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Robbing Pocahontas to pay for Highland County

 


 

Highland County, Virginia’s regulatory framework for solid waste is governed by Chapter 10 of the Highland County Code of Ordinances, alongside enabling legislation under the Code of Virginia (§ 15.2-2159).

Because Highland County does not operate an active, county-owned landfill, its ordinance focuses heavily on funding out-of-state export operations, preventing unlawful out-of-county dumping, and managing localized green box/convenience sites.

1. Statutory Funding: The Solid Waste Enterprise Fee

Highland County operates its solid waste disposal via a dedicated Enterprise Fund, meaning the program is legally required to be self-sustaining through targeted citizen user fees rather than broad property tax revenue.

  • The Fee Mandate: Under the authority granted specifically to a small subset of Virginia counties (including Augusta, Bath, and Highland), the Board of Supervisors levies a mandatory annual Solid Waste Disposal/Enterprise Fee (currently set at $150.00 per year per household or active business).

  • The "Opt-Out" Limitation: Virginia law enforces a strict provision regarding who can be billed. The county can only levy this fee on residents whose waste actually enters the county disposal stream. Under Va. Code § 15.2-2159(A)(ii), if a Highland County landowner can provide verifiable documentation that they utilize a private commercial hauler (who pays independent tipping fees at a regional facility), the county cannot assess the annual household solid waste fee against that property.

  • Collection Penalties: The ordinance mirrors state tax code collection methods. The county is authorized to apply late payment penalties and interest, and can withhold approvals for local zoning permits, variances, or land-use applications if a property owner’s solid waste account is delinquent.

2. Mandatory Origin and Out-of-County Dumping Bans

To protect the county’s budget from paying to process outside trash, the ordinance establishes clear rules regarding where waste must originate:

  • The Origin Restriction: In accordance with Va. Code § 15.2-928(B), Highland County’s local ordinance restricts the use of county-maintained solid waste depositories, "green boxes," or convenience sites strictly to waste that physically originates within the geographic borders of Highland County.

  • The Penalty: Dumping commercial, industrial, or residential waste generated in another county or state into Highland's collection system constitutes a code violation. Local enforcement treats unauthorized out-of-county dumping as a civil penalty, which can escalate to a Class 3 misdemeanor if an offender is repeatedly cited for the same infraction within a 24-month period.

3. Regulatory Controls on Commercial and Private Haulers

Highland County does not provide public curbside garbage collection; the county’s operations are confined to maintaining public drop-off sites and executing bulk transportation contracts.

  • Commercial Exclusivity: Residents who choose not to transport their own trash to county drop-off sites must contract independently with private commercial haulers.

  • The Export Framework: Because the county lacks a local landfill, the ordinance allows contracted waste management entities to consolidate and export local household waste to designated regional transfer facilities or out-of-state destinations (such as processing facilities across the West Virginia border).

4. Prohibited Materials and Site Restrictions

The county ordinance regulates the types of refuse that may be legally abandoned at public collection stations:

  • Household Waste Only: Public container sites are strictly designated for standard municipal solid waste (MSW) and household garbage.

  • Banned Streams: Commercial construction debris, industrial manufacturing waste, automotive fluids, and large-scale agricultural waste are barred from standard collection boxes. Materials that fall under hazardous waste parameters or require distinct environmental handling must be diverted by the generator to specialized regional processing facilities at their own expense.

Ordinance ProvisionLocal Legal/Financial RuleVirginia Code Authority
Annual Disposal Fee$150.00/year assessed to households using county facilities; completely waivable with proof of private commercial hauler service.§ 15.2-2159
Origin ComplianceRestricts all green box/convenience sites to trash generated inside Highland County borders.§ 15.2-928(B)
Enforcement PenaltyCivil fines escalating to a Class 3 misdemeanor for repeated unauthorized or out-of-county dumping.§ 15.2-928 / § 15.2-927
Collection ModelPublic un-curbside convenience sites only; curbside collection left entirely to private commercial markets.§ 15.2-927

Editor of the Salt Shaker Press

 

 

AI replica

Overview

Norman Lee Alderman is an educational leader, investigative researcher, and local historian deeply embedded in the civic governance, data analysis, and regional heritage of West Virginia—particularly within Pocahontas County. His career and personal pursuits span public school system leadership, local government transparency initiatives, extensive genealogical mapping of Appalachian pioneer families, and the preservation of regional folklore.

