. Henderson
Chairman, Board of Directors
Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority
This executive meeting package provides SWA Chairman David C. Henderson with a structured, data-grounded briefing and a companion slide deck outline to present to the Pocahontas County Commission.
EXECUTIVE MEETING BRIEF & TALKING POINTS
Prepared for SWA Chairman David C. Henderson
Meeting Objective
To present SWA Board Resolution No. 2026-02 and the Intergovernmental Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) to the Pocahontas County Commission, formally securing an annual general fund operating subsidy of $300,000.00. The core argument must shift the narrative from a discretionary "bailout" to a shared statutory responsibility necessary to prevent a $600.00 household rate hike, systemic public default, and private infrastructure seizure.
Section I: The Imminent Baseline Crisis (The Opening)
- The Talking Point: "Pocahontas County is home to approximately 8,620 residents and 4,300 households. Our solid waste stream generates only 7,400 to 8,000 tons of refuse annually, making our landfill the smallest operating facility in West Virginia. Because of this small scale, we have never had the waste volume to offset modern environmental compliance costs. Now, we have run out of physical space. Our landfill faces absolute closure by late 2026. The inexpensive era of local dumping is over; we must now transition to a transfer station model and haul our waste out of the county to the Greenbrier County Landfill."
- Supporting Data:
- Annual waste stream: 7,400 to 8,000 tons.
- Landfill closing date: Late 2026.
- Total county households: 4,300.
Section II: Landfill Siting History and waiving Eminent Domain
- The Talking Point: "It is important to remember why we are closing. In 2017, we attempted to purchase 25 acres of expansion land from the Jody Fertig estate. Ten acres were highly suitable, which would have given us 50 years of landfill life and gravity-fed leachate treatment, saving us millions. When negotiations collapsed, the county chose to waive its eminent domain powers to avoid intense local political friction. We chose short-term political peace. The direct consequence of that choice is that we are forced to close the landfill, transition to an out-of-county hauling model, and absorb massive new capital and operational liabilities."
- Supporting Data:
- Failed Fertig purchase: 25 acres (10 acres suitable for cells, 50-year landfill life extension).
- Eminent domain was waived by SWA and County Commission to avoid political blowback.
Section III: The Unfunded 30-Year Post-Closure Mandate
- The Talking Point: "In March 2025, the County Commission purchased the existing 40.6-acre landfill site from Renee Fertig-Hill for $129,900.00 using federal ARPA and LATCF relief funds. However, by placing the deed directly in the SWA's name, this transaction legally transferred 30 years of post-closure environmental monitoring, groundwater testing, and leachate mitigation liabilities directly onto the SWA. This mandate will cost between $50,000 and $75,000 annually. SWA operating funds are already entirely depleted by landfill closure construction costs, which have skyrocketed to between $2.4 million and $3.2 million."
- Supporting Data:
- Renee Fertig-Hill purchase: $129,900.00 base price + $24,307.50 for mandated perimeter fencing, funded by reallocated ARPA/LATCF federal relief.
- Post-closure environmental monitoring mandate: $50,000 to $75,000 annually for 30 years.
- Landfill closure construction cost: $2.4 million to $3.2 million.
Section IV: The $1.37M Private Lease Surcharge
- The Talking Point: "To manage the transition, the SWA proposed building a self-operated transfer station for $2.75 million using a low-interest 1% state loan. However, because this Commission refused to provide county general fund guarantees, we could not secure that public financing. We were forced to enter a public-private lease with JacMal, LLC. Under the approved Option 4, we are locked into fixed payments of $16,759.00 monthly ($201,108.00 annually) for 15 years, culminating in a final buyout of $1,103,495.24. This commercial lease model will cost us a total of $4,120,115.24. This is a $1.37 million surcharge (a 49.8% premium) over raw construction costs. The county's past refusal to back public debt has directly resulted in an ongoing $200,000-per-year capital drain."
- Supporting Data:
- SWA proposed self-operated station: $2.75 million at 1% SWMB interest.
- Option 4 Lease: $16,759.00 monthly ($201,108.00 annually) for 15 years, with a $1,103,495.24 final buyout.
- Total Option 4 Cost: $4,120,115.24 (compared to a ~$4,000,000 public borrowing model and a $2,750,000 raw asset value).
