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Taxes vs. Usage Fees

 

Comparative Analysis of Government Exactions: Taxes vs. Usage Fees

Executive Summary

The distinction between taxes and usage fees is a critical boundary in public finance, governing how revenue is raised, managed, and legally defended. Historically, the "Ability-to-Pay Principle" (the basis for progressive taxation) dominated 20th-century governance. However, recent decades have seen a resurgence of the "Benefit Principle," driving a shift toward "user-pay" models.

This briefing document outlines the legal, economic, and fiscal frameworks used to differentiate these exactions. Key takeaways include:

  • Legal Scrutiny: Courts use rigorous tests, such as the San Juan Cellular three-part test, to ensure fees are not "taxes in disguise."
  • Economic Efficiency: Usage fees serve as pricing signals that prevent the "tragedy of the commons" and promote allocative efficiency by aligning consumption with marginal costs.
  • Fiscal Stability: While fees offer dedicated revenue streams through Enterprise Funds, they face "fungibility" risks where earmarked funds simply allow general revenue to be diverted elsewhere.
  • Social Equity Challenges: Usage fees are inherently regressive. The rise of "taxation by citation" in criminal justice and the privatization of essential services like water and higher education place disproportionate burdens on low-income populations.
  • Judicial Trends: Recent rulings, including the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in Sheetz v. El Dorado County, mandate that fees must meet "rough proportionality" and "essential nexus" standards to remain valid.

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1. Theoretical Foundations of Public Revenue

Public revenue instruments are built upon two competing philosophical doctrines that dictate how the financial burden of government is distributed.

The Benefit Principle (Usage Fees)

This principle posits that burdens should be proportional to the benefits received. The state acts as a market actor, providing services (highways, water, education) for a price.

  • Objective: Allocative efficiency and cost recovery.
  • Impact: Forces users to internalize costs, preventing the overuse of resources.

The Ability-to-Pay Principle (Taxes)

This doctrine suggests taxes should be distributed according to a payer’s capacity to bear the burden, regardless of benefits received.

  • Objective: Distributive justice and funding "pure" public goods (national defense, police).
  • Impact: Justifies progressive income taxes where higher earners make an "equal sacrifice" in terms of marginal utility.

Comparison of Revenue Principles

Feature

Benefit Principle (Usage Fees)

Ability-to-Pay Principle (Taxes)

Philosophical Basis

Exchange/Commutative Justice

Distributive Justice/Social Contract

Market Analogy

Price for service

Membership dues for society

Payer Motivation

Personal utility/service acquisition

Mandatory contribution to general welfare

Standard Application

Tolls, water bills, park fees, tuition

Income, sales, and property taxes

Equity Constraint

Often regressive for lower incomes

Can be designed as progressive

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2. The Legal Taxonomy: Defining Taxes, Fees, and Penalties

Legal classification determines procedural requirements, such as whether a charge requires voter approval or a legislative supermajority.

The San Juan Cellular Three-Part Test

Originating from the 1992 case San Juan Cellular Telephone Co. v. Public Service Commission of Puerto Rico, this test identifies a "classic tax" versus a "classic regulatory fee" based on three criteria:

  1. Imposing Entity: Taxes are imposed by legislatures; fees are often delegated to administrative agencies.
  2. Targeted Class: Taxes apply to the general public; fees apply to a specific, regulated group or those receiving a particular benefit.
  3. Revenue Use: Tax revenue enters a General Fund for community-wide benefits; fee revenue is placed in dedicated accounts to defray specific administrative or service costs.

State Variations and the Voluntariness Debate

States like Washington use the Covell Framework, distinguishing between "commodity charges" (direct consumption like water) and "burden offset charges" (impact fees for using public resources).

A major point of contention is "voluntariness." While some argue fees are voluntary (e.g., choosing not to use a toll road), many jurisdictions have rejected this as a dispositive factor. The prevailing modern view focuses on the primary purpose—revenue raising (tax) versus cost recovery (fee)—as the most reliable indicator.

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3. Economic Efficiency and Pricing Mechanisms

From an economic standpoint, usage fees function as sophisticated instruments for resource management.

