List 50 statements of facts and law regarding the Pocahontas County, West Virginia Solid Waste Crisis. Include legal , ethical, and fiscal questions.
Here are 50 statements of facts and law, including legal, ethical, and fiscal questions, regarding the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Crisis based on the provided sources:
Background and the Crisis
- The Pocahontas County Landfill is currently projected to reach its absolute terminal capacity and close between October and December 2026.
- The county generates a low volume of municipal solid waste, averaging approximately 8,000 tons annually.
- Constructing a new landfill cell or facility would require over $10 million over 15 years, a capital cost the county's low waste volume cannot financially sustain.
- To ensure continued waste disposal, the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (PCSWA) determined it must transition from an active landfill model to a transfer station model.
- Upon the landfill's closure, the PCSWA is legally mandated to maintain a 30-year post-closure monitoring and leachate management program, an unfunded liability estimated at $75,000 annually.
- Nearly 60% of Pocahontas County’s total land area is held by federal and state governments (such as the Monongahela National Forest), limiting the taxable property base and restricting areas suitable for industrial waste development.
- Due to low population density and rugged terrain, the county has historically relied on an unmanned "Green Box" collection system rather than door-to-door hauling.
The JacMal "Option 4" Agreement
8. The PCSWA approved "Option #4," a public-private partnership with JacMal Properties LLC (owned by Jacob Meck) to build a transfer station adjacent to the existing landfill.
9. The Option 4 agreement establishes a 15-year triple net lease obligating the PCSWA to pay a fixed monthly rate of $16,759 to JacMal.
10. The lease includes a mandatory final buyout provision forcing the PCSWA to purchase the facility for $1,103,495.24 at the end of the 15-year term.
11. The aggregate financial commitment for local taxpayers under the JacMal Letter of Intent (LOI) exceeds $4.12 million.
12. The LOI features an "exclusivity clause" that explicitly prohibits the PCSWA from discussing or soliciting alternative waste infrastructure offers.
13. The LOI imposes a $200,000 penalty payment on the PCSWA if the project is not built, functioning as a liquidated damages clause.
14. The agreement shifts the risk to the public by requiring the PCSWA to be responsible for intentional or accidental damage to the transfer station structure or trash crane.
Constitutional, Statutory, and Procurement Law
15. Article X, Section 8 of the West Virginia Constitution prohibits local governments from creating multi-year debt exceeding specific thresholds without a 60% voter approval.
16. Under the West Virginia Supreme Court’s "Spelsberg Standard," a multi-year financial obligation by a public entity is unconstitutional unless it includes a "non-appropriation clause" granting the absolute right to cancel the contract at the end of any fiscal year.
17. The JacMal LOI lacks a non-appropriation clause and includes a mandatory final purchase, legally functioning as an unconstitutional creation of "present indebtedness".
18. The West Virginia Fairness in Competitive Bidding Act (W. Va. Code § 5-22-1) mandates that public construction contracts exceeding $50,000 be awarded through competitive bidding to the lowest qualified responsible bidder.
19. The PCSWA selected JacMal LLC to build the multi-million-dollar transfer station without utilizing a competitive bidding or Request for Proposals (RFP) process.
20. West Virginia public contract law (W. Va. Code § 5A-3-62) requires a 30-day "cancellation for convenience" clause, which is entirely absent from the JacMal 15-year LOI.
21. W. Va. Code § 7-3-3 mandates that the disposal of county property generally be conducted via public auction or competitive bidding, barring specific exemptions.
22. The PCSWA planned to transfer public land to the Greenbrier Valley Economic Development Corporation (GVEDC) as a "pass-through" entity to bypass the strict public auction requirements of § 7-3-3.
23. Using a "straw-man" ownership strategy (where a public entity holds land title purely to shield a private developer’s profit-generating asset from property taxes) violates the anti-evasion clauses of W. Va. Code § 11-3-9(b).
24. Entering into a non-competitive, third-party lease-to-own agreement directly jeopardizes $1.9 million in state grant funding the PCSWA holds in escrow, as state rules prohibit passing such grants to a private owner.
Regulatory and Siting Compliance
25. West Virginia Code § 24-2-1c requires that any commercial solid waste facility must obtain a Certificate of Need (CON) from the Public Service Commission (PSC) before construction or expansion can begin.