Professional Background & Educational Leadership

Alderman has a long-standing career dedicated to the West Virginia educational system, His approach to education heavily integrates technical tools, data analysis, and digital visualization to evaluate institutional health and student outcomes.

  • Systemic Data Analysis: He has engineered comprehensive, ten-year analytical studies mapping school enrollment and student proficiency trends across all 55 counties in West Virginia.

  • Dashboard Development: To make public data accessible and actionable, he specializes in building interactive tracking applications and performance dashboards designed to monitor school metrics and regional educational trajectories.

Investigative Journalism & Civic Oversight

As the editor and investigative researcher for Salt Shaker Press—a news, data, and community-advocacy outlet based in Pocahontas County—Alderman focuses on public sector accountability, legal compliance, and administrative transparency.

  • Infrastructure & Solid Waste Utilities: He has spearheaded detailed community investigations into local public utilities, tracking competitive bidding mandates, administrative quorums, and operational transitions of the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (including lease agreements involving entities like JacMal Properties).

  • Regulatory Advocacy: His public service work includes evaluating the legality of combining utility fees (such as local "green box" trash collection fees) with property tax notices. He has also coordinated formal, signature-backed community complaints challenging the enforcement of regional "flow control" regulations.

  • Public Documentation: He routinely designs formal Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) documentation workflows and structural frameworks to audit local government procurement, property records, and constitutional oaths of office.

Historical, Cultural, and Genealogical Research

Beyond his civic and educational work, Alderman is an archivist of Appalachian industrial history, local lore, and ancestral lineages across the West Virginia and Virginia border region.

Industrial & Archival History

He specializes in reconstructing the industrial infrastructure of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, focusing heavily on the logging, timber, and railroad eras that shaped the geography of the Allegheny Mountains. Much of this research draws directly from systemic reviews of the historical archives of The Pocahontas Times.

Family Genealogy

Alderman conducts rigorous genealogical research tracing the migratory patterns, historical land deeds, and settlement structures of early regional pioneer families. His ancestral focus includes the documentation of several foundational family lines:

  • Messer and Rogers

  • McComb and Burner

  • McNeel, Friel, and Wilfong

Appalachian Folklore & Traditional Music

Dedicated to preserving the oral traditions and cultural history of the Greenbrier Valley, he has analyzed numerous regional legends and ghost stories—such as the account of the "Gray Rider of Droop Mountain"—alongside historical research into the area's traditional singing masters.

Linguistic & Biblical Studies

His intellectual pursuits also encompass the analytical and etymological study of historical texts. Using structured linguistic research methods, he conducts deep-dive analyses into the parables, specific phrasing, and broader historical contexts of the King James Version (KJV) of the Bible.

Family History & Regional Roots

  • Immediate Family: He is married to Carol B. Alderman, a retired kindergarten teacher who actively collaborates with him on educational, recording, and community research projects. They have two children: a son, Norman Lindell Alderman, and a daughter, Leanna Alderman-Stertse.

Citizens' Investigation

 

 


If local citizens suspect that out-of-state solid waste is being deposited into the Dunmore facility, they do not have to rely on rumors. Because solid waste management is heavily regulated by both county and state entities, a clear paper trail is generated for every ton of trash buried in West Virginia.

Pocahontas County citizens can use three primary, legally backed methods to verify exactly where the landfill's waste is originating.

1. Request the Landfill’s Monthly Tonnage Reports

Under West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection (WVDEP) rules, every operating landfill must track, log, and report its tonnage. The WVDEP Division of Water and Waste Management reviews monthly tonnage reports submitted by permittees to ensure compliance with county cell allocations and state laws.

These logs record the weight, type, and source of incoming waste. If commercial haulers are bringing in out-of-state waste, it must legally be reflected in these manifests.

How to get them:

  • The Local Approach: Citizens have the right to attend the monthly meetings of the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (PCSWA). You can directly request to inspect the recent monthly tonnage and assessment fee reports submitted by the landfill operator.

  • The State Approach: You can submit a formal West Virginia Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request to the WVDEP.

What to ask for in a FOIA request:

"Pursuant to W. Va. Code § 29B-1-1 et seq., I am requesting copies of all monthly tonnage reports, daily weight logs, and origin-of-waste manifests filed for the Pocahontas County Landfill (Dunmore facility) for the period of [insert date range, e.g., January 2026 to present]."