  • Allocative Efficiency: Occurs when services are priced at their marginal cost. This prevents "economic waste" caused by over-consumption (when priced too low) or under-consumption (when priced too high).
  • Rationing Efficiency: Essential during capacity limits or shortages (e.g., peak electricity demand). "Value pricing" or "congestion pricing" allocates limited resources to those who value them most.
  • Two-Part Tariffs: A structure combining a fixed "customer fee" (to cover infrastructure costs) and a variable unit price (to ensure allocative efficiency at the margin).
  • User Cost of Capital: Used by the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) to estimate investment incentives. CBO modeling suggests a 1% decrease in the user cost of capital can lead to a 0.7% increase in investment.

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4. Fiscal Mechanics and Budgetary Architecture

The management of revenue differs significantly based on the fund structure used by state and local governments.

Fund Structures

  • General Fund: The primary operating account funded by broad taxes (income, sales). It offers maximum flexibility for shifting priorities.
  • Proprietary/Enterprise Funds: Designed for business-type activities (utilities). Revenues from fees are restricted to covering the costs of that specific service.
  • Fiduciary Funds: Held for others, such as employee pensions; these cannot be spent by the government for operations.

The Fungibility Problem

A significant challenge is the "substitution effect." Policymakers may "earmark" a popular tax (e.g., tobacco taxes for healthcare), but research from the Mercatus Center shows that legislatures often reduce general fund contributions to that same category, effectively "freeing up" money for less popular programs. In some cases, dedicating corporate income tax to education actually led to a decrease in total education spending.

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5. Case Study: Transportation and the "User-Pays" Crisis

The U.S. highway system, historically funded by the fuel tax, faces a "funding death spiral."

  • The Decline of the Fuel Tax: The federal gas tax has not increased since 1993, and its real value has dropped by over 50%. Improved fuel economy and Electric Vehicles (EVs) mean many users pay little to nothing for road wear.
  • Mileage-Based User Fees (MBUF/VMT): States are transitioning to charges based on vehicle miles traveled. This ensures all vehicles, regardless of energy source, contribute fairly.
  • Congestion Pricing: All-electronic tolling (AET) allows for real-time rate adjustments. In New York, congestion pricing reduced traffic by 11% (27 million fewer vehicles) while generating $550 million for transit improvements in its first year.

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6. Social Equity and the Burden of "Poverty Taxes"

Usage fees are structurally regressive, requiring lower-income households to devote a larger percentage of their income to essential services.

Criminal Justice and "Taxation by Citation"

Faced with political resistance to taxes, many jurisdictions have implemented administrative fees for court-appointed counsel and jail stays.

  • Inefficiency: Collection rates are low because targets are often impoverished.
  • Punitive Cycles: Non-payment leads to license suspensions and additional jail time.
  • Conflict of Interest: In California, litigation revealed "civil assessments" were used as an unconstitutional scheme to fund the judiciary itself, leading to the 2022 elimination of $500 million in debt.

Mitigation Strategies

Mitigation Strategy

Mechanism

Advantage

Disadvantage

Sliding Scale

Fee based on income percentage

Increases access for the poor

High administrative cost; "stigma effect"

Lifeline Rates

Low cost for baseline consumption

Ensures access to basics

May not cover full infrastructure cost

Full Waivers

Eliminates fee for certain groups

Maximizes social equity

Requires external subsidies

Vouchers/Grants

Direct payments to pay fees

Maintains market price signals

Complex to administer

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7. Judicial Evolution and the Proportionality Mandate

Modern case law has moved toward a high standard of documentation for government agencies.

  • The Proportionate Cost Standard: In Scott v. County of Riverside (2025) and Patz v. City of San Diego (2025), courts ruled that agencies must prove a logical connection between the fee charged and the actual cost of delivering the specific service.
  • Development Impact Fees: The U.S. Supreme Court ruling in Sheetz v. El Dorado County (2024) established that legislatively enacted fees (like those for new housing developments) must meet the "essential nexus" and "rough proportionality" tests. This prevents counties from setting flat fees without demonstrating the specific burden created by a development.
  • Invalidation of Fees: Fees used for general purposes—such as funding employee pensions—are increasingly invalidated by courts as unconstitutional, unvoted taxes.

The Hidden Cost of "Free": Why Your Next Bill Might Actually Be a Tax in Disguise

 

 

The Hidden Cost of "Free": Why Your Next Bill Might Actually Be a Tax in Disguise

Open your last water bill or a recent university tuition statement, and you will likely find a series of inscrutable line items: "infrastructure surcharges," "facility fees," or "administrative assessments." We have entered the era of the $40 "convenience fee" for a $10 service. These charges are often presented as distinct from the taxes we debate during election cycles, yet for the average citizen, the result is the same: the government is taking your money.

