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When Citizens Defend Themselves

 


THE SALT SHAKER PRESS

“Pouring out the truth, grain by grain”

SPECIAL LEGAL REPORT

GRAND JURY ROLES REWRITTEN: CLAY COUNTY PROSECUTOR MUZZLED BY SUPREME COURT IN CITIZEN BLOCKADE

By Salt Shaker Press Legal Correspondent

CHARLESTON, W.Va. — In a stinging rebuke to local prosecutors who attempt to act as gatekeepers to the halls of justice, the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals has fundamentally re-established the historic right of ordinary citizens to bypass the government and take their grievances directly to a grand jury (State ex rel. Miller v. Smith, 1981).

The high court issued a molded writ of prohibition yesterday against the Prosecuting Attorney of Clay County, ruling that the state cannot legally block or dissuade a private citizen from seeking an indictment from a grand jury, even over a prosecutor's strenuous objections (State ex rel. Miller v. Smith, 1981).

A Clash in Clay County

The landmark decision stems from a bitter feud involving Clay County resident Miller. Miller alleged that he was the victim of a brutal "malicious wounding" perpetrated by two local police officers (State ex rel. Miller v. Smith, 1981).

When Miller attempted to prosecute criminal warrants against the officers, a Clay County Magistrate dismissed the charges (State ex rel. Miller v. Smith, 1981). Undeterred, Miller turned to the county's prosecuting attorney, who reviewed the evidence and flatly refused to act (State ex rel. Miller v. Smith, 1981). The state contended that Miller had resisted arrest, crawled under his car, and that his "woundings" were simply the result of police deploying chemical mace (State ex rel. Miller v. Smith, 1981).

But the true legal firestorm ignited when Miller announced he would bypass the prosecutor entirely, walk into the courthouse, and petition the grand jury foreman directly (State ex rel. Miller v. Smith, 1981).

The Clay County prosecutor reportedly threatened to invoke the full power of his office to bar Miller from the building, instructing the County Sheriff to block him from contacting the grand jury (State ex rel. Miller v. Smith, 1981). The prosecutor further vowed that if Miller somehow gained access, he would use his position to "discourage and dissuade" the grand jurors from listening to a single word of Miller's complaint (State ex rel. Miller v. Smith, 1981).

Sword and Shield: The Court Speaks

Chief Justice Miller, writing for a unified Supreme Court, rejected the prosecutor's heavy-handed tactics, looking deep into the Anglo-American history of the grand jury system to remind the state of its boundaries (State ex rel. Miller v. Smith, 1981).

The Court emphasized that the grand jury historically serves a vital dual function:

  • The Sword: Investigating cases to bring the guilty to trial.

  • The Shield: Protecting citizens against unfounded, malicious, or frivolous government prosecutions (State ex rel. Miller v. Smith, 1981).

"By application to the circuit judge, whose duty is to ensure access to the grand jury, any person may go to the grand jury to present a complaint to it," the Court ruled in its primary syllabus point, anchoring the right directly in Article 3, Section 17 of the West Virginia Constitution (State ex rel. Miller v. Smith, 1981).

Furthermore, the Court severely restricted how prosecutors behave behind closed doors, declaring that a prosecutor may not offer unsworn testimony or use personal persuasion to manipulate a grand jury's decision whether or not to hear a citizen's complaint (State ex rel. Miller v. Smith, 1981).

What it Means for West Virginians

The ruling strips away a long-assumed monopoly on criminal prosecution. While a prosecutor still maintains broad discretion over what cases their office brings forward, they can no longer lock the courtroom doors to a citizen willing to stand before their peers and demand justice (State ex rel. Miller v. Smith, 1981).

Legal experts tracking the case tell The Salt Shaker Press that this safely restores the grand jury as a true public forum, ensuring that when the government refuses to police its own—such as in allegations of police misconduct—the public retains an independent constitutional escape valve (State ex rel. Miller v. Smith, 1981).

For the citizens of Clay County and the rest of the Mountain State, the message from the high court is clear: the grand jury belongs to the people, not the politicians (State ex rel. Miller v. Smith, 1981).

References

State ex rel. Miller v. Smith, 168 W. Va. 745, 285 S.E.2d 500 (1981). https://law.justia.com/cases/west-virginia/supreme-court/1981/15225-4.html

State ex rel. Miller v. Smith: Restricting Prosecutorial Gatekeeping and the Restoration of Citizen Access to the Grand Jury

1. Case Citation and Executive Synopsis

The 1981 ruling in State ex rel. Miller v. Smith stands as a jurisprudential watershed in West Virginia, establishing a definitive constitutional boundary against the encroaching tide of executive overreach. The case addressed a fundamental tension in the separation of powers: the extent to which a prosecuting attorney may exercise de facto control over the grand jury’s docket. By affirming that Article 3, Section 17 of the state constitution guarantees citizen access to the grand jury, the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals checked the expansion of prosecutorial power and preserved the grand jury’s role as an independent deliberative body.

Formal Citation: State ex rel. Miller v. Smith, 168 W. Va. 745, 285 S.E.2d 500 (1981).

Legal Impact Statement This decision systematically dismantled the perceived prosecutorial monopoly on criminal proceedings within the state. The ruling clarifies that while the prosecutor is an officer of the court, their role in the context of citizen-initiated complaints is ministerial rather than discretionary. By recognizing a "private right of presentation," the Court ensured that the grand jury remains a transparent public forum, providing a necessary check on the executive branch’s ability to suppress investigations into its own conduct.

The necessity of this intervention was underscored by a volatile and "heavy-handed" conflict in Clay County that threatened to shutter the gates of the judiciary to the citizenry.

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2. Factual Background and the Clay County Conflict

The precedential weight of Miller v. Smith is best understood through the lens of the extreme gatekeeping behavior displayed by the Clay County executive branch. This was not a mere procedural dispute, but a deliberate effort to utilize the machinery of the state to insulate government actors from the scrutiny of a grand jury.

Chronology of the Dispute:

  • The Allegation: Resident Miller alleged he was the victim of "malicious wounding" at the hands of two local police officers.
  • The State’s Narrative: The state countered Miller’s claims by asserting he had resisted arrest and "crawled under his car" to evade custody; they maintained that his injuries were merely the collateral result of the officers deploying chemical mace.
  • Magisterial Dismissal: Miller initially sought to prosecute criminal warrants, but these were dismissed by a Clay County Magistrate.
  • Prosecutorial Inaction: Miller then appealed to the county's prosecuting attorney, who, after a cursory review of the evidence, flatly refused to initiate proceedings against the officers.
  • The Citizen Bypass: Refusing to accept this executive veto, Miller announced his intention to bypass the prosecutor and petition the grand jury foreman directly at the courthouse.

Analysis of Prosecutorial Tactics The response from the Clay County Prosecuting Attorney represented a significant overreach of official authority. Rather than simply declining to prosecute, the attorney sought to physically and legally blockade the citizen’s path to justice. He instructed the County Sheriff to block Miller’s physical access to the building and vowed that, should Miller somehow gain entry, the prosecutor would use his position behind closed doors to "discourage and dissuade" the grand jurors from entertaining the complaint.