Section V: The Regressive Fee Threat and Insolvency Loop
- The Talking Point: "To cover this $201,108.00 annual lease and out-of-county hauling and tipping fees (budgeted at $550,000.00 annually), we had to double the mandatory residential Green Box fee to $260.00 for the 2026 fiscal year. Once out-of-county hauling begins, the fee must rise to $300 to $310. Without a $300,000.00 annual county operating subsidy, the fee will escalate to $600.00 annually per household. Pocahontas County has an 18.6% poverty rate and a median household income of $36,026.00. A flat $600.00 fee consumes 1.67% of our median household income. Our residents cannot pay this. We are already owed $264,000.00 in outstanding unpaid judgments from 529 delinquent individuals. Because state law prevents us from putting waste fees directly on tax tickets, our only enforcement is slow Magistrate Court litigation. A spike in delinquency past 40.64% triggers a SWA lease default, private seizure of the transfer station, SWA bankruptcy, and complete countywide sanitation failure."
- Supporting Data:
- Annual out-of-county hauling and tipping budget: $550,000.00.
- Socioeconomic metrics: 18.6% poverty rate, median household income of $36,026.00.
- Fee-to-income ratios: Historical $115 fee = 0.32% of median income; $260 fee = 0.72% of median income; $310 fee = 0.86% of median income; unsubsidized $600 fee = 1.67% of median income.
- Delinquency debt: $264,000.00 across 529 delinquent accounts.
- Insolvency trigger: Delinquency exceeding 40.64% (without a subsidy) defaults the JacMal lease.
COMPANION SLIDE DECK OUTLINE
Target Audience: Pocahontas County Commission
Slide 1: Enacting a Shared Solution for Pocahontas County Waste
- Visual Elements: SWA Logo, Date (July 2026), and Presenter Title (David C. Henderson, SWA Chairman).
- Core Message: Managing the late 2026 landfill closure requires cooperative public-sector funding to protect local residents from a $600.00 annual fee spike.
- Presenter Notes: "Thank you, Commissioners. We are here to establish a cooperative intergovernmental partnership that protects county taxpayers and ensures the financial and environmental survival of our waste management system."
Slide 2: The Baseline Reality of Landfill Closure
- Visual Elements: High-contrast summary table showing Pocahontas County operational parameters (8,620 population, smallest operating landfill in WV, late 2026 closure).
- Core Message: Our geographic and demographic scale makes out-of-county hauling an operational necessity.
- Bullet Points:
- Imminent Capacity Wall: Landfill closure mandated by late 2026 due to physical exhaustion.
- The Missed Path: 2017 waiver of eminent domain on the 25-acre Fertig expansion made local disposal closure permanent.
- Hauling Mandate: We must now transfer and haul 7,400 to 8,000 tons of annual refuse to the Greenbrier County Landfill.
Slide 3: Long-Term Liabilities Transferred to the SWA
- Visual Elements: Two-column layout: Column 1 shows local landfill closure construction costs; Column 2 shows 30-year post-closure maintenance obligations.
- Core Message: Deeding the 40.6-acre Renee Fertig-Hill tract to the SWA legally shifted 30 years of environmental monitoring costs to our operating budget.
- Bullet Points:
- Landfill Closure Construction: Capital requirement of $2.4 million to $3.2 million.
- Post-Closure Maintenance: 30 years of groundwater testing and leachate mitigation costing $50,000 to $75,000 annually.
- ARPA/LATCF Impact: The county’s $157,000 land purchase secured the site but depleted SWA's local reserves.
Slide 4: Capital Structure of the JacMal Transfer Station Lease
- Visual Elements: Bar chart comparing the $2.75M raw construction value against the $4.12M total cost of the approved Option 4 lease.
- Core Message: Lacking the county's general fund guarantees for public financing, the SWA was forced into a high-cost commercial lease that carries a $1.37 million premium.
- Bullet Points:
- Denied Public Loan: SWA was blocked from securing a low-interest 1% SWMB loan due to lack of county backing.
- The Approved Option 4 Lease: Fixed payment of $16,759.00 monthly ($201,108.00 annually) for 15 years.