This shift reveals a deepening fracture in the American social contract, rooted in two competing philosophies of public finance. On one side is the Benefit Principle, which treats the state like a market actor—if you use the service, you pay the price. On the other is the Ability-to-Pay Principle, the bedrock of traditional governance, which suggests we should contribute based on our financial capacity to support the common good. As local budgets are squeezed by inflation and political gridlock, the line between these two principles is blurring. We are increasingly paying "taxes in disguise," and the consequences are reshaping everything from our highways to our courtrooms.

The Label is a Lie: The Legal "Primary Purpose"

In the eyes of the law, what a legislature calls a charge is often a political fiction. Whether labeled a "premium," an "assessment," or a "surcharge," the judiciary increasingly looks past the nomenclature to find the "primary purpose" of the exaction.

The gold standard for this determination remains the San Juan Cellular three-part test. To distinguish a "classic tax" from a "classic regulatory fee," courts ask: Who imposed it (a legislature or an agency)? Who pays it (the general public or a specific regulated group)? And where does the money go (a general fund or a dedicated account)?

But the legal nuance goes deeper. In states like Washington, the Covell framework adds another layer of scrutiny, distinguishing between "commodity charges"—fees for products like water or electricity—and "burden offset charges," which are levied on activities that strain public resources, such as new developments. This matters because while "taxes" usually require a legislative supermajority or direct voter approval, "fees" are often tucked away in administrative rules, allowing revenue to grow without the political friction of a traditional tax hike. As the courts have noted:

"Courts generally hold that the nomenclature is not determinative; instead, the 'primary purpose' of the charge dictates its classification."

The Earmarking Illusion and the "Fungibility" Trap

Governments often sell new charges by "earmarking" them for popular causes—think lottery proceeds for schools or tobacco taxes for healthcare. However, the uncomfortable reality of public finance is that money is "fungible." One dollar is perfectly substitutable for another, leading to what economists call the substitution effect.

This is a high-stakes shell game. When a new dedicated fee brings a dollar into a department, the legislature may simultaneously reduce that department’s general fund allocation by a dollar. The result? The "dedicated" revenue has essentially "freed up" money for less popular programs elsewhere. Data from the Mercatus Center reveals a startling truth: for every dollar of corporate income tax dedicated specifically to education, researchers actually found a decrease in total education spending. This is the "Leviathan" model of government expansion—the state grows through politically palatable, dedicated revenue streams that provide a veneer of transparency while masking the true allocation of funds.

The "Funding Death Spiral" of the American Highway

The federal gas tax serves as a cautionary tale of what happens when a "proxy fee" fails. For decades, it was a rough-and-ready way to charge for road usage: more driving meant more gas, which meant more revenue. Today, this model is in a "funding death spiral."

The federal gas tax hasn't increased since 1993, its value eroded by inflation and fuel efficiency. Furthermore, the rise of Electric Vehicles (EVs) has created a fundamental unfairness: EVs are often heavier than gas-powered cars, contributing more to road wear, yet they pay zero in fuel taxes. To fix this, states are pivoting toward Mileage-Based User Fees (MBUF) or Vehicle Miles Traveled (VMT) charges.

These are "true" user fees that capture revenue regardless of the vehicle's power source. This transition also enables sophisticated urban management, like New York’s congestion pricing. By charging drivers to enter Manhattan south of 60th Street, the city generated over $550 million for transit and saw 27 million fewer vehicles in its first year. In this model, the fee isn't just revenue—it’s a tool to manage the city itself.

The Cost of a Zero-Price World

From an economic standpoint, providing public services at "zero price" through general taxation can be a disaster. This is the "Tragedy of the Commons": if a resource like water or a highway is free at the point of use, people will over-consume it until it is degraded or depleted.

Usage fees solve this through "allocative efficiency"—pricing a service at its marginal cost so users only consume what they truly value. To cover the massive fixed costs of infrastructure, many utilities are moving toward a Two-Part Tariff. Think of this as a "subscription fee for civilization": a fixed base cost to keep the pipes and wires in place, plus a variable cost for what you actually use. This prevents consumption distortions while ensuring the infrastructure survives.

Taxation by Citation: The Rise of the Poverty Tax

The most controversial shift in this landscape is the move toward funding the criminal legal system through administrative fees. Facing resistance to tax increases, many local governments have implemented "fees" for court-appointed counsel, jail stays, and late payments.