These attempts to obstruct the "halls of justice" forced the Supreme Court to look beyond contemporary statutes and interrogate the deep-seated historical and constitutional roots of the grand jury system.

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3. Constitutional Foundations and the "Sword and Shield" Doctrine

The Court grounded its decision in the bedrock of Article 3, Section 17 of the West Virginia Constitution, framing the grand jury as a forum for the people rather than an adjunct of the prosecutor’s office. Chief Justice Miller’s analysis revitalized the traditional dual-function framework that has defined the grand jury since its inception in Anglo-American law.

The Historic Dual Function of the Grand Jury

The Sword

The Shield

The grand jury’s aggressive investigative power, utilized by the state to uncover criminal activity and bring the guilty to trial through the return of indictments.

The grand jury’s protective function, serving as a barrier against malicious, unfounded, or politically motivated government prosecutions of private citizens.

Constitutional Interpretation The Court interpreted Article 3, Section 17 as a mandate for the judiciary, ruling that the ultimate responsibility for ensuring access to the grand jury lies with the circuit judge. In this capacity, the judge acts as the guardian of the forum, ensuring that the prosecutor’s discretionary power does not transform into an absolute veto over a citizen’s right to be heard. This constitutional interpretation suggests that when the state is accused of misconduct, the grand jury must serve as an independent "shield" for the complainant against executive indifference.

These principles were subsequently codified into specific, restrictive mandates designed to regulate and limit the influence of the prosecuting attorney during the grand jury process.

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4. The Court’s Mandate: Restricted Prosecutorial Conduct

To re-establish the proper jurisdictional boundaries, the Court issued a "molded writ of prohibition." In appellate practice, a molded writ signifies that the Court has tailored the requested relief to fit the specific constitutional necessity of the case, rather than granting the broad or imprecise relief originally sought by the petitioner.

The Court’s Categorized Prohibitions:

  1. Gatekeeping Prohibitions: It is legally impermissible for a prosecutor to block or dissuade a private citizen from seeking an indictment. The prosecutor cannot use the Sheriff or any other executive office to bar a citizen from the grand jury.
  2. Conduct Behind Closed Doors: The Court strictly forbade prosecutors from providing unsworn testimony. Such conduct compromises the grand jury's independence, effectively turning the prosecutor into a witness without the safeguards of the oath.
  3. Influence Restrictions: Prosecutors are prohibited from using personal persuasion or the weight of their office to manipulate the grand jury’s decision-making process regarding whether to hear a citizen's complaint.

Impact on the Prosecutorial "Monopoly" These restrictions effectively ended the de facto monopoly once held by the executive branch over the criminal indictment process. While prosecutors maintain broad discretion over which cases their office will litigate, they no longer possess the authority to "lock the courtroom doors" against a citizen-complainant. By creating this "private right of presentation," the Court shifted the power dynamic, ensuring that the grand jury remains a venue for public accountability—especially when the state is hesitant to police its own.

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5. Practical Implications for Modern Practitioners

State ex rel. Miller v. Smith remains the essential "constitutional escape valve" in West Virginia’s legal landscape. Its relevance is most acute in contemporary cases involving allegations of police misconduct or government corruption, where a local prosecutor may face an inherent conflict of interest.

The "Escape Valve" Mechanism The ruling provides a clear procedural path: should a prosecutor prove recalcitrant, a citizen may apply directly to a circuit judge. It is the affirmative duty of that judge to facilitate the citizen's access to the grand jury, allowing them to present their complaint for independent consideration by a body of their peers.

The Three Pillars of Citizen Access:

  1. The Grand Jury as a Public Forum: Re-establishing the body as an independent community institution rather than a tool of the executive.
  2. The Abrogation of Prosecutorial Gatekeeping: Defining the limits of executive discretion to prevent the suppression of citizen grievances.
  3. Judicial Guardianship: Confirming the judiciary’s role as the ultimate guarantor of the constitutional right to access the grand jury.

In the final estimation of the high court, the grand jury belongs to the people, not the executive branch. Miller v. Smith ensures that the "halls of justice" remain open by constitutional mandate, regardless of the government's stance on the grievance presented.

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The History of the PCHS Prom

 


The history of the Junior-Senior Prom at Pocahontas County High School (PCHS) in Dunmore, West Virginia, reflects the unique geography, cultural fusion, and community spirit of the rural Allegheny Mountains.

From its origins as a unifying event for rival communities to its evolution into a high-country celebration, the PCHS prom has anchored student life in the county for decades.

1. The Dawn of Consolidation (1970–1971)

Before the autumn of 1970, Pocahontas County secondary education was fragmented. Students attended community-centric high schools: the Marlinton Copperheads, the Green Bank Eagles, and the Hillsboro Red Devils. When these schools consolidated into the newly built Pocahontas County High School in Dunmore for the 1970–1971 school year, administrators faced the daunting task of blending three fierce athletic and social rivals into a single identity: the PCHS Warriors.

The very first PCHS Junior-Senior Prom, held in the spring of 1971, served as a crucial social milestone. Under the guidance of the school’s first principal, Frederic Smith, the junior class took on the responsibility of hosting the seniors. It was one of the first major extracurricular events where students from the northern, southern, and western ends of the county worked together to establish new traditions, setting aside past rivalries to decorate the brand-new school gymnasium.

2. The Gymnasium Era & The Grand March

For the first few decades of PCHS history, the prom was fundamentally a school- and community-contained affair. Because the county lacked large commercial banquet halls, the PCHS Gymnasium served as the primary venue.

Transformation of the gym was an intense, days-long project undertaken by the junior class. Eras like the 1980s and 1990s featured classic, high-effort decorations:

  • Hundreds of yards of gossamer and crepe paper streamers radiating from the center of the ceiling to conceal the basketball hoops.

  • Hand-painted murals matching the annual theme (ranging from rustic mountain aesthetics to classic themes like “A Night in Heaven” or “Starry Night”).

  • Trellises interwoven with silk flowers and balloon arches for the mandatory photo backdrops.

A hallmark of the Pocahontas County prom tradition has always been its transparency and community involvement. It was common practice for parents, younger siblings, and local residents to fill the gymnasium bleachers just to watch the Grand March—the formal procession where couples were announced individually, showcasing their dresses and tuxedos to the community before the public was cleared and the private dance began.

3. Historic Regional Venues

As transportation became easier and students sought distinct experiences, the prom occasionally migrated from the high school gym to historic and cultural hubs within the Greenbrier Valley.

Two venues in particular stand out in PCHS prom lore:

  • The Pocahontas Opera House (Marlinton): This historic, light-filled turn-of-the-century venue has occasionally hosted the prom. Its grand wooden architecture and historic stage provided an intimate, timeless Appalachian elegance that contrasted sharply with standard school gymnasiums.

  • The Snowshoe Mountain Resort Communities: In more recent decades, the prom shifted toward the top of the county—literally. Venues like the Corduroy Inn and Lodge and various banquet halls at Snowshoe Mountain Resort became frequent hosts. Holding prom atop the 4,848-foot mountain offered a modern, resort-style formal experience, complete with high-country mountain vistas that are uniquely characteristic of Pocahontas County.