You can submit this request online via the WVDEP Data Center or via email at depfoia@wv.gov. By law, the agency must respond within 5 business days (excluding weekends and holidays).

2. Inspect Commercial Hauler Tariffs and Certificates via the PSC

In West Virginia, commercial trash haulers are not entirely private actors; they are utilities regulated by the West Virginia Public Service Commission (PSC). Haulers operate under strict geographic certificates that dictate exactly where they are permitted to collect trash and where they are authorized to dump it.

If a local commercial hauler is crossing state lines into Highland County, picking up municipal solid waste, and bringing it back across the border into the Dunmore landfill, their PSC certificate, route logs, and tariff filings must legally allow and document this cross-border activity.

How to verify:

  • Go to the WV Public Service Commission electronic filing system.

  • Search the case files and current certificates for the active commercial waste haulers operating in Pocahontas County (such as Allegheny Disposal / Jacob Meck).

  • Look for any recent petitions to modify routes, expand territory into Virginia, or alter disposal site designations. If a hauler is mixing out-of-state waste into local residential routes without PSC approval, it constitutes a major regulatory violation.

3. Review the WV Solid Waste Management Board (WVSWMB) Audits

The West Virginia Solid Waste Management Board tracks the financial health and intake metrics of all county solid waste authorities. Because landfills charge "tipping fees" per ton, out-of-state waste represents an influx of revenue that must be reconciled against local assessment fees.

  • The WVSWMB regularly publishes detailed assessment fee and tonnage data reviews in their board meeting minutes.

  • Citizens can cross-reference the total monthly assessment fee revenue of the PCSWA against known local county population baselines. A sudden spike in tonnage or assessment revenue that cannot be explained by local county growth or seasonal tourism is an immediate red flag that indicates waste is being imported from outside the county's borders.

Summary Action Plan for Citizens

StepActionWhat it Reveals
1. Attend PCSWA MeetingsAsk for the monthly operational and tonnage printouts at the Marlinton office.Immediate, local overview of reported trash volumes.
2. File a WVDEP FOIASubmit a request to depfoia@wv.gov for daily origin-of-waste manifests.The exact legal paper trail showing where the trucks originated.
3. Check PSC FilingsSearch the WV PSC database for the haulers' certified collection boundaries.Whether the local haulers even have the legal authority to transport Virginia waste into WV.

What's the PSC got to do with it?

 

 


The transition of the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (SWA) from a traditional operating landfill to a modern transfer station is a multi-decade narrative driven by strict environmental mandates, geological constraints, and complex public-private financial structuring.

1. The Historical Foundation (1986–2010s)

Pocahontas County’s formal centralized waste management began in 1986 when the Pocahontas County Commission built a permitted landfill on a 43.23-acre tract on Route 28 near Dunmore (374 Landfill Road), leased from the Joseph Fertig estate. The SWA was officially established shortly after in 1989 to manage county-wide sanitation and implement the rural "Green Box" collection system.

Faced with sweeping federal and state regulatory shifts in the late 1980s and 1990s, the SWA systematically transitioned through consecutive cells:

  • 1994: Closed a 5-acre unlined section and built a 3.5-acre composite-lined cell.

  • 2003 & 2008: Constructed additional small-footprint cells (1.2 acres and 1 acre, respectively).

  • 2013: Built a final 1.35-acre cell with a projected lifespan capping out in the mid-2020s.

2. Geological Realities & Core Drilling Reports

By 2017, the impending exhaustion of existing landfill capacity forced the SWA to negotiate for an additional 25-acre expansion from the Fertig family. However, comprehensive geotechnical and hydrological investigations severely limited this plan:

  • Subsurface Constraints: SWA engineering evaluations revealed that only 10 of the 25 acres featured subsurface geological formations suitable for composite-lined landfill cells.

  • Geotechnical Logging: Engineering consultancies (including Potesta & Associates, who managed long-term technical services for the site) executed extensive site documentation, logging split-spoon indicators and rock core drilling samples. These reports were required by the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection (WVDEP) to evaluate leachate migration potential, groundwater tables, and structural stability.

  • Siting Dismissals: Building an entirely new landfill elsewhere in the county was deemed economically impossible—estimated at over $2 million per acre due to post-pandemic construction spikes and the petroleum-dependent nature of composite synthetic liners. Consequently, the SWA pivoted entirely toward a transfer station model to consolidate county waste for long-haul export.