This "taxation by citation" functions as a regressive poverty tax. Because many individuals in the system are impoverished, collection rates are notoriously low, and the cost of enforcement—police time and court hearings—often exceeds the revenue generated. More importantly, it creates a dangerous conflict of interest.

"California litigation against 'civil assessments' revealed these charges were being used as an unconstitutional scheme to fund the courts themselves, creating a financial incentive for the judiciary to impose maximum penalties."

In 2022, California moved to discharge $500 million of this debt, acknowledging that using court fees to fund the judiciary’s own budget was a fundamental threat to justice.

The Proportionality Mandate: The New Hurdle

The era of local governments setting flat, arbitrary fees is coming to an end. Recent judicial shifts, punctuated by the U.S. Supreme Court in Sheetz v. El Dorado County, have established a "proportionality mandate."

The Court ruled that local governments can no longer just "set a flat fee" for new construction. They must prove an "essential nexus" and "rough proportionality" between the fee and the specific burden created by the payer. If a county wants to charge a developer for a new housing tract, it must act like a firm of accountants and engineers, proving exactly how much traffic or water demand that specific project creates. While this protects builders from excessive costs, it creates a massive new hurdle for municipal budgets that rely on impact fees to fund growth.

Toward a New Social Contract

The struggle between taxes and fees reflects a choice between two versions of society. Is the government a collective enterprise where we share costs based on our ability to pay? Or is it a marketplace where public services are commodities?

The future likely demands a "Theory of Everything" for public finance—a tiered approach. Core "public goods" like the judiciary and basic education must remain funded through progressive taxation to ensure social equity. Meanwhile, "near-public goods" like utilities and high-end infrastructure should move toward sophisticated usage fees that promote efficiency.

To bridge the gap, we must adopt "lifeline rates"—subsidized tiers for basic consumption—to ensure the "user-pays" world doesn't leave the most vulnerable behind. Ultimately, a society that relies purely on taxes risks waste, but a society that relies purely on fees risks fragmentation. Finding the balance is not just an economic necessity; it is a question of our shared values.



Taxes vs. fees

 


Legal Assessment: Distinguishing Regulatory Fees from Unconstitutional Taxation

1. Contextual Framework: The Jurisdictional Shift Toward User-Pay Models

In the current fiscal landscape, municipal and state jurisdictions have executed a calculated shift away from broad-based taxation toward granular "user-pay" models. This strategic evolution is driven by the necessity to diversify revenue streams amidst political resistance to tax hikes and the desire to protect funding from legislative "raids." However, this migration has triggered heightened judicial scrutiny. Courts are increasingly aggressive in determining whether these charges are legitimate cost-recovery instruments or "taxes in disguise" designed to circumvent constitutional requirements, such as voter approval or supermajority thresholds.

The legal and philosophical survival of these charges depends on whether they are rooted in the Benefit Principle or the Ability-to-Pay Principle. Under the Benefit Principle, the state operates as a market actor, where the financial burden is distributed in proportion to the specific benefits received or burdens created. This framework promotes allocative efficiency by forcing users to internalize the costs of their consumption. Conversely, the Ability-to-Pay Principle treats revenue as a mandatory contribution to the social contract (distributive justice) based on a payer’s capacity to bear the burden, regardless of individual usage. While the Benefit Principle aligns with market logic, it faces legal and equity challenges when applied to "pure" public goods. These foundational philosophies dictate the legal justification for a charge, directly impacting its ability to withstand modern judicial review.

To navigate this landscape, counsel must move beyond philosophical abstractions and master the specific legal tests employed by the courts.

2. The Primary Purpose Doctrine: Applying the San Juan Cellular Test

Counsel must recognize that the "Primary Purpose" doctrine is the paramount defense against claims of unconstitutional taxation. Legislative nomenclature is never legally determinative; courts routinely look past labels such as "surcharge," "assessment," or "premium" to identify the actual intent of the collection. Strategically, a charge is only defensible as a fee if its primary purpose is cost recovery or regulation rather than general revenue generation. Within this framework, counsel should distinguish between Commodity Charges (fees for government products like water) and Burden Offset Charges (fees for activities that consume public resources, such as development).

The definitive benchmark for this distinction is the three-part San Juan Cellular test. To defend a fee, the following criteria must be meticulously satisfied:

Criterion

Classic Tax

Classic Regulatory Fee

Entity

Imposed by a legislature using sovereign power.