26. The PSC is mandated to deny a CON if the proposed facility is not reasonably cost-effective or is inconsistent with the local SWA siting plan.
27. Under WV Legislative Rules 33CSR1 and 33CSR3, solid waste facilities are prohibited from being located within 2,000 feet of public schools, healthcare facilities, and churches without a discretionary waiver from the WVDEP Secretary.
28. The proposed JacMal transfer station at the Dunmore landfill property is situated in an exclusionary zone potentially less than 2,000 feet from Pocahontas County High School.
29. A secondary transfer station site proposed by Jacob Meck in Green Bank is situated just 776 feet from the Community Care medical clinic and Green Bank Senior Citizens Center.
30. State regulations require solid waste facilities to maintain a strict 300-foot hydrological buffer from perennial streams, ponds, and wetlands.
31. Siting waste infrastructure on karst topography (limestone with sinkholes) presents severe groundwater contamination risks, triggering strict liability and enhanced environmental monitoring under WVDEP rules.
32. West Virginia Code § 22-15-13 requires that any investigation into siting a new commercial solid waste facility must publish a Class II legal advertisement and file a topographic map with the WVDEP.
Fiscal Realities and "Flow Control"
33. To secure revenue for the $16,759 monthly JacMal lease, the PCSWA drafted "Flow Control" regulations mandating that all municipal solid waste generated within the county must be exclusively processed through the new transfer station.
34. The PSC typically requires a 15-year lease agreement of this magnitude to include a monthly escrow deposit (projected at roughly $4,500) to ensure final buyout funds are available.
35. Implementing Flow Control strips northern Pocahontas County towns, like Durbin, of their ability to use closer, cheaper out-of-county landfills, artificially increasing their hauling costs.
36. To cover its ballooning debt, the PCSWA projected increasing the annual residential "Green Box" fee from $120/$135 to as high as $310 per year.
37. The SWA considered expanding this waste fee to every deeded land parcel in the county, including 1,738 farms and 4,671 unimproved lots that generate no municipal solid waste.
38. Assessing a flat fee on vacant parcels without rendering a direct service transforms the "fee" into an unconstitutional ad valorem property tax under West Virginia law.
39. W. Va. Code § 22C-4-10 caps the civil penalty for unpaid solid waste fees at $150 per year, but the PCSWA improperly drafted local regulations attempting to inflate this to a ruinous $150 per day.
40. State law (W. Va. Code § 22-15-7) mandates that active landfills provide one "free day" per month for residential waste disposal, but transfer stations are administratively exempt from this mandate.
41. The PCSWA voted to eliminate the landfill's monthly "free day" effective July 1, 2026, removing the only legal, no-cost disposal pathway for financially distressed residents.
Transparency, Ethics, and Protest
42. The West Virginia Open Governmental Proceedings Act (OGMA) requires agencies to conduct public business openly, strictly limiting executive sessions to narrow topics such as internal property acquisition strategies.
43. The PCSWA allegedly violated the OGMA by allowing private contractors (Jacob and Malinda Meck) to sit in on the executive session where their own multi-million dollar contract was being negotiated.
44. The West Virginia Ethics Act strictly prohibits public officials from having a pecuniary interest in public contracts over which they exercise influence or control.
45. Residents have actively protested the PCSWA’s transition plan, citing the lack of competitive bidding, the creation of a private monopoly, unconstitutional debt, and severe economic burdens placed on a county where nearly 23% of residents live below the poverty line.
Legal, Ethical, and Fiscal Questions
46. Legal Question: Does the PCSWA's 15-year lease-to-own agreement with JacMal LLC violate Article X, Section 8 of the West Virginia Constitution by creating a mandatory $4.1 million debt without a non-appropriation clause or public vote?
47. Legal Question: Can the WVDEP legally issue a facility permit for the Dunmore transfer station if it sits within the 2,000-foot exclusionary zone of Pocahontas County High School without the SWA obtaining a formal public nuisance waiver?
48. Ethical Question: Does the inclusion of private developers in an executive session to negotiate their own public infrastructure contract, while excluding other elected officials and the public, constitute a breach of the West Virginia Open Governmental Proceedings Act?
49. Ethical Question: Is it an abdication of fiduciary duty for a public waste authority to sign an "exclusivity clause" that legally bars it from seeking competitive, cheaper bids from other regional haulers?