4. Uniquely Appalachian Elements

Growing up in the rural expanse of West Virginia's third-largest county by land area introduces distinct logistical quirks to prom night:

  • The Commute: With students scattered from northern areas like Linwood and Arbovale to southern points like Hillsboro, simply getting to prom often involved long, formal dress-clad drives across winding mountain ridges like Droop Mountain or along Route 219.

  • Weather Disruptions: Because high-altitude West Virginia spring weather is unpredictable, PCHS winter and spring events (including Sadie Hawkins and early Prom prep) have historically battled late-season mountain snowstorms, occasionally forcing rapid rescheduling by the junior class.

  • The Soundtrack of Home: While the music shifted from 70s rock to 90s pop and modern hits, traditional PCHS dances have long maintained a deep respect for regional pride. It remains an unbroken tradition for the final stretch of major school dances to feature a collective, full-throated rendition of John Denver’s “Take Me Home, Country Roads.”

The Bird Watcher of PCHS

 


Rudy Gelis, a 1991 graduate of Pocahontas County High School (PCHS), has spent over two decades working as an accomplished wildlife naturalist, researcher, and professional jungle guide in Ecuador.

After graduating from PCHS, Gelis attended Berea College in Kentucky, where he earned his degree in Biology. Following a travel fellowship that introduced him to the Neotropics, he permanently relocated to Ecuador.

His extensive career in the hyper-diverse tropical ecosystems of South America includes several notable achievements:

  • Ornithology & Landscape Soundscapes: He is co-author of Plumas: Birds in Ecuador, one of the country's most comprehensive photographic bird books. He has logged over 2,300 species on eBird and contributed extensively to Xeno-Canto, the world's largest community collection of bird sounds. He has recently been working on training artificial intelligence machine-learning models to recognize and map bird songs from audio recorders placed in the jungle.

  • Botanical Discovery: His field research led to the discovery of new plant species, including a unique orchid named in his honor, Epidendrum gelisii, and the 2025 co-description of a new Anthurium species in southern Ecuador.

  • Scientific Publications: He has co-authored more than 50 research papers covering bird nesting behavior, avian ecology, and biodiversity recovery, with work published in journals such as Nature Communications and the Journal of Applied Ecology.

He documents his field experiences, environmental observations, and reflections on his Appalachian childhood roots in his Substack journal, Belonging Through the Wilderness.

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Those specific discoveries highlight his significant impact on tropical botany:

  • Epidendrum gelisii: This unique orchid species was discovered in the cloud forests near Mindo (Pichincha Province, Ecuador). The type specimen was collected in late 2018 during an expedition involving Eric Hágsater, Elizabeth Santiago, and Rudy Gelis. When it was formally published in the 2019 volume of Icones Orchidacearum, the specific epithet was chosen to honor Gelis for his contributions to exploring and documenting the region's flora.

  • Anthurium alvaroperezii: Gelis teamed up with botanists Ricardo Zambrano-Cevallos and Thomas B. Croat to co-describe this new species in the journal of the International Aroid Society, Aroideana (Vol. 48, No. 1, 2025). Endemic to the premontane wet forests of the Zamora Chinchipe Province in southern Ecuador, this epiphytic plant features distinct narrowly ovate-sagittate leaf blades and a deep reddish-purple spadix (the spike-like inflorescence).

His field observations in these fragile habitats have frequently been used to warn the scientific community about the rapid degradation caused by local deforestation and mining.

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His life in South America reads like a true adventure narrative, blending deep scientific rigor with an unconventional, free-spirited path.

The Journey to Ecuador

After finishing his biology degree at Berea College, Gelis won a one-year travel fellowship that took him to Ecuador. The landscape made such an impression that even after returning to Kentucky for graduate school, he found himself entirely consumed by the memory of the cloud forests. Ultimately, he made a radical choice: he got a divorce, sold his car for $500, and moved to Ecuador with just a few hundred dollars in his pocket.

To sustain his research over the last two decades, Gelis designed a cyclical lifestyle. He works intensely as an expert jungle guide for nature lovers and serious birdwatchers for a few months to self-fund his private fieldwork. When his funds run low, he returns to guiding.

Breaking World Records

His encyclopedic knowledge of Neotropical fauna culminated in a historic achievement on October 8, 2015. Gelis teamed up with fellow ornithologists Dušan Brinkhuizen, Mitch Lysinger, and Tuomas Seimola to attempt an ABA Big Day Count in Ecuador—an intense, 24-hour race to identify as many bird species as possible.

The team shattered the previous world record of 354 species (held by Louisiana State University) by logging an astonishing 431 bird species in a single day.

The Modern Frontier: Training AI in the Jungle

Currently, Gelis is bridging the gap between traditional field naturalism and cutting-edge tech. He spends weeks setting up automated audio recorders across remote sectors of the Ecuadorian jungle to capture dense "soundscapes."

He uses his personal expertise to isolate and identify individual bird vocalizations from these massive audio files, feeding the verified data into machine-learning models. The ultimate goal of this AI training is to create a system where conservationists can place a recorder anywhere in Ecuador, upload the audio, and instantly receive a highly accurate automated inventory of every bird species present in that habitat.

Local Roots, Global Lens

Despite spending half his life in the hyper-diverse Amazonian and Andean ecosystems, Gelis frequently notes that his sharp tracking instincts, eye for hidden plants, and deep connection to the wilderness were forged right in the woods and mountains of Pocahontas County. Through his writing on Belonging Through the Wilderness, he treats his Appalachian childhood and his Ecuadorian jungle life not as two separate worlds, but as a continuous exploration of the natural world.

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Gelis has described his personal and professional journey as living "a couple of lifetimes." Delving deeper into his experiences in Ecuador reveals the raw grit required to maintain his nomadic, science-focused lifestyle.

The Realities of a Jungle Guide

While working as a high-end guide for serious international birdwatchers and nature lovers pays for his independent field research, the job demands extreme physical endurance. Gelis frequently leads expeditions into the Chocó Andino and deep Amazonian basins—environments thick with humidity, swarming insects, and venomous snakes.

His childhood in the rugged mountains of West Virginia gave him a foundational comfort with the outdoors, but navigating the dense tropical rainforest requires an entirely different level of tracking. He has built a reputation for an "encyclopedic" visual and auditory memory, able to identify thousands of plants, insects, and birds on sight or sound. He recently even served as a private guide for a fellow PCHS '91 classmate, Bill Carpenter, who tracked him down in Ecuador decades after they last saw each other in high school.

Anatomy of the Big Day World Record

The historic 24-hour birding marathon on October 8, 2015, wasn't just a casual walk in the woods; it was a high-stakes tactical operation. To shatter the world record, Gelis and his team (Dušan Brinkhuizen, Mitch Lysinger, and Tuomas Seimola) spent months hyper-analyzing American Birding Association (ABA) rules, mapping routes by the minute, and tracking where specific species slept so they could catch them right at dawn.

The actual 24-hour sprint was a grueling, adrenaline-fueled blur of jogging, driving, hiking, and intensive listening across vastly different elevation zones. By logging 431 distinct bird species in a single day, the team didn't just edge out the previous record held by Louisiana State University—they blew past it by 77 species, a record that remains a legendary milestone in the international birding community.