Delegated to an administrative agency for regulation/service.

Payer Class

Applied broadly to many or all citizens.

Applied to a specific, identifiable group or service recipient.

Revenue Use

Deposited into a General Fund for community-wide benefit.

Placed in dedicated accounts to defray specific costs.

Counsel must expose the Fungibility Problem and the Substitution Effect as the primary litigation vulnerabilities in fee structures. Because tax revenues are perfectly substitutable, the "earmarking" of a fee for a popular purpose can be a deceptive facade. If a legislature creates a new fee for a specific service while simultaneously reducing that service’s General Fund appropriation by an equal amount, the fee effectively functions as a tax to "free up" money for other purposes. This lack of transparency aligns with the "Leviathan" model of government expansion and often leads to voter distrust and invalidation.

The validity of the entity and the fund must be supported by the specific proportionality of the amount charged.

3. The Proportionality Mandate: Sheetz v. El Dorado County and Modern Standards

The strategic landscape for public finance was fundamentally altered by the U.S. Supreme Court’s unanimous ruling in Sheetz v. El Dorado County (2024). This decision expanded judicial scrutiny by clarifying that exactions enacted by legislative bodies—not just those imposed administratively—are subject to the Takings Clause of the Constitution. Flat fees enacted by a Board of Supervisors are no longer immune to the rigorous standards previously reserved for individual assessments.

Under this modern mandate, any development impact fee or administrative assessment must satisfy a dual-standard of accountability:

  • Essential Nexus: A clear, documented connection must exist between the fee and the specific public impact of the payer's activity.
  • Rough Proportionality: The government must provide an Individualized Justification demonstrating that the fee amount is reasonably related to the specific burden created by the payer.

Recent appellate rulings, including Scott v. County of Riverside (2025) and Patz v. City of San Diego (2025), have codified the "Reasonable Cost" requirement. Courts now mandate that public agencies document the "true cost" of services. Tiered rates or assessments will be invalidated if the agency cannot provide a data-driven connection between the price and the service delivery cost. The economic stakes are significant: modeling suggests that a 1% decrease in the user cost of capital—often influenced by fee structures—can lead to a 0.7% increase in investment, highlighting the sensitivity of private incentives to government pricing.

This rigorous proportionality ensures that legal mechanisms align with the underlying economic efficiency of pricing.

4. Economic Rationale and Fiscal Architecture for Compliance

Strategically, usage fees serve as critical pricing signals that prevent the "Tragedy of the Commons." When services are provided at a zero price via general taxes, the lack of a price signal leads to excessive demand and resource depletion. To ensure compliance, fee structures must target two types of efficiency:

  1. Allocative Efficiency: Pricing a service at its marginal cost to prevent waste from over-consumption.
  2. Rationing Efficiency: Utilizing "Value Pricing" or "Congestion Pricing" to allocate limited resources to those who value them most.

The effectiveness of this model is evidenced by New York’s congestion pricing data, where the implementation resulted in 27 million fewer vehicles (an 11% reduction) while generating $550 million for transit improvements. Agencies can further optimize this through Two-Part Tariffs, utilizing a fixed "subscription fee" for infrastructure and a variable fee for consumption.

The Fiscal Architecture of the agency is the final evidentiary requirement for compliance. Fee revenue must be strictly segregated from the General Fund and directed into Enterprise or Proprietary Funds. These funds must operate like a business, where costs are recovered primarily through user charges. The strict segregation of these accounts is essential for defending a fee, as it proves the revenue is not being diverted to general operations or employee pensions.

This transition from economic theory to practice must also account for the social risks and equity challenges of the user-fee model.

5. Risk Assessment: Identifying "Taxes in Disguise" and Equity Concerns

Failure to distinguish between cost recovery and wealth redistribution creates significant strategic risks, specifically "Taxation by Citation." This practice—using fines and fees to fund general operations—leads to social destabilization and high-stakes litigation.

A critical case study is the California "civil assessment" litigation. In 2022, the state was forced to discharge $500 million in court debt after it was revealed the judiciary was using late fees as an unconstitutional funding scheme for its own operations, creating an inherent conflict of interest.

To maintain the "Fee" classification while addressing the regressive nature of these charges, counsel should evaluate the following mitigation strategies:

  • Lifeline Rates: Providing baseline service at a low cost.
  • Sliding Scales: Adjusting prices based on income. Strategic Warning: Counsel must note that sliding scales can carry a "stigma effect" that may decrease participation among those most in need.
  • Full Waivers/Subsidies: Maximizing equity for specific populations, though this requires external funding.
  • Vouchers/Grants: Providing direct assistance to maintain market price signals while ensuring access.

