The Town of Marlinton is indeed a Home Rule city, having been officially admitted to the West Virginia Municipal Home Rule program as a Class IV municipality on July 17, 2024.
Here are the latest details regarding the town's Home Rule initiatives and the current 2026 legislative landscape:
Marlinton’s Home Rule Implementation
1% Municipal Sales Tax: The town council passed the final reading of the ordinance to implement a 1% Sales and Service Tax and a 1% Use Tax. This tax is scheduled to go into effect on July 1, 2025.
Exemptions: Per the town's plan, this tax only applies to items already subject to the 6% state sales tax. Groceries, gasoline, and vehicles are exempt.
B&O Tax Reduction: To balance the new sales tax, Marlinton’s plan includes a reduction or elimination of certain Business and Occupation (B&O) tax categories. This is intended to shift the tax burden from local business owners to a broader base of consumers.
Additional Powers: Beyond taxation, Marlinton’s approved plan grants the town authority for:
On-the-spot citations for code violations.
Disposition of city property without a public auction (for properties valued under certain thresholds).
Liens on dilapidated properties to recover remediation and demolition expenses.
Liens for unpaid solid waste fees.
West Virginia Home Rule Law (2026 Updates)
The program, governed by W. Va. Code § 8-1-5a, has seen recent legislative attention in the 2026 Regular Session:
House Bill 5422 (2026): This bill was introduced to further refine the powers of the Home Rule Board. It emphasizes the "permanent" status of the program and continues the authority for any ordinances enacted during the original "pilot" phase.
Compliance & Fees: Municipalities must remain in "good standing" by paying an annual assessment (typically $2,000, though sometimes suspended if the fund is surplus) and filing annual progress reports with the state.
Class IV Limitations: Under the current law, only four Class IV municipalities (those with populations under 2,000) can be admitted per year. Marlinton secured one of these competitive slots in the 2024 cycle.
Summary of Marlinton's Timeline
| Milestone | Date |
| Home Rule Board Approval | July 17, 2024 |
| Ordinances Passed | October 7, 2024 |
| Sales Tax Effective Date | July 1, 2025 |
| First Annual Progress Report Due | Late 2025 / Early 2026 |
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Does this authority permit Home Rule cities control over their own sanitation systems such as solid waste disposal
The short answer is yes, but with significant legal boundaries.
Under the West Virginia Municipal Home Rule program, cities like Marlinton can gain expanded authority over the administration and enforcement of their sanitation services, but they remain strictly bound by state environmental laws and the oversight of the Public Service Commission (PSC) regarding rates.
1. Marlinton's Specific Sanitation Authorities
In Marlinton’s 2024 Home Rule application, the town specifically requested and received authority to improve the collection of sanitation fees. This is a common "Home Rule" tool used to bypass the standard, slower state processes:
Liens for Unpaid Fees: Marlinton is now permitted to file liens on real property for delinquent solid waste and sewage fees. Previously, municipalities often had to rely on civil lawsuits to recover small debts, which was costly and inefficient.
On-the-Spot Citations: The town can issue administrative "on-the-spot" citations for sanitation-related code violations (e.g., illegal dumping or improper storage) rather than going through the traditional municipal court summons process.
2. Where Home Rule "Ends" (The Statutory Wall)
While Home Rule grants flexibility in how a city manages its local service, it does not allow them to override the following:
The PSC "Firewall": Per W. Va. Code § 8-13-13, any service related to the collection and disposal of garbage, refuse, and waste remains subject to Chapter 24 of the state code. This means the Public Service Commission still has final approval over the rates (tariffs) charged to residents. A Home Rule city cannot unilaterally hike trash fees without PSC oversight.
Environmental Regulation: Municipalities must still comply with the West Virginia Solid Waste Management Act and all DEP (Department of Environmental Protection) regulations. They cannot use Home Rule to bypass environmental standards for landfills or transfer stations.
County Authority Conflict: In West Virginia, County Solid Waste Authorities (SWA)—like the Pocahontas County SWA—often have primary jurisdiction over the "flow" of waste. Home Rule does not typically allow a city to interfere with the county’s broader integrated waste management plan or the "mandatory disposal" rules set by the county.
3. Current Situation in Marlinton (2026)
As of early 2026, the Town of Marlinton continues to handle its own collection for residents (who are exempt from the County "Green Box" fee because they pay the city directly).
Key Distinction: Home Rule allows Marlinton to be a better "debt collector" and "code enforcer" for its sanitation system, but it does not give them the power to act as a "rogue regulator" outside of the state’s established environmental and rate-setting frameworks.