- The Buyout Trap: A final mandatory purchase buyout of $1,103,495.24 to transfer ownership to the SWA.
- Private Premium: Total contract cost of $4,120,115.24 is a 49.8% markup over the raw $2.75M construction value.
Slide 5: The Regressive Fee Threat & Insolvency Risk
- Visual Elements: Line graph displaying the regressive fee-to-income curve (historical $115 fee consuming 0.32% of median income vs. unsubsidized $600 fee consuming 1.67% of median income).
- Core Message: Raising the Green Box fee to $600.00 to cover hauling and lease costs without a county subsidy will trigger a massive delinquency wave and SWA bankruptcy.
- Bullet Points:
- Socioeconomic Vulnerability: Pocahontas County has an 18.6% poverty rate and a $36,026.00 median household income.
- Weak Collection Recourse: The SWA is already owed $264,000.00 in outstanding judgments from 529 delinquent individuals.
- The Default Threshold: A delinquency rate exceeding 40.64% (without a subsidy) defaults the JacMal lease, allowing private foreclosure and gate closure.
Slide 6: The Path Forward – Securing County Solvency
- Visual Elements: Flow diagram showing the mutual benefits of the proposed Intergovernmental MOU.
- Core Message: A $300,000.00 annual county subsidy protects residents, preserves tourism, and ensures SWA public solvency.
- Bullet Points:
- Rate Cap Protection: SWA legally caps the Green Box fee at $300.00 to $310.00, preventing a regressive $600.00 rate spike.
- Operating Subsidy: County Commission commits to $300,000.00 annually to offset regional hauling costs.
- Asset Insulation: SWA keeps its newly purchased three walking floor transfer trailers ($328,149.00) free and clear of all private commercial liens [10, SWA Board Resolution].
- Enforcement Reform: Jointly establish a Litter Control Officer under W. Va. Code § 7-1-3ff to aggressively recover outstanding judgments.
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I have performed a comprehensive financial and operational cost-benefit analysis evaluating the integration of the Town of Marlinton’s waste stream into the SWA transfer station system.
I have generated and published two interconnected resources in your Studio panel:
marlinton-cost-benefit-analysis.md: A detailed administrative report designed for the Pocahontas County Commission.marlinton_waste_integration_analysis.png: A dual-panel dashboard comparing the SWA's fixed overhead costs and Marlinton’s potential long-haul expenses.
Key Insights from the Cost-Benefit Analysis
1. The Town of Marlinton's Perspective: The Self-Hauling Illusion
- The Theoretical Saving: On paper, self-hauling Marlinton's 1,500 annual tons to the Greenbrier County Landfill costs approximately $66,275.00 annually ($44.18/ton), which seems significantly cheaper than paying the SWA's standard $95.00/ton tipping fee ($142,500.00).
- The Capital & Operational Surcharge: Self-hauling requires Marlinton to act as a long-haul transit entity. This forces the town to absorb $150,000.00 in upfront equipment CapEx ($15,000/yr amortized) and $51,275.00 in annual OpEx (covering 100 round-trips of 80 miles, CDL driver labor, fuel, and heavy truck maintenance).
- The Litigation Reality: Bypassing the local SWA to dump in another county violates countywide flow-control boundaries. A contested regulatory case before the West Virginia Public Service Commission (PSC) would cost the town an estimated $75,000.00 in first-year legal defense fees. This litigation completely erases first-year savings, raising Marlinton’s total Year-1 cost to $141,275.00 and risking permanently stranded capital assets.
2. The SWA's Perspective: Preventing a Residential Rate Shift
- Lost Operating Margin: SWA makes a net margin of $26.25 on every ton of commercial waste processed (charging $95.00/ton tipping fees while out-of-county hauling and regional tipping costs $68.75/ton). Bypassing Marlinton’s 1,500 tons instantly removes $39,375.00 annually in operating margin, which accumulates to a $590,625.00 loss over SWA's 15-year transfer station lease.
- Fixed Capital Overhead Surge: Because the SWA’s JacMal, LLC lease is a fixed $16,759.00 monthly liability, losing Marlinton's volume forces SWA's unit fixed overhead to surge from $57.95/ton to $71.32/ton (a 23.1% penalty).