The high stakes of these distinctions require a comprehensive standard for documenting fee validity.

6. Conclusion: A Comprehensive Standard for Documenting Fee Validity

To ensure government charges survive judicial scrutiny and serve their intended purpose, agencies must adhere to the following framework.

Compliance Checklist:

  1. Verification of Primary Purpose: Formally document that the charge is for cost recovery or burden offset (Commodity vs. Burden Offset) rather than general revenue.
  2. Essential Nexus & Rough Proportionality: Conduct detailed engineering and economic studies to establish the link between the fee and the impact.
  3. Individualized Justification: Prepare data-driven evidence that the fee reflects the "true cost" of the specific service provided to the payer.
  4. Proper Fund Accounting: Ensure absolute segregation of revenue within Enterprise/Proprietary funds to avoid the "Substitution Effect."
  5. Equity Assessment: Implement mitigation strategies (e.g., Lifeline Rates) while accounting for the administrative costs and potential stigma effects.

The balance between market efficiency (Usage Fees) and the social contract (Taxes) remains the central challenge of modern public finance. Only through rigorous documentation and adherence to constitutional proportionality can an agency maintain the delicate equilibrium required for fiscal sustainability.

Citizens Access to a Grand Jury

 


The right of a citizen to present a complaint directly to a grand jury in West Virginia is established by State ex rel. Miller v. Smith, 168 W. Va. 745 (1981).

While most "Miller" searches lead to the famous 1995 "Plain Error" case, this 1981 decision is the foundation for the "Open Courts" provision regarding grand juries.


The Core Ruling: State ex rel. Miller v. Smith (1981)

The West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals ruled that under Article III, Section 17 of the West Virginia Constitution (the "Open Courts" clause), any person has a constitutional right to present a complaint to a grand jury.

Syllabus Point 1: "By application to the circuit judge, whose duty is to insure access to the grand jury, any person may go to the grand jury to present a complaint to it."

Key Rules from the Decision

  • The Prosecutor Cannot Block You: A prosecuting attorney does not have the power to stop a citizen from appearing before a grand jury. Their role is to assist the grand jury, not to act as a "gatekeeper" who can unilaterally deny access.

  • The Judge is the Gatekeeper: If a citizen wants to present evidence or a complaint, they must apply to the Circuit Judge, not the prosecutor.

  • Protecting the "Sword and Shield": The Court emphasized that the grand jury serves a dual function: a "sword" to investigate crime and a "shield" to protect citizens from unfair prosecution. Allowing citizens to petition directly ensures the "shield" stays intact even if a prosecutor is biased or indifferent.


Modern Clarification: In re: Dreyfuse (2020)

Because the 1981 Miller ruling was so broad, the Court clarified the process in 2020 to prevent people from "clogging" the system with frivolous or abusive complaints.

The Current Process

  1. Written Application: The citizen must file an application with the Circuit Court.

  2. Prosecutor Review: The judge gives a copy to the prosecutor. The prosecutor can then decide to investigate the claim themselves or decline.

  3. In-Camera Hearing: If the prosecutor declines or fails to act, the judge holds a private (in-camera) hearing to listen to the citizen and the prosecutor.

  4. Judicial Discretion: The judge can deny the application if it is found to be frivolous, abusive, or intended to obstruct justice.


Summary Table

CaseYearImpact on Citizen Rights
State ex rel. Miller v. Smith1981Established the constitutional right of citizens to bypass the prosecutor and petition the grand jury via a judge.
In re: Dreyfuse2020Added procedural guardrails allowing judges to block applications that are "abusive" or "frivolous."

Would you like me to help you draft a formal application to a circuit court, or do you need the specific syllabus points for a legal brief?

Proposed Request for Investigation

 


TO: The Honorable Circuit Court of Pocahontas County, West Virginia / Office of the Prosecuting Attorney

SUBJECT: Formal Request for a Grand Jury Investigation into Alleged Criminal Conspiracy, Antitrust Violations, and Statutory Breaches by the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (PCSWA).

This document serves as a formal petition requesting an immediate legal investigation into the actions of the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (hereinafter "SWA") and its principal officers. Evidence suggests the SWA has engaged in a coordinated effort to circumvent West Virginia state laws, monopolize local commerce, and obscure its actions from public scrutiny regarding the multi-million dollar waste management transition planned for 2026.