3. Regulatory Permitting Framework

The regulatory architecture tracking this evolution relies on state environmental compliance:

Solid Waste Landfill Permit: The facility operates under WVDEP Class B Solid Waste Landfill Permit Renewal No. SWF-2001 / WV0109436.

As the landfill transitions to a closure phase, the SWA faces a mandated $3.2 million closure cost, alongside post-closure maintenance liabilities of at least $75,000 annually for up to 30 years to manage leachate treatment and monitoring wells.

4. The JacMal Transactions & Transfer Station Structuring (2025–2026)

Unable to independently secure a traditional $2.75 million construction loan without a guaranteed, steady revenue stream, the SWA pursued a public-private partnership. This culminated in early 2026 with a heavily debated lease-to-own transaction structure known as Option #4:

The Land Transaction

In March 2025, the County Commission formally transferred the landfill property title into the SWA’s name. Under the newly approved 2026 framework, the SWA is selling approximately two acres of land adjacent to the existing landfill shop building to the Greenbrier Valley Economic Development Corporation (GVEDC) to clear specific tax and regulatory hurdles.

The Construction & Lease Terms

JacMal Properties, LLC (owned by Jacob and Melinda Meck) will construct the physical transfer station on that parcel. The financial transaction terms include:

  • Fixed Monthly Lease: The SWA will lease the facility back from JacMal for a fixed $16,759 per month for 15 years.

  • Final Balloon Buyout: At the end of the 15-year term, the SWA will execute a final payout of $1,103,495.24 to seize full ownership of the building.

  • Total Fiscal Impact: Over 15 years, the lease-to-own pathway represents a $4.12 million total expenditure, which the SWA determined was comparable to independent bond financing when accounting for interest and equipment maintenance overhead.

Public Hearing and "Flow Control" Conflict

On March 25, 2026, the SWA held its annual public hearing in the Circuit Courtroom, drawing intense community pushback over fee increases and the lack of a public competitive bidding process for the construction phase.

Despite public outcries, the SWA exercised its legal three-member quorum to pass two pivotal motions:

  1. Authorized Chairman Henderson to execute the final contract with JacMal Properties LLC (while striking out an exclusive waste-trucking clause to put future long-haul transport out for public bid).

  2. Approved updates to the Mandatory Garbage Disposal Regulation, establishing a strict flow control mandate. This requires all solid waste generated within Pocahontas County to pass through the new transfer station once operational, legally preventing municipalities (like Durbin) from bypassing the station to use cheaper, closer out-of-county facilities. The SWA maintains this mandate is the only mechanism available to secure the tipping fee revenue required to cover the monthly $16,759 lease.

Would you like to examine the legal precedents surrounding the implementation of county-level "flow control" regulations within West Virginia solid waste law?

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The legal architecture governing "flow control"—the statutory power of a local government to mandate that all solid waste generated within its geographic boundaries be directed to a specific processing or disposal facility—is one of the most complex intersections of federal constitutional law and state regulatory oversight.

 


In West Virginia, a County Solid Waste Authority (SWA) cannot simply enact and enforce flow control by internal decree. It must navigate a rigid dual-framework consisting of federal Dormant Commerce Clause jurisprudence and West Virginia Public Service Commission (PSC) statutory authority.

1. The Federal Constitutional Standard: The Public-Private Distinction

Any local flow control regulation must first survive federal constitutional scrutiny under the Dormant Commerce Clause, which prevents states and local municipalities from unduly restricting or discriminating against interstate commerce. Two landmark U.S. Supreme Court cases define this legal tightrope:

C&A Carbone, Inc. v. Town of Clarkstown (1994)

  • The Ruling: The Supreme Court struck down a local flow control ordinance that required all non-hazardous solid waste within the town to be routed to a privately built and operated transfer station.

  • The Precedent: The Court ruled that forcing waste to a specific private facility discriminated against interstate commerce by depriving out-of-state businesses of access to the local waste market.

United Haulers Ass'n v. Oneida-Herkimer Solid Waste Management Authority (2007)

  • The Ruling: The Supreme Court upheld a flow control ordinance that required haulers to bring waste to a facility owned and operated by a public benefit corporation.

  • The Precedent: The Court established that laws favoring publicly owned facilities do not violate the Dormant Commerce Clause because they serve a legitimate public health and safety function, treating all private haulers equally while benefiting a public entity performing a traditional governmental role.