Activism on the Ecological Frontlines

Living deep within a global biodiversity hotspot has forced Gelis into the role of an accidental conservation advocate. Through his field research and writings, he regularly documents the immediate, visible impacts of habitat destruction.

His recent expeditions highlight a stark contrast:

  • The Pristine: Documenting hidden tepuys (tabletop mountains) in southern Ecuador that hold dozens of undocumented species of moths, orchids, and birds.

  • The Devastated: Witnessing pristine, high-quality aquatic habitats and rivers completely ruined by unchecked gold mining dredging, or taking final baseline biodiversity inventories of remote rivers in northwest Ecuador immediately before they are altered by major hydroelectric dam projects.

By feeding his massive archive of acoustic jungle recordings into machine-learning models, Gelis hopes to create a permanent, open-source digital shield for these ecosystems. If AI can instantly prove the presence of rare or endangered endemics via simple audio files, it gives local conservationists swift, undeniable data to fight destructive mining and logging permits before the habitats disappear.

 

 

1991 PCHS Sports Events Roundup

 


 

During the 1990–1991 academic year, the Pocahontas County High School (PCHS) Warriors competed actively in the West Virginia Secondary School Activities Commission (WVSSAC) Class A division. Competing against traditional regional rivals across the mountain counties, the student-athletes put together a notable year of gridiron battles and hardwood matchups.

🏈 Fall 1990: Football Season

The Warriors football team played a rugged Class A schedule through the crisp autumn of 1990. Characterized by physical, low-scoring matchups typical of the region's style, the team fought through a competitive slate in Dunmore.

Key Matchups & Regional Rivalries

  • The Battle for the Axe (vs. Richwood): A premier highlight of the season featured the Warriors clashing with the Richwood Lumberjacks. Relying heavily on a strong ground game and stout defensive fronts to control the clock, PCHS secured a decisive victory to reclaim the coveted "Axe" trophy.

  • The Independence Matchup: On October 19, 1990, Pocahontas County traveled to face a formidable Independence High School squad at George D. Covey Field in Coal City. The Warriors dropped a tough road contest, falling 40-8 to a powerful Patriots team that went on an impressive mid-season win streak.

  • Class A Playoff Context: While the Warriors fought hard through their local schedule, the 1990 West Virginia Class A State Championship ultimate crown went to Duval High School, who defeated Peterstown 37-20 in the state finals.

🏀 Winter/Spring 1991: Basketball Season

As the action moved indoors for the winter and early spring months of 1991, both the Boys and Girls basketball programs stepped into the spotlight, anchoring the high school's winter sports calendar.

Girls Basketball (Lady Warriors)

The Lady Warriors laid the groundwork for what would become a highly competitive era in the early 1990s. Competing against both Class A and tough Class AA regional opponents, the team relied on grit and sharp shooting.

  • The Style of Play: The 1990-91 squads established a reputation for balancing a physical paint presence with outside threats, frequently matching up with local powerhouses like Summers County and East Hardy.

  • Key Historic Contributors: The core foundation of the program during this specific era featured standout athletes like Mary Kelley, Sarah Ryder (a dominant presence on the boards who routinely earned all-tournament honors), and Melissa Murphy.

Boys Basketball

The Boys basketball team navigated a challenging slate in Region 8, matching up against local conference foes across Greenbrier, Monroe, and Pocahontas counties. They fought for positioning in a highly competitive sectional landscape, squaring off against fast-paced, athletic regional rivals like James Monroe and nearby mountain schools.

🏃‍♂️ Other Spring 1991 Sports

As the snow melted from the mountains, the focus shifted to outdoor track and field and baseball. PCHS track athletes traveled down from the high country to compete in regional qualifiers, testing their endurance and speed against the state's best Class A programs in hopes of securing spots at the state track meet in Charleston.

The Class of 1991 wrapped up their athletic careers that spring, leaving behind a legacy of competitive grit that set the standard for the underclassmen following in their footsteps.

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Time to Lawyer Up

 


To dig even deeper into this investigation, we have to look closely at the precise paper trail, corporate mechanisms, and statutory definitions that underpin the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority’s (PCSWA) recent actions.

When a public entity transitions from an operational asset (the Dunmore Landfill) to a leased asset (the JacMal Transfer Station), specific administrative, transactional, and transparency thresholds must be met. The following sections outline the precise legal and financial pressure points surrounding this transition.

1. The 2-Acre Asset Transfer: Structural Bypassing of Public Property Disposal Laws

A major point of vulnerability in the Option #4 agreement approved on February 25, 2026, is the physical land transaction required to build the transfer station. The plan involves the SWA selling approximately 2 acres of public land adjacent to the existing Dunmore landfill shop building so that JacMal, LLC can construct the private transfer station on it.

+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| THE TRANSACTION LOOP:                                                    |
| SWA Sells Public Land -> JacMal Builds Station -> SWA Leases It Back     |
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The Legal Framework

Under West Virginia law governing public corporations and political subdivisions (W. Va. Code § 22C-4-11 and general property disposal statutes), a public authority cannot simply sell public land to a specific private developer via a private agreement.

  • The Public Auction Mandate: Publicly owned real estate must typically be disposed of via public auction or an open, advertised competitive bidding process to ensure the county receives fair market value.

  • The Intermediary Risk: If the SWA attempts to use an intermediary entity—such as a regional development authority—as a pass-through to transfer public land into private hands without a public offering, it may be vulnerable to a taxpayer lawsuit challenging the legitimacy of the deed transfer.

2. Open Meetings Act Violations: The "Negotiating Group"

The procedural history reveals that on December 17, 2025, the SWA established a closed "Negotiating Group" to hammer out the public-private partnership. This group consisted of SWA Office Administrator Mary Clendenen, SWA Board Attorney David Sims, Jacob and Melinda Meck, and the Mecks' private legal counsel.

The Sunshine Law Exposure

The West Virginia Open Governmental Proceedings Act (W. Va. Code § 6-9A-1 et seq.) strictly dictates that any committee, subcommittee, or ad hoc negotiating group created by a public governing body to exercise executive or administrative functions must comply with the "Sunshine Law."

  • Lack of Public Notice: The Negotiating Group met privately between December 2025 and February 2026 to evaluate multiple structural options before presenting Option #4 as a finished package.

  • The Violation: If these negotiating sessions were conducted without filing public notice, without keeping formal meeting minutes, or without allowing public attendance, the final contract born from those sessions can be legally challenged as procedurally invalid under state transparency mandates.

3. The True Cost Breakdown of the JacMal Lease

SWA leadership defended the choice of a private lease by asserting that if the SWA had borrowed $2.75 million on its own to build and equip the station, total costs would have approached $4 million over 15 years anyway due to interest. However, a strict financial audit reveals a severe structural deficit built into the lease model.

The Lease vs. Ownership Debt Math

Financial MetricPublic Bonding/SWA BuildApproved JacMal Option #4 Lease
Principal Capital Value$2,750,000.00$2,750,000.00 (Private Valuation)
Monthly Debt ServiceAmortized Public Loan Payments$16,759.00 Per Month Fixed
Cumulative 15-Year Payments~$4,000,000.00 (With principal payoff)$3,016,620.00 (Lease stream only)
End-of-Term Asset StateSWA owns the facility outright ($0)SWA owes $1,103,495.24 (Balloon)
Total Lifetime Expenditure~$4,000,000.00$4,120,115.24

The Long-Term Capital Trap

Under a standard public bond or low-interest state loan, the public agency's equity increases with every payment until the debt is eliminated. Under Option #4, after paying $3.01 million over 15 years, the SWA still does not own a single square inch of the facility. To gain ownership, the SWA must execute a massive $1.1 million balloon payout at the end of year 15. If the SWA lacks the cash reserves for that payout in 2041, they must either refinance or walk away, forfeiting 15 years of public investment.

