Appalachian Power Could Take Legal Action Against PSC, Chief Says

In a decision Tuesday, the PSC denied the recovery of $232 million of the $553 million the company sought from electricity customers to account for higher fuel and purchased power costs from 2021 to last year.

Appalachian Power said it’s exploring legal options against the West Virginia Public Service Commission (PSC).

In a decision Tuesday, the PSC denied the recovery of $232 million of the $553 million the company sought from electricity customers to account for higher fuel and purchased power costs from 2021 to last year.

The PSC did allow the recovery of $321 million over 10 years. That amounts to $2.50 a month on the average residential customer’s bill, and they will begin paying that on Sept. 1.

In a statement, Appalachian Power President and Operating Chief Aaron Walker called the commission’s ruling “disappointing and deeply troubling.”

“Through the information and facts we presented to the commission, and the relevant legal standards, it is our position that no disallowance was warranted,” Walker said. “We are studying the order in detail and will explore all legal remedies available to us.”

The PSC paid an outside consultant to review Appalachian Power’s fuel procurement and power plant management practices during the past three years. It concluded that the company did not respond quickly enough to changes in the coal market, nor did it run its power plants when it was most economical to do so.

The company countered that it had managed its operations the best it could under challenging conditions. The economic rebound in 2021 led to a surge in demand for electricity, pushing up the price of coal and natural gas.

In 2021 and 2022, Appalachian Power and other utilities found themselves short of the coal they needed to operate their plants.

The company sought approval of a settlement that would have spread the cost out over 20 years and reduced the requested amount to $503 million.

The Kanawaha County Commission was among those opposing the settlement. The commission asked the PSC to reject the company’s entire request.

Still, commissioners applauded the PSC’s decision on Wednesday.

“It sends a clear message that excessive rate hikes will not go unchallenged, and utility companies must be held accountable for their actions,” Commissioner Ben Salango said in a statement. “We will continue our fight for fair utility rates that reflect the economic realities facing our community.”

Appalachian Power is an underwriter of West Virginia Public Broadcasting.

‘Ol Mountain Trader’ Closes Doors After 50 Years

The paper is closing because Debbie Salango is retiring. 
“I had one guy say he wants me to reconsider. And I said ‘You mean to reconsider getting old? I really don’t have any control,” Salango laughed.

The Ol Mountain Trader free classified ads publication that serviced southern West Virginia has closed after a 50-year run. 

Debbie Salango started the paper from the living room of her two-bedroom trailer on Sullivan Road in Glen Morgan. Her husband had been working long hours and she had been selling hand-knitted afghans and babysitting to make it by. 

“I was there with two babies, and we didn’t have enough money to do anything. And I wanted a new vacuum cleaner – and couldn’t afford a new vacuum cleaner, or even a payment for one,” Salango said. 

The money that she was spending to advertise in the classified section of the newspaper was eating into her profit and making it hard to make money.

“So my first publication was four, letter size, typewritten pages, front and back, stapled together, and it was 25 cents,” she said. “I went into the stores. Not knowing what I was doing.”

The paper was a success. At one point there were over 72 pages of ads. It is West Virginia’s oldest, free classified advertising paper. Salango said she has had many readers reach out and express their sadness as well as share stories about how the publication affected their lives. 

“One fella said that he had a family with four kids, and when the mines would strike and they would be short on money, he would sell things. And that kept his family going. Stories like that just warm your heart,” Salango said. 

As online personal ad websites grew in popularity, the paper dwindled down to the 32 pages it has today. The paper is closing because Debbie Salango is retiring. 

“I had one guy say he wants me to reconsider. And I said ‘You mean to reconsider getting old? I really don’t have any control,’” Salango laughed. 

Salango will be picking back up where she left off 50 years ago – babysitting, except this time it will be her grandchildren. 

“I have six little curtain climbers,” Salango said. “Yea its full circle.”

County Commission Asks For Change To Tax Credit Law

A provision in House Bill 2526, the personal income tax reduction law passed earlier this year, allows taxpayers to receive a credit on their income taxes for paying their county level personal property taxes. But that is causing confusion for many. 

A provision in House Bill 2526, the personal income tax reduction law passed earlier this year, allows taxpayers to receive a credit on their income taxes for paying their county level personal property taxes. But that is causing confusion for many. 