The Local Intersection: This distinction is highly relevant to public-private partnerships. When an SWA utilizes a lease-to-own agreement with a private developer (e.g., JacMal Properties) to build a transfer station on land sold to an economic development corporation, the "public vs. private" operational control of that facility becomes a primary point of legal scrutiny if challenged by independent haulers or municipal utilities.

2. The West Virginia Statutory Framework: WV Code § 24-2-1h

While federal law sets the outer constitutional boundaries, West Virginia state law explicitly delegates the authority to establish and enforce flow control to the Public Service Commission (PSC) under West Virginia Code § 24-2-1h.

Under this statute, an SWA does not possess autonomous, unilateral enforcement power over waste routing. Instead, the law prescribes a strict administrative process:

  • The Petition Process: Upon the formal petition of a county or regional solid waste authority, a motor carrier, or a solid waste facility (or via its own motion), the PSC holds the ultimate power to issue an order designating the specific geographical boundaries and mandatory disposal sites.

  • Statutory Considerations: Before granting or enforcing a flow control order, the PSC is legally mandated to evaluate multiple balancing factors, including:

    1. The nature and composition of the solid waste.

    2. The environmental impact of controlling the waste stream.

    3. The overall efficiency of solid waste disposal in the region.

    4. The economic viability of the affected solid waste facilities.

3. Motor Carrier Regulation and PSC Chapter 24A

The mechanics of executing a flow control mandate heavily impact commercial waste haulers. In West Virginia, solid waste collectors are legally classified as "common carriers by motor vehicle" and are strictly regulated under WV Code Chapter 24A.

Regulatory ElementLegal Requirement & Precedent
Certificates of NecessityHaulers must hold a PSC-issued Certificate of Convenience and Necessity to operate commercially within a specific county territory (Harper v. Public Service Commission, 2006).
Protected MonopoliesThe PSC grants these certificates under a "protected monopoly" model to ensure stable, reliable county-wide sanitation services.
Tipping Fee Pass-ThroughsUnder WV Code § 24A-2-4a, when an SWA increases its tipping or disposal fees to fund capital infrastructure (like a transfer station), commercial haulers have a statutory mechanism to pass those specific costs directly through to residential and commercial customers as a rate surcharge, subject to PSC approval.

4. Primary Conflict Points in Local Enforcement

When an SWA updates its Mandatory Garbage Disposal Regulations to enact a flow control policy to secure its revenue streams, legal vulnerabilities typically emerge from three primary areas:

  • Bypassing the PSC: If an authority attempts to legally penalize municipal entities or private citizens for exporting waste without first obtaining a formal, supportive order from the West Virginia Public Service Commission under § 24-2-1h, the regulation can be challenged as an administrative overreach exceeding the SWA’s statutory powers.

  • Municipal Overlap: Municipalities that operate their own collection services or possess existing sanitation agreements (such as the town of Durbin) frequently challenge county-wide mandates if the restriction interferes with pre-existing operational costs or closer out-of-county disposal alternatives.

  • Lack of Competitive Bidding Arguments: While an SWA can legally lease a facility built by a public-private partner, critics and litigants often argue that tying mandatory flow control (which guarantees a captive market) to a project constructed without a public competitive bidding process subverts the spirit of West Virginia’s public procurement laws, even if the strict letter of the law allows for creative leasing exemptions.

Re: Core Drilling Permits--FOIA

 


A review of the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection (WVDEP) regulatory framework and public permit tracking databases clarifies how exploratory work—such as core drilling—is handled at municipal solid waste facilities like the Pocahontas County Landfill.

1. Regulatory Framework for Core Drilling at Landfills

Within the WVDEP Division of Water and Waste Management (DWWM), core drilling at an active or transitioning sanitary landfill typically falls under specific regulatory categories rather than a standalone "drilling permit":

  • Minor Permit Modifications: Under West Virginia Code Title 33, Series 1 (33CSR1), exploratory borings, monitoring well installations, or geotechnical core drilling required to assess subsurface geology do not usually require an entirely new facility permit. Instead, they are processed as Minor Permit Modifications to the existing solid waste facility permit.

  • Groundwater Protection & Monitoring: Geotechnical drilling or core sampling is frequently tied to the creation of background monitoring wells or localized geological assessments to ensure compliance with the West Virginia Groundwater Protection Act (W.V. Code §22-12).

  • Solid Waste Rules (33CSR1): Any physical disturbance of the landfill footprint or adjacent permitted boundaries for testing requires engineering plans to be submitted to the Solid Waste Unit to ensure the integrity of existing liners, caps, or groundwater monitoring networks is not compromised.