We respectfully request a review of the following alleged violations:

COUNT I: Antitrust Violations, Monopolistic Practices, and Restraint of Trade

The SWA is allegedly attempting to establish an illegal private monopoly for waste disposal by partnering with a single private entity, Allegheny Disposal (operating as JacMal, LLC, controlled by Jacob Meck).

  • Illegal Implementation of "Flow Control": To guarantee the financial success of this private partnership, the SWA intends to mandate "Flow Control," a rule dictating that all municipal solid waste generated in the county must be processed through the Allegheny Disposal facility.
  • Restraint of Trade: This mandate explicitly prohibits local residents and independent commercial haulers from seeking more affordable tipping fees in neighboring counties. By eliminating all market competition, the SWA is constructing a private monopoly that restricts interstate/inter-county commerce and acts as an illegal restraint on trade.
  • Usurpation of PSC Jurisdiction: The SWA does not possess the statutory authority to unilaterally enforce flow control. Under West Virginia Code §24-2-1h, the authority to mandate flow control resides exclusively with the Public Service Commission (PSC), which must first conduct a rigorous evaluation of the public necessity and economic impact.

COUNT II: Procurement Fraud and Evasion of Competitive Bidding

The SWA has allegedly conspired to bypass mandatory state procurement and bidding laws to award a lucrative contract to a pre-selected private vendor.

  • Violation of Statutory Thresholds: The SWA approved a 15-year agreement with JacMal, LLC/Allegheny Disposal valued at an estimated $4,120,000. This was done without soliciting competitive bids, in direct violation of West Virginia Code §20-14-10 (which mandates bidding for services exceeding $25,000) and the Fairness in Government Procurement Act under §5-22-1 (which mandates competitive bidding for construction projects over $50,000).
  • Use of a Straw-Man Entity: To unlawfully circumvent these laws, the SWA and its attorney, David Sims, characterized the deal as a "public-private partnership". The SWA engineered a scheme to transfer approximately two acres of public landfill property to the Greenbrier Valley Economic Development Corporation (GVEDC) to act as an intermediary, allowing the private contractor to build the facility and lease it back to the county at $16,759 per month. This maneuver appears designed specifically to evade public scrutiny and procurement transparency.

COUNT III: Violations of the Open Governmental Proceedings Act

The SWA has allegedly exhibited a pattern of suppressing public participation and violating the spirit, if not the letter, of state transparency laws.

  • Suppression of Public Comment: During a highly contentious public hearing held in a courtroom on March 19, 2026, the SWA strictly limited citizen commentary to "green box" fees alone. The board explicitly refused to allow the public to question or discuss the underlying construction or hauling contracts that were driving those very fee increases.
  • Violation of Legislative Intent: West Virginia Code §22C-4-1 dictates that waste management conflicts must be resolved in a "local governmental forum where citizens can most easily participate in the decision-making process". The SWA's exclusionary tactics, including limited public engagement during the 2023 Stakeholder's Group, violate this statutory mandate.

COUNT IV: Statutory Overreach and Illegal Taxation Attempts

In an attempt to fund its privately operated transfer station, the SWA explored unlawfully expanding its taxation authority over Pocahontas County citizens.

  • Illegal Fee Assessments on Vacant Land: In March 2026, the SWA’s attorney proposed forcing every deeded property in the county, including unimproved and vacant land, to pay the mandatory "Green Box" waste fee. This is a blatant violation of West Virginia Code §22C-4-10, which restricts such fees solely to persons "occupying a residence or operating a business establishment".
  • Prohibited Property Tax Integration: The SWA additionally investigated integrating these solid waste fees directly into the county's ad valorem property tax system to force collection, a practice strictly prohibited under West Virginia tax code.
  • Governance Defects: The SWA board has conducted binding votes while operating with illegal vacancies that exceeded the 60-day statutory limit for replacement (§22C-4-3). Furthermore, critics have alleged that SWA Chairman Dave Henderson has been operating and voting under an oath of office that expired in 2015.