- The Ratepayer Surcharge: To bridge this $39,375.00 annual deficit, the SWA would be forced to shift the financial burden onto local residential "Green Box" ratepayers, triggering an additional $9.16/household annual surcharge across the county's 4,300 households.
SWA vs. Marlinton Self-Hauling Cost Comparison
| Cost Category / Metric | Scenario A: SWA Integration (Consolidated) | Scenario B: Marlinton Self-Hauling (Bypassed) | Impact of Bypassing the SWA |
|---|---|---|---|
| SWA Processed Waste Volume | 8,000 Tons | 6,500 Tons | -1,500 Tons (-18.75%) |
| SWA Fixed Overhead Cost | $57.95 / Ton | $71.32 / Ton | +$13.37 / Ton (+23.1% Surcharge) |
| SWA Net Operating Cash Flow | $454,392.00 | $415,017.00 | -$39,375.00 annually |
| Marlinton Annual Disposal Cost | $142,500.00 | $66,275.00 *(No Litigation)*$141,275.00 (With Litigation) | +$76,225.00 Year-1 Savings *(No Lit.)*+$1,225.00 Year-1 Savings (With Lit.) |
| Pocahontas County Ratepayer Risk | Low (Stabilized Fees) | High (Forced Surcharge) | +$9.16 / household annual fee |
| Legal & Regulatory Exposure | None | Severe (PSC Boundary Dispute) | High risk of stranded municipal capital |
INTERGOVERNMENTAL AGREEMENT FOR SOLID WASTE POOLING AND RATE STABILIZATION
This Intergovernmental Agreement for Solid Waste Pooling and Rate Stabilization (the "Agreement") is entered into this 10th day of July, 2026, by and between:
- The Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority, a public agency and corporate body politic established under W. Va. Code § 22C-4-3, having its principal business office at 900-H Tenth Avenue, Marlinton, West Virginia 24954 (hereinafter the "SWA"); and
- The Town of Marlinton, a municipal corporation and political subdivision of the State of West Virginia, having its municipal hall at Marlinton, West Virginia 24954 (hereinafter the "Town").
The SWA and the Town are collectively referred to herein as the "Parties" and individually as a "Party."
RECITALS
WHEREAS, the SWA is charged with administering the integrated public solid waste management system in Pocahontas County, West Virginia, and ensuring that all municipal solid waste generated within the county is managed in an environmentally safe and economically sustainable manner; and
WHEREAS, the SWA operates a mandatory solid waste disposal system and has entered into a public-private partnership lease agreement (Option 4) with JacMal, LLC to operate a county solid waste transfer station on tax-exempt land adjacent to the county landfill shop, committing the SWA to a fixed lease liability of $16,759.00 monthly ($201,108.00 annually) for fifteen (15) years; and
WHEREAS, the physical capacity of the Pocahontas County Landfill will be exhausted by late 2026, making the transition to an out-of-county hauling model to regional facilities (specifically the Greenbrier County Landfill in Lewisburg, West Virginia) a public necessity; and
WHEREAS, the Town of Marlinton collects and manages approximately 1,500 tons of municipal solid waste annually from its residential and commercial occupants; and
WHEREAS, the SWA has determined that maintaining a consolidated local waste volume is mathematically required to distribute the fixed capital overhead of the JacMal lease, and that bypassing the Town's 1,500 annual tons would cause SWA’s unit fixed overhead to surge from $57.95 to $71.32 per ton (a 23.1% penalty), forcing a regressive $9.16 annual surcharge onto the county’s 4,300 residential "Green Box" ratepayers; and
WHEREAS, the Town has evaluated the economics of self-hauling its municipal waste directly to Lewisburg and determined that the upfront equipment capital expenditure ($150,000.00) and annual hauling operational costs ($51,275.00), combined with the severe risk of flow-control litigation before the West Virginia Public Service Commission (PSC), completely erases any theoretical tipping-fee savings; and
WHEREAS, the Parties recognize that pooling their respective waste streams at the centralized county transfer station achieves optimal public economies of scale, stabilizes public utility rates, and insulates local taxpayers from structural insolvency.
NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the mutual covenants, terms, conditions, and rate protections contained herein, and pursuant to the regulatory powers granted under W. Va. Code § 22C-4-23, the Parties formally agree as follows:
SECTION I: PURPOSE & STATUTORY AUTHORITY
- Purpose: The purpose of this Agreement is to legally bind and pool the municipal solid waste streams of the SWA and the Town at the SWA’s transfer station, ensuring a consolidated base volume to minimize unit overhead costs and establish legal rate protections for both the Town and county residents.
- Statutory Authority: This Agreement is executed under the authority of W. Va. Code § 22C-4-23(10), which empowers county solid waste authorities to enter into contracts, leases, and agreements with governmental agencies, and W. Va. Code § 8-12-1 et seq., governing the cooperative powers of West Virginia municipalities.
SECTION II: CONTRACT TERM
- Effective Date: This Agreement shall become effective on the date of its execution by both Parties and shall remain in full force for an initial term of fifteen (15) years, running conterminously with the SWA’s JacMal, LLC Option 4 lease.
- Renewal: Upon the expiration of the initial term, this Agreement may be renewed for successive five (5) year terms upon the written mutual consent of both governing bodies.
SECTION III: TOWN COMMITMENT & WASTE FLOW CONTROL
- Mandatory Volume Commitment: The Town hereby agrees to deliver one hundred percent (100%) of the municipal solid waste collected by municipal personnel or municipal contractors within the corporate limits of the Town (estimated at 1,500 tons annually) exclusively to the SWA’s transfer station.
- Prohibition of Direct Export: Pursuant to county flow-control rules, the Town shall not transport, cause to be transported, or permit any municipal solid waste collected under its municipal authority to be hauled directly to any out-of-county landfill or non-SWA-approved facility.
- Local Ordinances: The Town Council agrees to maintain local municipal ordinances that mirror the SWA’s prohibited conduct regulations, specifically prohibiting open dumping, open burning, and unauthorized private burial of solid waste within municipal boundaries.
SECTION IV: SWA DISPOSAL OBLIGATION & SERVICE LEVELS
- SWA Acceptance: The SWA agrees to accept all municipal solid waste delivered by the Town at the transfer station during standard operating hours (Monday through Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., and Saturday, 8:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.).
- Out-of-County Transport: The SWA assumes full financial and operational responsibility for compacting, loading, and transporting the Town's waste from the transfer station to the designated regional disposal facility. The SWA shall utilize its newly acquired three walking floor waste transfer trailers ($328,149.00 total fleet value) to perform this transport.
- Indemnification: The SWA shall indemnify and hold the Town harmless from any environmental liabilities, regulatory fines, or monitoring costs associated with the final disposal of the waste at the receiving regional landfill or the 30-year post-closure monitoring of the closed county landfill site.
SECTION V: TIPPING FEES & RATE STABILIZATION PROTECTIONS
- Preferred Municipal Tipping Fee: The SWA shall charge the Town a preferred municipal tipping fee of $95.00 per ton (inclusive of the $8.75 West Virginia Solid Waste Tax and all applicable state environmental surcharges) for all waste delivered under this Agreement.
- Rate Cap and Escalation Limits: To protect the Town’s municipal budget from arbitrary or volatile rate hikes, the SWA agrees to cap any future tipping fee increases at a maximum of three percent (3.0%) annually or the change in the Federal Consumer Price Index (CPI), whichever is lower.
- PSC Regulatory Approval: Any proposed modification to the preferred municipal tipping fee outside the limits established in Paragraph 2 must be formally filed with, audited by, and approved by the West Virginia Public Service Commission (PSC).
- Subsidy Rate Adjustment: In the event that the Pocahontas County Commission formally approves and disburses the requested $300,000.00 annual general fund operating subsidy to the SWA, the SWA agrees to review and implement a proportional reduction in the Town's preferred municipal tipping fee to reflect the lower local tax-funded operating cost.
SECTION VI: ENFORCEMENT & COMPLIANCE INTEGRATION
- Litter Control Officer Cooperation: The SWA and the Town shall jointly petition the County Commission to establish a designated county Litter Control Officer under W. Va. Code § 7-1-3ff.
- Fee Recovery Collaboration: SWA administrative staff, led by Office Administrator Mary Clendenen, shall share delinquent account registries with the Town’s billing department. The Town agrees to assist in identifying non-paying commercial and residential property owners, streamlining the administrative enforcement process to recover outstanding municipal waste debts without relying solely on slow Magistrate Court litigation.