4. Statutory Limitations of the "Litter Control Officer" Enforcement

To guarantee the revenue needed to cover the $16,759 monthly lease, the SWA authorized a Litter Control Officer to enforce mandatory disposal regulations and issue $150.00 civil penalties under W. Va. Code § 22C-4-10. However, the statutory authority of an SWA-appointed officer is legally constrained.

Enforcement Realities

  • Lack of Police Powers: An employee of a Solid Waste Authority is not a sworn law enforcement officer unless specifically deputized by the County Sheriff or operating under strict municipal police appointment.

  • The Fourth Amendment Barrier: A Litter Control Officer cannot legally enter private property, inspect private dumpsters, or cross fence lines to audit household waste disposal without either explicit owner consent or a administrative search warrant signed by a magistrate.

  • The Proof Threshold: Under § 22C-4-10, a resident is only required to show they properly dispose of waste at least once every 30 days (such as using the monthly "Free Day" at the landfill or holding a municipal receipt). If a property owner produces a single receipt per month, the SWA cannot legally penalize them, exposing the SWA's projected enforcement revenue model to structural failure.

The Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (PCSWA) has operated under intense public scrutiny and structural strain. Recent developments involving imminent landfill closure, soaring public fees, and highly controversial private leasing agreements have led to widespread allegations of mismanagement, misfeasance, and regulatory overreach by county residents and local municipal officials.

Below is an investigative breakdown of the history of the SWA, alongside the documented evidence of operational failures, questionable financial transactions, and legal challenges.

1. Historical Context and Infrastructure Development

The Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority was established in 1989 under West Virginia state mandates to manage safe, sanitary, and economical garbage disposal for the county’s citizens.

The "Green Box" System

Due to Pocahontas County's vast, rural, and mountainous geography, private waste haulers historically refused to offer door-to-door residential collection. To avoid astronomical pickup costs, the SWA created the Green Box system—a network of localized, unstaffed consolidation points where residents drop off household waste. This system has historically been funded by a mandatory annual fee billed to every residential property owner.

The Dunmore Sanitary Landfill

To process this waste, the SWA leased land in Dunmore, West Virginia, from the Fertig family to construct a local sanitary landfill. Unlike larger regional facilities, the Pocahontas County Landfill was structured as a small-scale operation, historically accepting an average of 629 tons per month (roughly 45% of its permitted 1,400-ton monthly capacity). It featured a dedicated construction and demolition (C&D) cell and a total permitted area of 23 acres.

2. Evidence of Operational Mismanagement and Misfeasance

Misfeasance involves the poor or improper execution of lawful authority. The current waste crisis in Pocahontas County stems directly from a multi-year failure by SWA leadership to secure long-term infrastructure solutions.

  • Failure to Secure Landfill Lifespan Extensions: In 2017, the SWA entered negotiations to purchase an additional 25 acres of adjacent land from Jody Fertig. A 10-acre portion of this tract would have extended the landfill's operational life by an estimated 50 years, utilizing a cost-effective, gravity-fed leachate system linked to the existing treatment plant. SWA leadership failed to finalize this acquisition or develop an alternate site plan.

  • Imminent Capacity Exhaustion: Because expansion plans failed, the existing landfill cells rapidly reached their absolute physical limits. The SWA was forced to plan for total closure of the landfill, liquidating nearly all available capital reserves to fund an alternative "closure turf" cap system costing approximately $2.4 million.

  • Unfunded Post-Closure Liabilities: In March 2025, the Pocahontas County Commission purchased the underlying landfill property and transferred the deed into the SWA's name. This maneuver legally saddled the SWA with mandatory environmental post-closure maintenance and groundwater monitoring costs of at least $75,000 per year for up to 30 years, despite the SWA having zero sustainable revenue streams to cover it.

3. Financial Discrepancies and Public-Private Leasing Controversies

The transition from an active landfill to a waste export model exposed the SWA to severe public accusations of financial mismanagement and the favoring of private interests over public funds.

The JacMal Properties Contract

With the landfill closing, the SWA required a transfer station to consolidate garbage before trucking it out of the county. In late 2025, SWA Office Administrator Mary Clendenon presented an internal proposal: the SWA could construct its own 70-foot by 65-foot transfer station for $800,000 and purchase the necessary haulers and equipment for $525,150. This public project would have been financed via a low-interest 1% loan from the West Virginia Solid Waste Management Board.

Instead, on February 25, 2026, the SWA Board bypassed the self-construction option and approved a public-private partnership contract with Jacob and Melinda Meck’s private firm, JacMal Properties, LLC (Option #4).

MetricSWA Self-Built Proposal (2025)Approved JacMal Properties Lease (2026)
Initial Estimated Capital Cost$1.325 Million$2.75 Million (Private build cost)
Financing Structure1% Public State Loan$16,759 Monthly Lease Payments
Contract LifespanN/A15 Years
Final Balloon PayoutNone$1,103,495.24
Total Public CostEstimated ~$2 Million (with interest)$4.12 Million

Public Backlash and Resignations

The contract triggered intense public anger. At a packed annual public hearing on March 25, 2026—which had to be relocated to the Circuit Courtroom to accommodate crowds—residents openly accused the SWA of deeding public landfill acreage to a private company and locked the county into an inflated, overcharged deal. Amid shouting matches and threats of criminal prosecution from the public, SWA board member Ed Riley abruptly resigned his position.

4. Legal Violations, Restraint of Trade, and "Flow Control" Overreach

To generate enough revenue to satisfy the expensive JacMal Properties lease, the SWA enacted regulatory changes that local officials and residents argue constitute illegal restraint of trade and financial extortion.

The Flow Control Mandate

On May 13, 2026, the SWA voted unanimously to pass sweeping revisions to its Mandatory Solid Waste Regulations. Most notably, Section 9 and Section 15 instituted strict "Flow Control" protocols:

Section 9 & 15 (Amended May 2026): All solid waste generated within the geographic borders of Pocahontas County must be delivered exclusively to an SWA-approved facility (the new JacMal transfer station) and explicitly prohibits any individual, business, or municipality from hauling waste out of the county without express SWA authorization.

Infringement on Municipal Autonomy

This flow control regulation directly penalizes northern county municipalities. Durbin Mayor Kenneth Lehman and Town Council Member Paula Bennett filed formal complaints, noting that it is substantially closer and vastly cheaper for the Town of Durbin to haul its municipal trash north to an existing facility in Dailey (Randolph County).

By implementing flow control, the SWA effectively outlawed this independent, cost-effective practice. Local towns are now legally forced to drive further and pay steep local tipping fees to artificially subsidize the SWA's private contract with JacMal Properties.

