Justice Signs Bill Eliminating Arts Agency

West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice has signed a bill eliminating the Department of Education and the Arts.

The governor’s office said in a news release that he noted that no programs would have federal funding reduced. The release said the legislation will place all education operations under the Department of Education while saving money.

Justice said a Department of the Arts and Culture and History will be created and will answer directly to him.

Earlier this month, Justice fired department secretary Gayle Manchin. Manchin is a former state school board president and is the wife of Democratic U.S. Sen. Joe Manchin. Justice is a Republican who switched from the Democratic Party last year.

The department’s agencies include Culture and History, West Virginia Public Broadcasting, the Center for Professional Development, the Library Commission, Rehabilitation Services and Volunteer West Virginia.

Update: 4 Percent Teacher Pay Raise Bill Reaches House Following Senate Procedural Confusion

Update: 10:15 p.m. 03/03/18

The question of whether striking West Virginia teachers would return to the classroom Monday was temporarily dwarfed by another Saturday night: What just happened here?

The state Senate passed a bill that they thought would give teachers a 4 percent raise, less than the 5 percent they asked for. But, according to a House of Delegates clerk, the version Senate lawmakers passed had some of the same key language as the original.

Essentially, they accidentally passed the bill their opponents asked for. 

Confusion spread throughout the Senate chambers, as House members walked across the hall to watch some of their counterparts sort out what some kept calling a “clerical error.” Eventually, in a puzzling set of moves, the Senate passed the version they intended. The House will now have the chance to review the amended bill. (The House approved the 5 percent raise almost unanimously on Wednesday.)

Gov. Jim Justice chimed in with a statement: “While everyone is focused on the mistakes, my focus is solely on getting our children back to school,” it said in part.

“This wrangling needs to stop right now,” Justice said. “For crying out loud, we are putting our children at risk. I will not be a party to pitting our state employees against our teachers. I strongly feel we are blessed to have both.”

Earlier Saturday, the president of West Virginia’s largest teacher’s union said an ongoing teacher walkout will continue “indefinitely” unless teachers get the 5 percent raise they’ve been asking for.

Dale Lee made the remarks on behalf of the two teachers unions, and the one representing school service personnel, shortly before the West Virginia Senate voted on an amended bill. The lawmaker behind that amendment, state Sen. Greg Bosos, R-Nicholas, said his plan could free up money in the state budget to allow raises for all public employees in the state.

“Until this bill passes at 5 percent, we will be out indefinitely,” Lee told reporters.

On the seventh day of teacher walkouts in all 55 counties Friday, Justice and a group of superintendents urged Senate leaders to pass the governor’s plan as proposed, with a 5 percent increase. Teachers are also asking for changes to the public employees health care plan, known as PEIA. School administrators have said that the task force set up to study the issue is a good first step toward that fix.

Visitors in the gallery booed when senators cast their votes: 19-15 to change the bill’s language to a 4 percent raise and 21-13 with passage.

Union leaders couldn’t be immediately reached after the vote.

Politifact: Precedent Says West Virginia Teacher’s Strike Isn’t Lawful

West Virginia teachers spent a sixth day on strike on March 1 after negotiations were insufficient to end the walkout. But is their strike legal?

Shortly before the strike began, state Attorney General Patrick Morrisey (and U.S. Senate candidate) said it wasn’t.

On Feb. 21, Morrisey tweeted, “ ‘The impending work stoppage is unlawful and should come to an end.’ — Patrick Morrisey.”

Legal experts said Morrisey is on solid ground about the lawfulness of the strike.

As the Charleston Gazette-Mail reported on Feb. 20, the key precedents on this case emerged in 1990, the last time teachers in West Virginia went on strike.

On March 8, 1990, then-Attorney General Roger W. Tompkins, a Democrat, wrote an opinion saying, “There is no right to strike against the state. Thus, any strike or concerted work stoppage by the public teachers of this state is illegal. … It is our opinion that any strike by public teachers is illegal and may be dealt with accordingly by school officials.”

The state Supreme Court essentially agreed with this reasoning in a ruling on April 12, 1990.

“Public employees have no right to strike in the absence of express legislation or, at the very least, appropriate statutory provisions for collective bargaining, mediation, and arbitration,” the court wrote. “In view of our legislature’s silence on these complex issues, we decline to intervene.”

The West Virginia Education Association, the state affiliate of the National Education Association, the national teacher’s union, did not respond to an inquiry for this article. When the group’s president, Dale Lee, was previously asked whether a strike was illegal, Lee acknowledged “Probably yes,” according to the Gazette-Mail.

Morrisey’s tweet was carefully worded, legal experts say.

If he had used the word “illegal,” he might have been open to critique on the grounds that teachers would not be committing a crime by taking part.

“I know of nothing that says a teacher who strikes commits a crime,” said West Virginia University law professor Bob Bastress. “Participating in a strike would be no different from a teacher who feigns illness to get a day off. The conduct could expose the teacher to discipline.”