SECTION VII: FORCE MAJEURE & EMERGENCY CONTINGENCY
- Force Majeure: Neither Party shall be liable for a failure to perform its obligations under this Agreement if such failure is caused by acts of God, extreme weather rendering mountain passes impassable, or catastrophic equipment failure of the transfer station crane.
- SWA Operational Lockout Bypass: If the transfer station is closed, seized, or subjected to an operational lockout by the private landlord (JacMal, LLC) due to a leasing dispute:
- The SWA shall immediately activate its Direct Haul Contingency Plan.
- The SWA shall utilize its independent trailer fleet and SWA road tractors to accept the Town's waste at a designated public transfer point and haul it directly to the regional landfill.
- The SWA shall maintain the Town's preferred municipal tipping fee of $95.00 per ton during any such emergency bypass period.
SECTION VIII: GENERAL PROVISIONS
- Governing Law: This Agreement shall be governed by, construed, and enforced in accordance with the laws of the State of West Virginia.
- Severability: If any court of competent jurisdiction holds any provision of this Agreement invalid or unenforceable, the remaining provisions shall remain in full force and effect.
- Entire Agreement: This Agreement constitutes the entire understanding between the SWA and the Town regarding solid waste pooling and supersedes all prior verbal negotiations or draft proposals.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the Parties have executed this Intergovernmental Agreement on the date first written above.
FOR THE POCAHONTAS COUNTY SOLID WASTE AUTHORITY:
By: __________________________________
David C. Henderson, Chairman
Board of Directors
Attest:
By: __________________________________
Mary Clendenen, Office Administrator
FOR THE TOWN OF MARLINTON:
By: __________________________________
Sam Felton, Mayor
Town Council of Marlinton
Attest:
By: __________________________________
Town Clerk
- Approved as to Form by: _______________________
David Sims, Esq., SWA Legal Counsel
While the two selected files (Chaos in the CC.pdf and solidx.pdf) do not explicitly mention the "Town Council" or "Town of Marlinton" by name, they lay out the exact mathematical, legal, and operational mechanics of the Pocahontas County solid waste system. If a local municipality or major public waste stream rejects the SWA pooling agreement and diverts its waste, it triggers a predictable chain reaction that threatens the SWA with structural default:
1. Immediate Loss of Commercial Tipping Revenue
The SWA’s financial model relies on balancing two distinct revenue streams: residential Green Box fees and commercial tipping fees. Under the current system, commercial tipping revenues help offset a portion of SWA's operating deficit. If a local municipality rejects the SWA pooling agreement and diverts its tons elsewhere, the SWA immediately loses this critical commercial tipping margin, creating an unbudgeted cash-flow deficit.
2. Surge in Unit Fixed Overhead Costs
Under the approved Option 4 lease with JacMal, LLC, the SWA is locked into a fixed, non-negotiable payment of $16,759.00 monthly ($201,108.00 annually) for 15 years. This lease liability must be paid regardless of the county's waste volume. Because the county is already a low-density, low-volume jurisdiction (generating only 7,400 to 8,000 tons annually), any reduction in incoming waste volume means the fixed lease overhead must be distributed over fewer tons, immediately driving up the per-ton processing cost for the remaining users.
3. Surcharges Shifted to Residential "Green Box" Ratepayers
To bridge the operational deficit caused by a diverted municipal waste stream, the SWA would have no choice but to shift the entire cost burden onto local households.
- This would force the residential "Green Box" fee to escalate from the current $260.00 toward the projected post-closure rate of $310.00, or even the unsubsidized limit of $600.00 annually.
- For a county with an 18.6% poverty rate and a median household income of $36,026.00, a flat $600.00 fee consumes an unsustainable 1.67% of median household income.
4. A Catastrophic Delinquency and Default Loop
A regressive rate hike of this scale would trigger a compliance collapse among low-income and fixed-income residents.
- The SWA is already struggling with collection, holding $264,000.00 in unpaid judgments from 529 delinquent individuals.
- Because West Virginia law prevents the SWA from putting waste fees directly on property tax tickets, the SWA is forced to sue non-payers individually in Magistrate Court—a process that is too slow and expensive to handle a systemic delinquency wave.