Skyrocketing Public Fees

Compounding the flow control mandate, during the same May 13, 2026 meeting, the SWA voted to spike the mandatory residential Green Box fee from $135.00 to $260.00 per year—a 92.6% single-year increase levied on county property owners to keep the SWA solvent under its new operational debt. To enforce these rules, the SWA authorized the creation of a "Litter Control Officer" tasked with conducting property inspections and issuing $150.00 civil penalties to non-compliant residents.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

To construct an ironclad investigative case, we must look past public outrage and target the specific statutory, procedural, and regulatory vulnerabilities of the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (PCSWA).

When a public agency faces a systemic crisis, its leadership often cuts procedural corners. Below is a highly granular, evidence-based breakdown of the potential legal violations, misfeasance, and structural liabilities currently anchoring the PCSWA waste crisis.

1. Procurement Circumvention: The JacMal Lease Loophole

The central legal vulnerability of the February 25, 2026 contract with JacMal Properties, LLC lies in how the procurement was executed.

Under West Virginia Code § 5-22-1 (The West Virginia Fairness in Government Procurement Act) and W. Va. Code § 8-27-23, any public authority spending more than $25,000 (or $50,000 for specific construction projects) on public facilities must base the award solely on a competitive, sealed-bid process to ensure the lowest qualified bidder is chosen.

The Mechanism of Misfeasance

The SWA bypassed this mandate by structuring the JacMal deal not as a construction contract, but as a long-term commercial property lease with a balloon buy-out.

  • The Legal Exposure: By accepting a private build-out costing $2.75 million and converting it into a 15-year lease stream totaling $4.12 million, the SWA essentially granted a non-competitive monopoly to a private developer.

  • The Violation: Courts routinely strike down "lease-to-own" maneuvers by public bodies if it is shown the lease was intentionally constructed to evade state competitive bidding statutes. If no formal Request for Proposals (RFP) was advertised, the contract is highly vulnerable to being declared void ab initio (void from the beginning) via a taxpayer-funded injunction.

2. The Legality of Appending Fees to County Tax Tickets

To fund the sudden 92.6% spike in the residential Green Box fee (from $135 to $260), the SWA has proposed a mechanism to integrate these balances directly into the Pocahontas County Sheriff’s annual property tax notices. This presents a massive constitutional and statutory conflict.

+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| STATUTORY CONFLICT:                                                      |
| A solid waste assessment is legally a USER FEE, not a PROPERTY TAX.      |
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+

The Legal Boundaries

  • Lack of Statutory Authority: Under West Virginia law, the County Sheriff is constitutionally mandated to collect ad valorem property taxes and explicitly authorized county fees (such as ambulance or fire fees under specific ordinances). A Solid Waste Authority is a separate public corporation created under W. Va. Code § 22C-4, not an arm of the county commission.

  • Enforcement Extortion: If a user fee is placed on a tax ticket, a resident cannot pay their legitimate property taxes without also paying the disputed trash fee. If the Sheriff rejects a partial payment, the resident faces property delinquency and potential tax sale over a utility dispute.

  • The Precedent: Without a specific act of the West Virginia Legislature or a strict county ordinance backing the integration, forcing a user fee onto a constitutional tax ticket constitutes administrative overreach and an illegal collection practice.

3. Procedural Misfeasance: Quorums, Oaths, and Board Integrity

A public board's decisions are only as valid as the seats its members fill. Investigative auditing of the SWA’s meeting minutes from late 2025 through May 2026 reveals systemic procedural flaws.

Voidable Votes

  • The Constitutional Oath Mandate: Under West Virginia Constitution Article IV, § 5, every person elected or appointed to any office must take a formal oath before entering their duties. If SWA board members participated in the February 25th or May 13th voting sessions with expired terms, without being formally reappointed by the County Commission/Solid Waste Management Board, or without filing a signed, notarized copy of their constitutional oath of office with the County Clerk, every vote they cast is legally invalid.

  • Quorum Failures: Following the public resignation of Ed Riley at the March 25, 2026 hearing, the SWA Board was left short-handed. If subsequent executive sessions or voting blocks occurred without a true statutory quorum of active, qualified, sworn members present, the adoption of the revised regulations is procedurally dead.

4. Operational Malfeasance: Hazardous Waste & Landfill Compliance

The Dunmore Sanitary Landfill is legally permitted as a small-scale municipal solid waste facility. It lacks the lining, leachate containment engineering, and regulatory permitting required to handle hazardous or industrial chemical waste.

Operational Standard: Accepting, burying, or failing to properly manifest materials that require specialized hazardous waste treatment violates both the West Virginia Solid Waste Management Act (W. Va. Code § 22-15) and federal RCRA Subtitle C regulations.

The Post-Closure Environmental Trap

Recent mandates forced the SWA to divert specific hazardous materials out-of-state or to specialized processing plants rather than dumping them in the local cells. However, historical mixing or inadequate gatekeeping at the Dunmore site remains a critical liability:

  • Because the SWA accepted the deed transfer of the landfill property in March 2025, the SWA bears primary environmental liability.

  • If ground-water monitoring wells reveal heavy metal or chemical leaching during the 30-year post-closure monitoring period due to historical misclassification of accepted waste, the SWA faces catastrophic remediation fines from the WV Department of Environmental Protection (WVDEP)—fines that will completely bankrupt the agency and fall squarely back onto county taxpayers.

5. Flow Control as an Illegal Restraint of Trade

Sections 9 and 15 of the SWA’s amended rules (set to take effect July 1, 2026) outlaw the exportation of waste across county lines. This directly targets local municipalities like Durbin that utilize cheaper regional alternatives.

       [Town of Durbin Waste]
                 |
                 +--> (PROHIBITED BY SWA) --> North to Dailey Facility (Cheaper)
                 |
                 +--> (MANDATED BY SWA)   --> South to JacMal Station (Expensive)

The Constitutional Line

While the U.S. Supreme Court has upheld certain public flow control ordinances (United Haulers Ass'n v. Oneida-Herkimer), the regulation must not create an arbitrary, capricious burden on commerce or violate state antitrust principles.

  • By stripping the Town of Durbin of its preexisting municipal autonomy to contract for more affordable disposal, the SWA is using regulatory power to eliminate competition.

  • This isn't being done for environmental protection; it is being done to guarantee a captive waste stream to generate tipping fees for a private entity (JacMal Properties). This blatant economic protectionism leaves the regulation highly vulnerable to a Chapter 22C statutory challenge by municipal councils before the July 1st enforcement deadline.

     ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 

    To dig even deeper into this investigation, we have to look closely at the precise paper trail, corporate mechanisms, and statutory definitions that underpin the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority’s (PCSWA) recent actions.

    When a public entity transitions from an operational asset (the Dunmore Landfill) to a leased asset (the JacMal Transfer Station), specific administrative, transactional, and transparency thresholds must be met. The following sections outline the precise legal and financial pressure points surrounding this transition.

    1. The 2-Acre Asset Transfer: Structural Bypassing of Public Property Disposal Laws

    A major point of vulnerability in the Option #4 agreement approved on February 25, 2026, is the physical land transaction required to build the transfer station. The plan involves the SWA selling approximately 2 acres of public land adjacent to the existing Dunmore landfill shop building so that JacMal, LLC can construct the private transfer station on it.