50. Fiscal Question: If the PCSWA enforces "Flow Control" and raises Green Box fees to $310 annually, will the resulting financial burden on fixed-income residents lead to mass non-payment, administrative collapse, and a surge in environmentally destructive "midnight dumping"?
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Create a proposal to resolve this crisis.
Here is a comprehensive proposal to resolve the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Crisis. This strategy, known as the "East Fork Pivot," abandons the legally flawed and financially devastating "Option 4" agreement in favor of a publicly-owned, competitively bid transfer station that protects both the fiscal and environmental health of the county.
Pillar 1: Safe and Legally Compliant Siting The current proposals to build at the Dunmore landfill or the Green Bank Meck property introduce severe public health and legal hazards due to their proximity to Pocahontas County High School, the Community Care medical clinic, and the Green Bank Senior Center.
- Relocate to the East Fork Industrial Park: The county should relocate the proposed transfer station to Frank, WV. This site features historical industrial use and is located several miles from the nearest school, safely avoiding the strict 2,000-foot institutional exclusionary zone mandated by West Virginia solid waste and composting rules (33CSR3 Section 3.2.a.5).
- Conduct Necessary Surveys: To ensure full regulatory compliance, the site must undergo rigorous topographical and hydrological surveys to guarantee a 300-foot buffer from the East Fork of the Greenbrier River and a 500-foot setback from residential dwellings.
Pillar 2: Restoring Procurement and Constitutional Integrity The current 15-year, $4.12 million lease-to-own Letter of Intent (LOI) with JacMal Properties LLC breaches state procurement mandates and violates Article X, Section 8 of the West Virginia Constitution by locking taxpayers into mandatory debt without an annual non-appropriation clause. Proceeding with this private monopoly directly jeopardizes $1.9 million in state grant funding currently held in escrow.
- Void the Unconstitutional Contract: The Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (PCSWA) must immediately abandon the JacMal LOI.
- Initiate Competitive Bidding: The PCSWA should engage an independent criteria developer to issue a competitive Request for Proposals (RFP) for a publicly owned "truck-to-truck" transfer station. Opening the contract to regional competitors unlocks true market pricing, protects the escrowed state grants, and explores integrated "zonal hauling" options.
Pillar 3: Engineering Financial Affordability The PCSWA's current model relies entirely on a flat-rate surge that would hike the residential "Green Box" fee from $120 to an unaffordable $310+ annually, economically devastating the county's elderly and fixed-income households.
- Divert PILT Funds: The County Commission must formally dedicate 20% (approximately $200,000) of its annual federal Payment in Lieu of Taxes (PILT) directly to the SWA capital improvement fund to subsidize residential rates.
- Implement Tiered Fees: Using the PILT subsidy, the SWA can freeze the fee at $135 for seniors and low-income residents, set a moderate $185 tier for standard households, and shift higher proportional costs to commercial resort entities like Snowshoe.
- Leverage Grants and Loans: The county should fund the $575,000 truck-to-truck station by applying for the USDA Rural Development Water and Waste Disposal Grant (which covers up to 75% of costs) and utilizing a 1% low-interest loan from the WV Solid Waste Management Board (SWMB).
- Offload Post-Closure Liability: To secure long-term fiscal health, the PCSWA must aggressively integrate the closing Dunmore landfill into the WVDEP’s Landfill Closure Assistance Program (LCAP), effectively shifting the $75,000 annual 30-year groundwater monitoring liability from the county budget to the state.
Pillar 4: Preventing Illegal Dumping and Enhancing Logistical Efficiency Forcing all county waste to travel to a single central transfer station generates unnecessary heavy-truck emissions and fuel waste for peripheral towns, while unaffordable fees incentivize illegal "midnight dumping".
- Maintain the "Free Day": By keeping fees affordable and maintaining the monthly free disposal day for bulky household items, the county removes the financial incentive for illegal dumping, thereby protecting the karst topography and the headwaters of the Cheat, Elk, Greenbrier, and Gauley rivers.
- Grant a Geographic Exemption: Northern towns like Durbin should be granted an exemption from "Flow Control" mandates, allowing them to haul their trash directly to the closer Dailey facility in Randolph County for a small administrative fee. This vastly improves regional logistical efficiency and protects the local tourism economy from heavy truck traffic.