Summary Table: Home Rule vs. Sanitation
| Action | Permitted under Home Rule? |
| Placing liens for unpaid trash bills | Yes (if in the approved plan) |
| Issuing immediate fines for littering | Yes |
| Setting garbage rates without the PSC | No |
| Ignoring State DEP Landfill Rules | No |
| Exempting residents from County fees | Yes (usually via service credit) |
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Under the West Virginia Constitution (Article VI, § 39(a)), the "Municipal Home Rule Amendment" grants the electors of any municipality with a population over 2,000 the authority to frame, adopt, and amend their city charter. This amendment empowers these municipalities to pass laws and ordinances governing their local affairs, provided those local laws do not conflict with the state constitution or general state laws.
Statutory Powers of Municipalities West Virginia Code grants cities "plenary power" to control and regulate their municipal affairs. These broad powers include:
- Creating, modifying, or discontinuing city departments.
- Acquiring and managing city streets, avenues, alleys, and property.
- Levying and collecting taxes and special assessments authorized by the state legislature.
- Furnishing local public services and operating passenger transportation systems.
- Exercising local police power for the protection, safety, and health of persons and property, including adopting sanitary regulations.
- Imposing penalties for the violation of city ordinances.
Judicial Restrictions and Dillon's Rule Despite the constitutional and statutory establishment of home rule, local autonomy in West Virginia has historically faced significant judicial resistance. In 1969, the state recodified municipal law specifically to achieve uniformity and abrogate the common-law principle known as "Dillon's Rule"—a doctrine that strictly limits local government powers to those expressly granted by the state. The law explicitly states that municipal powers should be given full effect without regard to this rule of strict construction.
However, the West Virginia Supreme Court largely ignored these legislative directives and continued to interpret local autonomy very narrowly. The court has maintained a fundamental legal principle of state preemption, declaring that whenever a municipal ordinance conflicts with a state statute, the state statute prevails and the local ordinance is rendered invalid.
The Home Rule Pilot Project Frustrated by the judiciary's restrictive interpretations, the West Virginia legislature launched a much-heralded "pilot project" on home rule in 2007. This project empowered 34 participating cities to pass ordinances that are actually inconsistent with state law, subject to specific restrictions and oversight by a state Home Rule Board.
In passing this pilot project, the legislature made another explicit attempt to clarify to the courts that Dillon's Rule is dead in West Virginia. While the project was extended to 2019 with a strong chance of becoming permanent for participating municipalities, cities that are not part of the pilot project remain under the old legal regime and are still highly vulnerable to state preemption.
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The West Virginia Municipal Home Rule program allows participating municipalities to implement local ordinances and rules that would otherwise be restricted by state law, provided they do not conflict with the U.S. Constitution or specific state-mandated areas (such as criminal law or the Open Meetings Act).
Based on current records from the West Virginia Municipal Home Rule Board and the town's legislative actions:
Status of Marlinton
Yes, the Town of Marlinton is a Home Rule city. * Approval Date: The West Virginia Municipal Home Rule Board officially approved Marlinton’s application and written plan on July 17, 2024.
Classification: Marlinton participates as a Class IV municipality. Under current state law (W. Va. Code § 8-1-5a), the Home Rule program is permanent and open to all municipalities, though there is a statutory limit allowing only four new Class IV municipalities to be admitted each year.
Primary Initiative: The town’s Home Rule plan focuses heavily on tax restructuring. Specifically, Marlinton sought authority to:
Implement a 1% Municipal Sales and Use Tax.
Reduce or eliminate certain categories of the Business and Occupation (B&O) tax.
Implementation Timeline: According to the town's 2024 Progress Report, the local ordinances to enact these changes were passed on October 7, 2024, with an effective implementation date set for July 1, 2025.
The West Virginia Home Rule Law (W. Va. Code § 8-1-5a)
The law provides a framework for "innovation in local government." Key aspects include:
Broad Authority: Participating cities can bypass certain "one-size-fits-all" state statutes to address local issues like administrative streamlining, dilapidated properties, and economic development.
Mandatory Requirements: Cities must pay an annual $2,000 assessment to the Home Rule Board and submit annual progress reports detailing the success and "lessons learned" from their initiatives.
Prohibited Areas: Even Home Rule cities cannot pass ordinances regarding:
The state’s Controlled Substances Act.
Criminal procedure or sentencing.
Professional licensing standards.
Enforcement of state building or fire codes (beyond what is already permitted).
Annexation (which still follows general state code).
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