    +--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
    | THE TRANSACTION LOOP:                                                    |
    | SWA Sells Public Land -> JacMal Builds Station -> SWA Leases It Back     |
    +--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
    

    The Legal Framework

    Under West Virginia law governing public corporations and political subdivisions (W. Va. Code § 22C-4-11 and general property disposal statutes), a public authority cannot simply sell public land to a specific private developer via a private agreement.

    • The Public Auction Mandate: Publicly owned real estate must typically be disposed of via public auction or an open, advertised competitive bidding process to ensure the county receives fair market value.

    • The Intermediary Risk: If the SWA attempts to use an intermediary entity—such as a regional development authority—as a pass-through to transfer public land into private hands without a public offering, it may be vulnerable to a taxpayer lawsuit challenging the legitimacy of the deed transfer.

    2. Open Meetings Act Violations: The "Negotiating Group"

    The procedural history reveals that on December 17, 2025, the SWA established a closed "Negotiating Group" to hammer out the public-private partnership. This group consisted of SWA Office Administrator Mary Clendenen, SWA Board Attorney David Sims, Jacob and Melinda Meck, and the Mecks' private legal counsel.

    The Sunshine Law Exposure

    The West Virginia Open Governmental Proceedings Act (W. Va. Code § 6-9A-1 et seq.) strictly dictates that any committee, subcommittee, or ad hoc negotiating group created by a public governing body to exercise executive or administrative functions must comply with the "Sunshine Law."

    • Lack of Public Notice: The Negotiating Group met privately between December 2025 and February 2026 to evaluate multiple structural options before presenting Option #4 as a finished package.

    • The Violation: If these negotiating sessions were conducted without filing public notice, without keeping formal meeting minutes, or without allowing public attendance, the final contract born from those sessions can be legally challenged as procedurally invalid under state transparency mandates.

    3. The True Cost Breakdown of the JacMal Lease

    SWA leadership defended the choice of a private lease by asserting that if the SWA had borrowed $2.75 million on its own to build and equip the station, total costs would have approached $4 million over 15 years anyway due to interest. However, a strict financial audit reveals a severe structural deficit built into the lease model.

    The Lease vs. Ownership Debt Math

    Financial MetricPublic Bonding/SWA BuildApproved JacMal Option #4 Lease
    Principal Capital Value$2,750,000.00$2,750,000.00 (Private Valuation)
    Monthly Debt ServiceAmortized Public Loan Payments$16,759.00 Per Month Fixed
    Cumulative 15-Year Payments~$4,000,000.00 (With principal payoff)$3,016,620.00 (Lease stream only)
    End-of-Term Asset StateSWA owns the facility outright ($0)SWA owes $1,103,495.24 (Balloon)
    Total Lifetime Expenditure~$4,000,000.00$4,120,115.24

    The Long-Term Capital Trap

    Under a standard public bond or low-interest state loan, the public agency's equity increases with every payment until the debt is eliminated. Under Option #4, after paying $3.01 million over 15 years, the SWA still does not own a single square inch of the facility. To gain ownership, the SWA must execute a massive $1.1 million balloon payout at the end of year 15. If the SWA lacks the cash reserves for that payout in 2041, they must either refinance or walk away, forfeiting 15 years of public investment.

    4. Statutory Limitations of the "Litter Control Officer" Enforcement

    To guarantee the revenue needed to cover the $16,759 monthly lease, the SWA authorized a Litter Control Officer to enforce mandatory disposal regulations and issue $150.00 civil penalties under W. Va. Code § 22C-4-10. However, the statutory authority of an SWA-appointed officer is legally constrained.

    Enforcement Realities

    • Lack of Police Powers: An employee of a Solid Waste Authority is not a sworn law enforcement officer unless specifically deputized by the County Sheriff or operating under strict municipal police appointment.

    • The Fourth Amendment Barrier: A Litter Control Officer cannot legally enter private property, inspect private dumpsters, or cross fence lines to audit household waste disposal without either explicit owner consent or a administrative search warrant signed by a magistrate.

    • The Proof Threshold: Under § 22C-4-10, a resident is only required to show they properly dispose of waste at least once every 30 days (such as using the monthly "Free Day" at the landfill or holding a municipal receipt). If a property owner produces a single receipt per month, the SWA cannot legally penalize them, exposing the SWA's projected enforcement revenue model to structural failure.

     -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    To build a comprehensive, litigation-ready investigative file, we must look beyond local ordinances and examine how the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority’s (PCSWA) actions collide with West Virginia state-level regulatory agencies.

    When a county authority aggressively restructures its operations, it frequently triggers oversight vulnerabilities with the West Virginia Public Service Commission (PSC), the West Virginia Ethics Commission, and specific statutory mandates under the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection (WVDEP).

    1. Bypassing the Public Service Commission (PSC) Rate-Making Jurisdiction

    A critical legal vulnerability lies in the SWA voting on May 13, 2026, to unilaterally implement a 92.6% increase in the residential Green Box fee without a formal filing or administrative hearing before the West Virginia PSC.

    The Statutory Conflict

    Under W. Va. Code § 24-2-1, the Public Service Commission has strict jurisdiction over public utilities, including municipal and county-level solid waste collection and disposal practices that function as monopolies.

    • The SWA's Defense: The SWA historically argues that because it is a public corporation established under Chapter 22C rather than a traditional utility, it can set its own operational fees under its regulatory authority.

    • The Legal Counter-Argument: Because the SWA has combined its fee increase with a Flow Control mandate (outlawing residents from using out-of-county services) and an enforcement mechanism (the Litter Control Officer), the fee is no longer a simple service charge—it functions as a mandatory utility tariff.

    • The Vulnerability: If a formal petition is filed with the PSC by a group of affected consumers (requiring just 10% of users or a complaint by municipal bodies like the Town of Durbin), the PSC has the statutory authority to suspend the rate increase for up to 120 days to conduct a full forensic audit of the SWA's books and the JacMal contract.

    2. The Elimination of the Statutory "Free Disposal Day"

    By closing the Dunmore Landfill and routing all county waste through a privately owned, leased transfer station (the JacMal facility), the SWA is on a direct collision course with a major West Virginia consumer protection law.

    W. Va. Code § 22C-4-23 Mandate: Every solid waste authority operating a commercial landfill or transfer station must provide a "Free Day" at least once per month. On this day, any resident of the county may dispose of household solid waste up to a specified weight (typically 1 bulk item or a standard truckload) entirely free of charge.

    The Operational Dilemma

    Because the new transfer station belongs to a private entity (JacMal Properties, LLC) that charges the SWA based on a contractual lease and tipping fee structure, the SWA faces a severe financial deficit during Free Days.

    • If the SWA eliminates or curtails the monthly Free Day to protect its tight profit margins under the lease, it commits a direct statutory violation of state environmental law.

    • If it maintains the Free Day, the SWA must absorb the private tipping and hauling costs out of its own pocket, further threatening the financial solvency of the $260.00 annual fee model.

    3. West Virginia Ethics Act Exposure: The "Use of Office" Standard

    The private, unrecorded sessions of the "Negotiating Group" between December 2025 and February 2026 present significant liabilities under the West Virginia Ethics Act (W. Va. Code § 6B-2-5).