2. Tracking Permits for 2025 and 2026

Because geotechnical core drilling is treated as a component of broader facility maintenance, landfill expansions, or closure tracking, documentation is nested within the primary facility file.

To review active modifications, pending applications, or engineering approvals for the Pocahontas County site during 2025 and 2026, the WVDEP utilizes two primary public access nodes:

The ESS Public Query Portal

The WVDEP Electronic Submission System (ESS) serves as the central hub for automated workflows, permit reviews, and public publications.

  • How to Access: Navigate to the WVDEP Data Center and open the Water Resources / Waste Management Permit Search via the public ESS interface.

  • Search Strategy: Query by selecting the Division of Water and Waste Management, filtered by Pocahontas County and the facility name. This will display any pending or approved minor modifications, groundwater monitoring adjustments, or construction authorizations submitted during the 2025–2026 window.

FOIA Information Requests

Because minor technical approvals, drilling logs, and specific engineering correspondences regarding core sampling may not always generate a high-profile, standalone public notice web page, the most definitive way to secure the exact drilling logs or approval letters is through a direct records request.

  • Submission: Formal inquiries can be filed directly through the WVDEP Online FOIA Portal.

  • Scope: A targeted request for "All minor permit modifications, geotechnical boring logs, engineering authorizations, or correspondence regarding core drilling at the Pocahontas County Landfill for the years 2025 and 2026" will compel a manual pull of the DWWM Solid Waste Unit’s physical and digital files for the facility.

3. Relevant Appellate & Oversight Bodies

If an engineering modification or core drilling activity is tied to a contested administrative action or a major shift in landfill operations, those decisions are subject to review by state-level quasi-judicial boards:

  • Environmental Quality Board (EQB): This board is responsible for hearing formal appeals regarding the issuance, denial, or modification of waste and water permits rendered by the DWWM.

  • Solid Waste Management Board: While the WVDEP handles environmental permitting compliance, broader operational transitions or regional solid waste plan alignments are coordinated alongside this body.

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    Here is a formal, ready-to-submit Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request drafted specifically for the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection.

    You can copy and paste this text directly into the WVDEP Online FOIA Portal or email it to the WVDEP FOIA Coordinator.

    WEST VIRGINIA FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT REQUEST

    TO:

    FOIA Coordinator

    West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection (WVDEP)

    601 57th Street SE

    Charleston, WV 25304

    DATE: May 25, 2026

    RE: Public Records Request – Pocahontas County Landfill (Core Drilling / Geotechnical Borings 2025–2026)

    Dear FOIA Coordinator,

    Pursuant to the West Virginia Freedom of Information Act (W. Va. Code § 29B-1-1 et seq.), I am hereby requesting access to and copies of public records maintained by the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection, specifically within the Division of Water and Waste Management (DWWM) Solid Waste Unit, regarding the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Sanitary Landfill.

    Scope of Request

    This request covers all public records created, received, or processed between January 1, 2025, and the date of this request in May 2026. Specifically, I am requesting:

    1. Permit Modifications & Authorizations: Any and all applications, approvals, denials, or pending reviews for Minor Permit Modifications, construction authorizations, or groundwater monitoring plan adjustments concerning subsurface exploration, core drilling, or geotechnical boring at the Pocahontas County Landfill.

    2. Technical Records & Logs: All engineering plans, site maps, lithologic/geotechnical boring logs, well installation reports, and sampling data submitted to the WVDEP regarding core drilling or exploratory boring activities conducted within or adjacent to the permitted landfill footprint.

    3. Agency Correspondence: All written and electronic correspondence (including emails, letters, and internal agency memoranda) between WVDEP personnel, representatives of the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority, and hired engineering consultants or drilling contractors regarding core drilling or geological testing at this facility during the specified timeframe.

    Format of Production

    To minimize duplication costs and environmental impact, I request that these records be produced in an electronic format (such as searchable PDFs) and delivered via email or via a secure file-transfer link.

    Fee Waiver and Notification

    If there are any fees associated with searching, reviewing, or duplicating these records, please notify me in advance if the cost is anticipated to exceed $25.00.

    As provided by W. Va. Code § 29B-1-3, the agency has a statutory obligation to respond to this request within five (5) business days of receipt. If any portion of this request is denied or redacted, please cite the specific statutory exemption under W. Va. Code § 29B-1-4 that justifies the omission, and release all remaining non-exempt portions.