Howard Seufer Jr., an attorney in Charleston, agreed. “Strikes by public employees are not crimes in our state,” he said. “But public employees do not enjoy a right under our laws to strike.”

On another linguistic note, Seufer pointed out that the 1990 state Supreme Court ruling specifically noted that it was using the terms “strike” and “work stoppage” interchangably. That aligns with a 1965 opinion by the same court, which “suggested that a ‘strike’ refers to the actions of employees that may result in such a work stoppage,” Seufer said.

If it sounds unusual for a union to be unable to strike, that’s the case in West Virginia.

Unions in West Virginia, including the WVEA, “exist as voluntary associations that lobby on behalf of their members and provide them with certain services, such as representation in grievance and disciplinary proceedings,” Seufer said. “But our laws do not treat these associations as unions in the same sense other states do.”

Specifically, West Virginia law does not recognize a right for public school employees to collectively bargain, he said. Rather, the legislature regulates public school labor by statute.

Bastress said that common law applies on the issue of strikes, “and there is no right to strike in common law.”

Our ruling

Referring to a West Virginia teacher’s strike, Morrisey tweeted that “the impending work stoppage is unlawful.”

Precedents both from his own office and from the state Supreme Court support that view, and Morrisey was careful to say “unlawful” rather than “illegal.” By going on strike, the teachers are not taking part in criminal activity; they are at risk of disciplinary action.

We rate the statement True.

W.Va. Senate Votes To Ax Water Pollution Provision; Advances Bail Bill

The West Virginia Senate voted unanimously Thursday, Feb. 22, for a bill that would delete a section of state law governing water pollution by surface coal mining.

The bill from the Senate Energy, Industry and Mining Committee would cut a requirement that the mining company get certification afterward that it mitigated damage to streams or more than 250 acres of watershed.

The provision says mitigation costs cannot exceed $200,000 per acre.

Committee Chairman Randy Smith, a Davis Republican and sponsor, described only other provisions before Thursday’s vote, saying this conforms state law to federal law.

He said industry stakeholders and the state Department of Environmental Protection agreed.

The West Virginia Rivers Coalition, an environmental group, said the coal industry-backed bill was made available only Monday without time to analyze it.

Tracking Animals

The Senate also is advanced legislation to allow using leashed dogs to track mortally wounded deer or bear.

The bill, headed to a floor vote today, would revise the current law that prohibits using dogs to hunt or chase deer.

It says that only the hunter may kill the wounded animal, which would count toward the hunter’s bag limit.

The tracking would remain subject to all applicable laws, including having written permission to hunt on private property, doing it during legal hunting hours and having a valid West Virginia hunting license and any requisite stamps or permits.

House Passes Bill Clarifying Bail Practices

The West Virginia House of Delegates passed a bill to change how bail is set for certain misdemeanor cases.

The Charleston Gazette-Mail reports House Bill 4511, which passed 94-4 Thursday, would require defendants for certain misdemeanor cases to be released on personal recognizance instead of bail. Misdemeanors involving actual violence, a victim that’s a minor or use of a deadly weapon, among other caveats, would be decided on a case-by-case basis.

House Judiciary Chairman John Shott, R-Mercer, the bill’s lead sponsor, said during the Thursday vote that the bill attempts to alleviate some of the regional jail system’s financial burden from housing inmates. The state Department of Military Affairs and Public Safety said it costs about $48.25 per day to house an inmate in a regional jail.

Lawmakers Consider Ways to Combat Opioid Epidemic in 2018 Session

 

The start of the 2018 state Legislative session is only one month away. Lawmakers in the Eastern Panhandle met in Martinsburg for a Legislative Outlook Breakfast hosted by the Berkeley County Chamber of Commerce to discuss several issues they hope to tackle at the statehouse this year.

 

One focus is creating more ways to combat West Virginia’s opioid epidemic — particularly how the crisis affects those in the state’s foster care system.

The state Department of Health and Human Resources reported in November that nearly 6,400 children are in some type of foster care – whether that’s in traditional foster homes or in other placements like emergency shelters. The West Virginia Children’s Home Society says at least 50 percent of kids in foster care are there due to drug related issues.

 

Senate Finance Chairman Craig Blair, a Republican from Berkeley County, suggested one way to tackle the problem would be to offer long term, reversible birth control to mothers who are addicted to drugs.

Blair said by providing easy access to things like IUDs, or intrauterine devices – would be more cost effective for the state than spending the hundreds of thousands of dollars spent on special care for children born with drug related issues.

“You get this contraception out there,” Blair said, “You will see a significant reduction in the amount of children being born [with drug related issues] and the money that we have to spend weaning them off whatever their mother was addicted to.”

Blair says he’s pro-life but states he’s pro-contraception as well. He argues this option would be another way to combat the opioid epidemic and help keep more children from being born with drug related ailments.

The 2018 state Legislative session will begin on January 10.

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