Alert (March 14, 2026): Due to recent high winds, our radio/TV tower in Bethany is not operational. Our engineers are working to resolve the issue. Alert (March 11, 2026): Our TV translator in Flatwoods is experiencing technical issues. Our engineers are troubleshooting the problem and expect it to be down for a couple days.
Thank you for your patience.
This week, a new novel about two girls and an astronomy textbook draws inspiration from one of the quietest places in West Virginia. Also, author Annette Saunooke Clapsaddle talks about growing up as part of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians. And, a Kentucky tattoo artist practices traditional tattooing and traditional music. He says they’re not too different.
These were the only two completed bills to include fiscal notes. The childcare tax credit has an estimated $4.2 million loss in revenue, which covers this entire fiscal year, with eligibility starting from July; and the 2 percent personal income tax cut, effective Jan. 1, 2025, has an estimated $18.4 million loss in revenue this fiscal year and $46 million in the next full fiscal year.
The other major goal of the session was to move money to state programs. In all, 26 bills classified as new “supplemental appropriations” passed both chambers, amounting to a total $498,315,838.
A table of the supplemental appropriations that passed both chambers during the second special session of the 2024 West Virginia Legislature. *Note: SB 2009 and SB 2010 are “inadvertently” listed twice, but the Total Supplemental Appropriations value is accurate. Credit: West Virginia Legislature;
Outside of supplemental appropriations, one bill also increased an existing appropriation to the maintenance for the State Road Fund by $150 million.
In all, legislators considered 47 unique bill topics. Most had counterparts in the other chamber — with the exception of one Senate bill to appropriate $15 million to university repairs, which passed; and four House bills aimed at additional childcare programs, which did not pass.
Each day a special session is called outside of interim meetings, it costs an estimated $35,000 per day, according to West Virginia Senate Director of Communications Jacque Bland. The session began on Sept, 30, then adjourned until the three previously scheduled interim meetings days Oct. 6 to Oct. 8, with floor sessions and committee meetings scheduled between.
Justice signed 20 bills on Oct. 10, with the remaining 17 awaiting his signature.
Incomplete Legislation
Del. Kayla Young, D-Kanawha, was the sponsor on four childcare bills, along with other House Democrats. The first proposed appropriating $4.6 million to the Department of Human Services’ Office of Child Care Development. The second outlined a $1,000 refundable child tax credit for all who qualify for a federal child tax credit; the bill would have cost an estimated $287.5 million per year. The third would have created a refundable tax credit at 50 percent of the federal child and dependent care tax credit. The fourth would have made all child care program employees who work at least 20 hours a week eligible for the DHS child care subsidy program. All stalled in committees.
A bill that would appropriate $300,000 towards four new rotunda statues failed to progress during the special session. One sticking point was it would have removed the statue of U.S. Sen. Robert C. Byrd. The legislature did, however, pass a resolution to send a Hershel “Woody” Williams statue to the U.S. Capitol.
Add WVPB as a preferred source on Google to see more from our team
The 2026 state Legislative session stretched all the way to midnight Saturday night. WVPB reporters Randy Yohe, Chris Schulz and Maria Young were in the rotunda as the session concluded and brings us this recap.
On The Legislature This Week, our legislative reporters discuss bills nearing the finish line and our student reporter talks to first responders about a new safety bill.
Host and reporter Randy Yohe speaks with Senior Reporter Chris Schulz and Assistant News Director Maria Young. They discuss some of the biggest bills they covered during the 2026 regular session of the West Virginia Legislature — and what issues did not come up. They also look ahead to the legislature's final day, Saturday, March 14.
After a lengthy and passionate debate, the Senate passed a bill that reverts decision-making on athletic transfers back to the West Virginia Secondary Schools Athletic Commission.