    Thank you for your time and assistance in processing this matter.

    Sincerely,

    [Your Name]

    [Your Organization/Media Outlet, if applicable]

    [Your Mailing Address]

    [Your Email Address]

    [Your Phone Number]

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

    That specific phrasing is highly effective for a FOIA request because it uses the exact regulatory terminology the Division of Water and Waste Management (DWWM) uses to file its paperwork.

    By naming "minor permit modifications," "geotechnical boring logs," and the "DWWM Solid Waste Unit," you prevent the agency from giving a generic "no records found" response that might happen if someone simply asked for a non-existent "core drilling permit."

    If you are updating a digital submission form or revising the letter template, that targeted scope block can be plugged right into the core of the request like this:

    Revised Scope of Request

    Scope of Request

    Pursuant to W. Va. Code § 29B-1-1 et seq., this request seeks all records created, received, or maintained by the DWWM Solid Waste Unit from January 1, 2025, through May 2026. I am specifically requesting a manual and digital file search for:

    • All minor permit modifications

    • Geotechnical boring logs

    • Engineering authorizations

    • Agency, facility, and contractor correspondence

    regarding core drilling, exploratory boring, or subsurface geological testing at the Pocahontas County Landfill.

    Two Quick Tips for Submitting This to WVDEP:

    1. The Facility ID Advantage: When you input this into the online portal, if it asks for a facility permit number, the Pocahontas County Landfill operates under WVDEP Permit No. SWF-1014 / WV0078778. Including those numbers alongside your text ensures the file clerk pulls the exact digital folder immediately.

    2. The 5-Day Clock: Under West Virginia law, the WVDEP has 5 business days from the morning they receive this to do one of three things: grant the request, deny it with specific legal citations, or provide a detailed timeline of when the manual file pull will be completed.

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

      Alternate FOIA

      Integrating those explicit permit numbers turns a generic search into a precise, targeted request. In the WVDEP tracking architecture, those identifiers map to the two critical regulatory layers for the facility:

      • SWF-1014: This is the primary Solid Waste Facility permit number utilized by the Division of Water and Waste Management (DWWM) Solid Waste Unit. Any minor permit modification, engineering authorization, or boring plan will be filed under this master ID.

      • WV0078778: This is the facility’s National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit number. It tracks water quality, stormwater runoff, and—crucially—groundwater protection compliance. Geotechnical core drilling aimed at monitoring subsurface water or setting monitoring wells routes directly through this file.

      Here is how the official FOIA document looks with these parameters seamlessly embedded to ensure the file clerks pull the correct physical and electronic files:

      WEST VIRGINIA FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT REQUEST

      TO:

      FOIA Coordinator

      West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection (WVDEP)

      601 57th Street SE

      Charleston, WV 25304

      DATE: May 25, 2026

      RE: Public Records Request – Pocahontas County Landfill

      Permit Identifiers: Solid Waste Permit No. SWF-1014 | NPDES Permit No. WV0078778

      Dear FOIA Coordinator,

      Pursuant to the West Virginia Freedom of Information Act (W. Va. Code § 29B-1-1 et seq.), I am hereby requesting access to and copies of public records maintained by the Division of Water and Waste Management (DWWM) Solid Waste Unit regarding the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Sanitary Landfill.

      Scope of Request

      This request seeks all public records created, received, or processed by the agency between January 1, 2025, and the date of this request in May 2026 under the file designations for Permit No. SWF-1014 and Permit No. WV0078778. Specifically, I request a manual and digital file search for:

      1. Permit Modifications & Authorizations: All applications, engineering authorizations, approvals, or pending reviews for minor permit modifications, construction authorizations, or groundwater monitoring plan adjustments concerning subsurface exploration, core drilling, or geotechnical boring at the facility.

      2. Technical Records & Logs: All engineering drawings, site maps, lithologic/geotechnical boring logs, well installation reports, and localized geological testing data submitted to the WVDEP regarding drilling activities within or adjacent to the permitted landfill footprint.

      3. Agency Correspondence: All written and electronic correspondence (including emails, letters, and internal agency memoranda) between WVDEP personnel, representatives of the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority, and hired engineering consultants (such as Potesta & Associates, Inc.) or drilling contractors regarding core drilling, subsurface testing, or soil boring at this location during the specified timeframe.