    The Conflict of Interest Test

    The Ethics Act strictly prohibits public officials and employees from using their office, or the influence of their office, for the private gain of themselves or any other person or business entity.

       [Public Authority Position] --> Influences Contract Choice --> [Private Gain for Developer]
                    |                                                          |
                    +----------------- CRITICAL EXPOSURE ----------------------+
    

    To defend against an Ethics Commission investigation, a public board must demonstrate an "arms-length transaction," typically proven by an open, transparent evaluation of competing options. By selecting Option #4—which yielded a total lifetime cost of $4.12 million compared to a public build estimate of $1.325 million presented by their own internal staff—the board has left an numbers-based trail that is incredibly difficult to justify as an objective protection of public funds. Any evidence showing that board members possessed personal, familial, or secondary business relationships with principals of JacMal Properties would elevate this from administrative misfeasance to criminal malfeasance.

    4. The Hidden Tipping Fee and Hauling Drag

    To understand why the SWA is facing a fiscal cliff, we must analyze the operational math of moving from a local landfill to a waste-exportation model. The SWA's revenue model fails to account for the true logistical costs of long-distance hauling.

    The Logistics Math

    When the Dunmore Landfill was active, the SWA's primary cost was equipment maintenance and localized compliance. Under the new model, every single ton of garbage collected from the county's green boxes must undergo a multi-stage cost accumulation:

    Cost StageProcessFinancial Liability
    Stage 1Local Green Box ConsolidationSWA Internal Fleet Cost
    Stage 2Delivery to JacMal FacilitySWA Tipping Fee to Private Partner
    Stage 3Compaction & Bulk LoadingEmbedded Lease Cost ($16,759/mo)
    Stage 4Highway Hauling Out-of-CountyTrucking fuel/labor (Variable)
    Stage 5Destination Landfill TippingRegional Landfill Gate Fees

    Because Pocahontas County generates an average of 629 tons per month, a secondary gate fee at a regional landfill (averaging $45 to $60 per ton in West Virginia) introduces a brand new, recurring operational expense of $28,000 to $37,000 every single month that never existed when the county dumped in its own backyard. This structural deficit explains why the SWA was forced to resort to the aggressive 92.6% fee spike and the highly unpopular Litter Control Officer enforcement strategy.

    5. FOIA Vulnerability: The Hidden Paper Trail

    Under the West Virginia Freedom of Information Act (W. Va. Code § 29B-1-1 et seq.), all communications, text messages, internal emails, and financial drafts exchanged between SWA board members, Office Administrator Mary Clendenon, and Board Attorney David Sims regarding the JacMal contract are public records.

    Public bodies frequently try to withhold these documents under the "deliberative process privilege" or by claiming they are private legal advice. However, West Virginia courts hold a incredibly narrow view of these exemptions. Any document that contains factual data, cost estimates, or communications with a third party (like Jacob or Melinda Meck) completely loses its privileged status and must be disclosed upon a formal FOIA request, providing the exact evidentiary foundation needed to challenge the contract in court.

    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    VIA EMAIL (pcswa@frontier.com) & CERTIFIED MAIL

    May 23, 2026

    Mary Clendenon, Office Administrator

    Custodian of Public Records

    Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority

    900-H Tenth Avenue

    Marlinton, WV 24954

    RE: West Virginia Freedom of Information Act Request – JacMal Properties, LLC Procurement, Lease Agreement, and Associated Records

    Dear Ms. Clendenon:

    Pursuant to the West Virginia Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), W. Va. Code § 29B-1-1 et seq., this is a formal request to inspect and obtain copies of public records maintained by, in the custody of, or generated by the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (PCSWA).

    West Virginia public policy declares that "all persons are... entitled to full and complete information regarding the affairs of government and the official acts of those who represent them as public officials and employees." (W. Va. Code § 29B-1-1).

    Scope of Requested Records

    This request strictly targets records produced, sent, received, or compiled from November 1, 2025, through the date of this letter (May 23, 2026). To ensure reasonable specificity under W. Va. Code § 29B-1-3(4), this request is narrowed to the following four distinct categories:

    1. Internal and External Communications

    All written or electronic communications—including but not limited to emails, email attachments, text messages, and instant messaging application logs (e.g., SMS, Signal, WhatsApp)—exchanged by, between, or among:

    • Any active or recently resigned member of the PCSWA Board (including but not limited to Ed Riley);

    • SWA Office Administrator Mary Clendenon;

    • SWA Legal Counsel David Sims;

    • Jacob Meck and/or Melinda Meck;

    • Any agent, employee, or legal representative representing JacMal Properties, LLC.

    This item includes all communications discussing public-private partnership proposals, Option #4, draft lease language, land transfers, or procurement exemptions.

    2. Financial Models, Projections, and Cost-Benefit Analyses

    All spreadsheet files (including Excel formats with active formulas intact), valuations, actuarial tables, reports, and memos concerning the economic viability of a county transfer station, explicitly including:

    • The internal staff proposal detailing a self-constructed $1.325 million public facility funded via a 1% West Virginia Solid Waste Management Board loan.

    • The finalized and draft financial models for the approved 15-year lease with JacMal Properties, LLC requiring a $16,759.00 monthly payment and an eventual $1,103,495.24 balloon buyout.

    • Any documentation regarding the calculation, projection, and justification for the residential Green Box fee adjustment from $135.00 to $260.00.

    3. Records of the "Negotiating Group"

    All agendas, meeting notices, minutes, sign-in sheets, memorandum drafts, notes, or audio/video recordings associated with the private sessions of the "Negotiating Group" established on or around December 17, 2025, containing representation from PCSWA and JacMal Properties, LLC.

    4. Real Estate Transfer and Asset Disposal Records

    All surveys, appraisals, deeds, board resolutions, and legal descriptions concerning the proposed or executed conveyance, sale, lease, or transfer of the approximately 2-acre public parcel adjacent to the Dunmore Landfill shop building intended for the construction of the JacMal transfer station.

    Format of Production

    Pursuant to W. Va. Code § 29B-1-3(4), if the requested records exist in electronic or digital form, please provide them in their native electronic media format (e.g., .pdf, .xlsx) via email to minimize reproduction costs. If files are too large for direct email attachment, please make them available via a secure digital download link.

    Statutory Redaction & Mandated Response Timeline

    Under W. Va. Code § 29B-1-3(5), the PCSWA has a maximum of five (5) business days from the receipt of this request to take one of the following actions:

    1. Furnish copies of the requested information;

    2. Provide a specific time and place where the records may be inspected; or

    3. Deny the request in writing, stating the specific statutory exemption under W. Va. Code § 29B-1-4 relied upon for the withholding.

    If any portion of these records is deemed exempt from public disclosure under the law, you are required to redact only the exempt material and provide all remaining, reasonably segregable portions of the public records. Any clean denial or reduction must include a statement of the specific reasons for the exemption, as the burden of proof rests entirely on the public body.

    Thank you for your prompt attention to this matter. I look forward to your formal response within five business days.

    Sincerely,

    [Your Name / Media Outlet]

    [Your Contact Information]

     

    Note: This is an AI research report and should not be used for legal action without the assistance of a license attorney.

 

 

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