- Once non-payment starves the SWA of the cash needed to meet its monthly JacMal lease, the SWA will default.
5. Private Foreclosure and Systemic Shutdown
If the SWA defaults on its payments, JacMal, LLC retains physical ownership of the transfer station. Under Option 4, the private landlord has the right to seize the facility, shut its gates, and leave Pocahontas County with no functional, lawful waste disposal mechanism. SWA administrators have warned that such a crisis would force the SWA into bankruptcy, dumping the entire environmental and financial mess onto the County Commission and forcing emergency, taxpayer-funded commercial bailouts.
6. Escalation to Public Service Commission (PSC) Litigation
To prevent a municipal waste stream from leaving the county, SWA leadership would likely attempt to enforce strict local "flow-control" regulations. This would result in immediate, costly legal battles before the West Virginia Public Service Commission (PSC) over the SWA's legal status, operational authority, and jurisdiction over municipal haulers.
To model the exact percentage of commercial waste diversion that would push the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (SWA) past its solvency limit under the current $260.00 annual Green Box fee, we must evaluate the structural physics of the county’s out-of-county hauling operation.
This projection uses the SWA's actual operating parameters: 4,300 households subject to the $260 fee, a projected 22.0% compliance delinquency rate at this fee level (yielding $872,040.00 in collected residential revenue), and a $201,108.00 fixed annual lease payment to JacMal, LLC.
Because the SWA recently purchased its own fleet of three walking floor transfer trailers for $328,149.00, its out-of-county hauling budget ($550,000.00 annually to transport 8,000 total tons to the Greenbrier County Landfill) is heavily exposed to fixed capital overhead (driver salaries, trailer financing, and vehicle maintenance).
The mathematical solvency thresholds under different operational models are detailed below:
Scenario A: Best-Case (100% Variable Hauling Costs)
If we assume that every ton of diverted waste reduces out-of-county transport costs proportionally by exactly $68.75 per ton ($550,000 / 8,000 tons):
- Net Margin Per Ton: SWA charges commercial haulers $95.00/ton and pays $68.75/ton to haul and tip it. This yields a net margin of $26.25 on every ton processed.
- Maximum Diversion Limit: No Solvency Limit Triggered (Solvent at 100% Diversion).
- The Math: Losing 100% of the county's 3,684 tons of commercial waste removes $350,000.00 in tipping revenue but saves the SWA $253,290.00 in transport/tipping costs. The net cash flow drop is only $96,710.00, leaving the SWA with a $111,721.00 operating surplus at the end of the year.
Scenario B: Realistic Logistics (50% Semi-Fixed Hauling Costs)
In a self-hauling operation, approximately half of the transport budget (depot operations, tractor lease, and CDL salaries) remains fixed regardless of tonnage:
- Fixed Hauling Cost: $275,000.00
- Variable Hauling Cost: $34.38 / Ton
- SWA Net Margin Per Ton: $60.62 ($95.00 tipping fee minus $34.38 variable cost).
- Insolvency Threshold: 93.32% Commercial Waste Diversion
- The Math: If more than 3,438 tons (93.3%) of commercial waste are diverted away from the transfer station (for example, if both the Town of Marlinton and Allegheny Disposal bypass the SWA), the SWA’s net cash flow falls below zero. At 100% diversion, the SWA suffers an annual operational deficit of -$14,923.00, triggering a lease default.
Scenario C: Critical Logistics (70% Fixed Hauling Costs)
In geographically isolated, low-density mountainous corridors, fixed logistics costs (truck maintenance, bad-weather delays, and fixed-route operations) can consume up to 70% of the transport budget:
- Fixed Hauling Cost: $385,000.00
- Variable Hauling Cost: $20.63 / Ton
- SWA Net Margin Per Ton: $74.37 ($95.00 tipping fee minus $20.63 variable cost).
- Insolvency Threshold: 76.07% Commercial Waste Diversion
- The Math: If commercial diversion exceeds 2,802 tons (76.1%), the SWA cannot cover its fixed operating overhead and JacMal lease. At 100% diversion, the SWA faces a severe annual deficit of -$65,581.00, leading to immediate structural bankruptcy.