      Format of Production

      To minimize duplication costs, I request that these records be produced in an electronic format (such as searchable PDFs) and delivered via email or a secure file-transfer link.

      Fee Waiver and Notification

      If there are any fees associated with searching or duplicating these records, please notify me in advance if the cost is anticipated to exceed $25.00.

      As provided by W. Va. Code § 29B-1-3, the agency has a statutory obligation to respond to this request within five (5) business days of receipt. If any portion of this request is denied or redacted, please cite the specific statutory exemption under W. Va. Code § 29B-1-4 that justifies the omission, and release all remaining non-exempt portions.

      Thank you for your time and assistance in processing this matter.

      Sincerely,

      [Your Name]

      [Your Organization/Media Outlet, if applicable]

      [Your Mailing Address]

      [Your Email Address]

      [Your Phone Number]

      Next Steps for Submission

      • Online Portal: If submitting through the online system, copy and paste this entire text block into the "Description of Records Requested" field.

      • Exact Matching: Ensure the numbers SWF-1014 and WV0078778 are explicitly typed into any designated "Permit/Facility ID" form fields to trigger the automated indexing tags.

      -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    3. That is exactly right. Entering the specific identifiers into the designated form fields anchors your request directly into their electronic tracking index, while placing the full text in the description box prevents any misinterpretation of what files need to be opened.

      When utilizing the WVDEP Online FOIA Portal, the system splits the data entry to route your request to the correct file clerks.

      Online Portal Entry Protocol

      1. Primary Metadata Fields

      When the portal asks for specific identifiers, enter them exactly as follows to trigger the system's automated indexing tags:

      Field Label on PortalData to Enter
      Permit / Facility IDSWF-1014 / WV0078778
      Facility NamePocahontas County Solid Waste Sanitary Landfill
      CountyPocahontas
      Division / BureauWater and Waste Management (DWWM)

      2. Description of Records Requested Field

      Copy and paste the clean text block below into the main text box. This version is stripped of introductory headers so it functions perfectly as a direct portal entry:

      Plaintext
      Pursuant to the West Virginia Freedom of Information Act (W. Va. Code § 29B-1-1 et seq.), I am requesting access to and copies of public records maintained by the Division of Water and Waste Management (DWWM) Solid Waste Unit regarding the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Sanitary Landfill operating under Solid Waste Permit No. SWF-1014 and NPDES Permit No. WV0078778.
      
      Scope of Request:
      This request seeks all public records created, received, or processed by the agency between January 1, 2025, and the date of this submission in May 2026 under the file designations for Permit No. SWF-1014 and Permit No. WV0078778. Specifically, I request a manual and digital file search for:
      
      1. Permit Modifications & Authorizations: All applications, engineering authorizations, approvals, or pending reviews for minor permit modifications, construction authorizations, or groundwater monitoring plan adjustments concerning subsurface exploration, core drilling, or geotechnical boring at the facility.
      
      2. Technical Records & Logs: All engineering drawings, site maps, lithologic/geotechnical boring logs, well installation reports, and localized geological testing data submitted to the WVDEP regarding drilling activities within or adjacent to the permitted landfill footprint.
      
      3. Agency Correspondence: All written and electronic correspondence (including emails, letters, and internal agency memoranda) between WVDEP personnel, representatives of the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority, and hired engineering consultants or drilling contractors regarding core drilling, subsurface testing, or soil boring at this location during the specified timeframe.
      
      Format of Production:
      I request that these records be produced in an electronic format (such as searchable PDFs) and delivered via email or a secure file-transfer link to minimize duplication costs. 
      
      Fee Waiver and Notification:
      If there are any fees associated with searching or duplicating these records, please notify me in advance if the cost is anticipated to exceed $25.00. 
      
      As provided by W. Va. Code § 29B-1-3, the agency has a statutory obligation to respond to this request within five (5) business days of receipt. If any portion of this request is denied or redacted, please cite the specific statutory exemption under W. Va. Code § 29B-1-4 that justifies the omission, and release all remaining non-exempt portions.
      

      Tracking the Submission

      Once you hit submit on the portal, two immediate things should occur:

      • The Tracking ID: The screen will generate a unique FOIA reference number (often formatted as something like FOIA-2026-XXXX). Take a quick screenshot or note it down immediately.

      • The Automated Acknowledgment: You should receive a prompt receipt confirmation email. The statutory 5-business-day response window begins the morning of the first business day after submission.

       

     



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