PRAYER FOR RELIEF Given the severity of these allegations, which include the unauthorized creation of a monopoly, the avoidance of competitive bidding for a $4.12 million public commitment, and the suppression of citizen oversight, we request that the Circuit Court and the Prosecuting Attorney:

  1. Initiate a formal Grand Jury investigation into the SWA’s contracting practices with JacMal, LLC / Allegheny Disposal.
  2. Issue an injunction halting the transfer of public lands and the execution of the lease agreement until a full legal review of the bidding process is completed.
  3. Investigate the SWA board's governance structure, including expired oaths and procedural violations, to determine the legal validity of their recent votes.

If the prosecuting attorneys is unable or unwilling do so, we request that all citizens who wish to make a presentation be allowed to do so. 

Critical Comment Period

  


Written Comments: The public may submit written comments regarding the green box fee to the Solid Waste Authority office until April 6, 2026, at 4:30 PM.

Based on the information you've provided regarding written comments, I have compiled a complete visual of the public notice for the West Virginia Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority.


Written Comments:

The public may submit written comments regarding the green box fee to the West Virginia Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority office until April 6, 2026, at 4:30 PM.


Public Notice Contact Details

For your reference, here is the official contact information and background context based on my verification:

Office & Contact Information

The Solid Waste Authority (SWA) business office is located within the courthouse complex in Marlinton.

  • Physical Address:

    Pocahontas County Courthouse (Basement Level)

    900-H Tenth Avenue

    Marlinton, WV 24954

  • Mailing Address:

    P.O. Box 224

    Marlinton, WV 24954

  • Phone: (304) 799-6262

  • Email: pcswa@frontier.com

  • Website: pocahontascountyswa.yolasite.com


Landfill Closure Notice

It is crucial to note that the Pocahontas County Landfill (located at Landfill Road in Dunmore) is estimated to close in the fall of 2026 due to reaching its permitted capacity. Following this closure, the SWA is planning a transition to a transfer station model, which is expected to result in significantly higher Green Box fees to cover the costs of transporting waste to another county's landfill.  

Salt Shaker Press (i.e. Norman Alderman) will FOIA all your letters from the SWA.  

March 26 Hearing Summary

 


The following is a summary of the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority hearing held on March 26, 2026. This meeting addressed the proposed construction of a transfer station and changes to the "green box" waste disposal fees.

Solid Waste and Fee Proposal

The primary focus of the meeting was the impending closure of the county landfill and the transition to a transfer station model.

  • Landfill Status: Officials stated that the current landfill is nearly full and attempts to expand on adjacent land failed years ago [00:18].

  • Transfer Station Plan: The authority proposed an agreement with Jackal Properties LLC (owned by Jacob Meck) to build a transfer station. This is structured as a public-private partnership involving the Greenbrier Valley Economic Development Corporation to reduce costs through property tax abatement [22:33].

  • Green Box Fees: There was significant discussion regarding raising the "green box" fee (residential waste fee) to fund the new system. Residents expressed concern that fees could rise from $130 to $300 or more annually [01:09:59].

Public Concerns and Opposition

The hearing was marked by intense public opposition and frequent interruptions.

  • Affordability: Many residents, particularly those on fixed incomes or Social Security, stated they could not afford the proposed fee increases [09:02], [01:13:22].

  • Lack of Competitive Bidding: Citizens repeatedly questioned why the multi-million dollar contract was a "no-bid" deal given to a single private entity rather than being opened for public bidding [27:18], [01:33:06].

  • Monopoly Allegations: Residents expressed fear that the mandatory disposal regulations would create a monopoly, forcing them to use the new facility and making it illegal to take trash to neighboring counties where it might be cheaper [52:30], [58:39].

  • Transparency: Speakers requested access to the financial analysis and full contract documents, which officials stated would require a FOIA (Freedom of Information Act) request [01:13:36], [01:18:51].

Board Actions and Governance

Despite the vocal opposition, the board moved forward with several procedural votes:

  • Board Vacancies: The public pointed out that only three of the five board seats are currently filled [41:50].

  • Approved Motions: The board voted 3-0 to approve the Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with the Greenbrier Valley Economic Development Corp and Jackal Properties in its current form [33:34]. They also authorized the chairman to execute the lease agreement with Jackal Properties once legal reviews are finalized [35:51].

  • Mandatory Regulations: The board voted to approve the mandatory solid waste disposal regulations [40:19].

Deadlines for Public Comment

  • Written Comments: The public may submit written comments regarding the green box fee to the Solid Waste Authority office until April 6, 2026, at 4:30 PM [15:43].

  • Board Applications: The County Commission is accepting applications for the vacant board seats until April 3, 2026 [01:31:57].



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