Summary of Solvency Projections at $260.00 Fee
| Commercial Diversion Rate | Net Cash Flow (100% Variable Hauling) | Net Cash Flow (50% Fixed Hauling) | Net Cash Flow (70% Fixed Hauling) | SWA System Status (Realistic Model) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0% (Full Integration) | $208,432.00 | $208,432.00 | $208,432.00 | SOLVENT (Baseline Safety Margin) |
| 25% Diversion | $184,254.00 | $152,593.00 | $127,264.00 | SOLVENT (Buffer Compressed) |
| 50% Diversion | $160,077.00 | $96,754.00 | $46,096.00 | SOLVENT (Critical Cash Flow Warning) |
| 75% Diversion | $135,899.00 | $40,915.00 | $4,928.00 | BORDERLINE (Solvency boundary under 70% Fixed Model) |
| 80% Diversion | $131,064.00 | $29,748.00 | -$3,306.00 | DEFAULT under high-fixed-cost mountain hauling |
| 95% Diversion | $116,557.00 | -$3,745.00 | -$24,670.00 | DEFAULT under standard 50% fixed logistics model |
| 100% (Complete Bypass) | $111,721.00 | -$14,923.00 | -$65,581.00 | SYSTEM COLLAPSE & SWA BANKRUPTCY |
The Takeaway for the County Commission
This analysis proves that protecting waste flow control is a prerequisite for public-sector solvency. If the Town of Marlinton or private waste haulers are permitted to bypass the centralized transfer station and direct-haul waste out of the county, they do not just "save" their own tipping fees—they actively dismantle the financial baseline of the entire county waste system, shifting the SWA's fixed capital overhead directly onto local, low-income residential ratepayers.
If the Town of Marlinton bypasses the Solid Waste Authority (SWA) and attempts to transport its municipal waste independently (such as hauling it directly to an out-of-county facility), it would face severe, compounding legal and financial risks under the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Regulations (as recorded in solidx.pdf):
1. Violation of the Flow Control Mandate (Section 9)
The regulations establish strict countywide flow control. Section 9 explicitly mandates that all municipal solid waste generated within Pocahontas County must be delivered to facilities designated or approved by the SWA as part of its integrated solid waste management system. Bypassing the SWA to haul waste to an out-of-county landfill directly violates this legal requirement.
2. Engaging in Prohibited Conduct (Section 15)
The regulations specifically designate the following activities as prohibited:
- "Transporting municipal solid waste to unauthorized facilities."
- "Taking municipal solid waste out of Pocahontas County, unless authorized by the Authority." If Marlinton exports its municipal trash without SWA authorization, it is committing a direct violation of these prohibited conduct clauses.
3. Violation of Licensed Hauler Requirements (Section 13)
If the Town of Marlinton collects and transports waste using its own municipal trucks and personnel, it must comply with Section 13, which requires all waste transporters to:
- Register with the SWA.
- Deliver all waste to the SWA's commercial solid waste facility.
- Submit monthly and annual tonnage reports. Failing to deliver this waste to the designated SWA facility constitutes an additional breach of hauler regulations.
4. Compounding Daily Civil Penalties (Section 17)
The financial penalties for non-compliance are structured to escalate rapidly:
- The SWA can assess civil penalties of $150.00 per violation.
- Crucially, each day of violation constitutes a separate offense. If the town bypasses SWA facilities daily, they would face compounding $150.00/day fines that quickly accumulate into thousands of dollars in statutory debt.
5. Extensive Cost Recovery Liabilities (Section 18)
Under Section 18, any entity responsible for unlawful waste routing or disposal is liable for a broad range of recovery fees. Marlinton could be forced to pay the SWA's:
- Cleanup costs
- Investigation costs
- Administrative costs
- Disposal costs
- Any other legal remedies available under West Virginia state law.
6. SWA Judicial Enforcement and Injunctive Relief (Section 16)
To stop the town from bypassing its facilities, the SWA is legally empowered to pursue injunctive relief in court. This would result in a court order legally halting Marlinton's independent hauling operations, potentially leaving the town with stranded long-haul capital equipment and no lawful method to dispose of municipal garbage.
Note: This is an AI product of the Salt Shaker Press and is not intended as legal advice.