Salango said he has been flooded with calls and emails from residents who already paid their full year’s property tax – which makes them ineligible for the dollar-for-dollar credit in 2024.

To take advantage of the personal property tax credit, the state tax department is advising that taxpayers only pay half of the amount owed this year by Oct. 1, then the other half in 2024 by April 1 to qualify for Motor Vehicle Property Tax Adjustment Credit. However, Kanawha County Commissioner Ben Salango said the West Virginia Legislature needs to make it simpler for taxpayers. 

“I think that if they will adjust for law to make sure that even people who pay early, for instance, if they pay in 2023, for personal property tax or automobile tax, in 2024, that they also get that rebate,” Salango said. “And so that’s one of the things we’ve asked the legislature.”

The Kanawha County Commission sent a letter on July 31 to leadership members of the state Senate and the House of Delegates asking for the legislature to make this change in a special session expected to happen next week. 

For links to tax forms and details on the net tax credits, click here.

Kanawha County Commission Opposes Natural Gas Rate Increases

Mountaineer Gas customers will see their bills go up 15 percent, and Hope Gas customers will see theirs go up 28 percent.

Kanawha County commissioners “vehemently” oppose the double-digit rate increases the West Virginia Public Service Commission recently approved for Mountaineer Gas and Hope Gas.

Mountaineer Gas customers will see their bills go up 15 percent, and Hope Gas customers will see theirs go up 28 percent.

“Utility rate increases are always tough on customers, and these double-digit increases are devastating, especially during a time of record inflation,” said Commissioner Ben Salango.

Both increases are smaller than what the companies asked the PSC to approve.

About 300,000 natural gas customers statewide are affected by the decision.

The Kanawha County Commission has also voiced its opposition to a $297 million request from Appalachian Power. If approved, the average residential customer’s bill would increase $18 a month.

On Wednesday, the PSC will consider Mon Power’s request to raise its customers’ bills an average of $11 a month.

Justice Bets On Economic Promises In Race Against Salango

Republican West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice sat marveling at all the good news he argues he’s delivered in the month before election day.

Never mind that coronavirus numbers are on the rise all over the state, turning more counties on his color-coded map red and orange. The criticisms that dogged him for much of his first term — that he was checked out on the job and had enriched himself and his businesses — Justice bets those are all a distant memory for voters.

“It’s hard to keep up with the announcements,” Justice riffed last Friday at the former Hobet mine in Boone County, a massive empty site in southern West Virginia that critics say Justice has neglected to redevelop.

The not-so-subliminal message behind his not-so-humble brag: he deserves another term for focusing on projects such as road repairs and economic development in a state that badly needs both.

He now plans to spend $40 million to build road access at the mine property. That news came three weeks after the state announced several hundred jobs would come to the state’s northeast to run testing grounds for a futuristic transportation technology called hyperloop. And then there’s the road paving project Nitro, a town south of Charleston, that Justice celebrated in early October.

Justice’s opponent, Democratic nominee Ben Salango, is betting that voters will see through the rush of press conferences. “We all know that many of his ‘announcements’ never materialize and that his election-year promises don’t hold water,” Salango tweeted.

Justice had confronted that criticism bluntly. “What do you want me to do? Just stop announcing?” he said at the mine site. Then, sneering at the notion that the avalanche of announcements is a victory lap timed to boost his reelection campaign, the governor deployed one of his many folksy phrases, calling the criticism “bullsnot.”

With campaigning curtailed due to the pandemic, Justice is banking on television ads and his alliance with President Donald Trump, who remains enormously popular in West Virginia, to secure a second and last term in office.

Salango, a Kanawha County commissioner, says he wants to attract foreign investment to the state and grow sports tourism. He also said he wants to give state teachers another raise and address perennial issues such as the lack of high-speed broadband access across large swaths of rural West Virginia.

But he admits that the challenge of gaining name recognition without large campaign events is formidable.

“One of the biggest problems is not being able to get out as much,” Salango, 47, said in an interview during a recent outdoor Democratic Party rally at a park in Charleston. He has still barnstormed the state, holding small outdoor events, even venturing at one point near Justice’s posh resort, the Greenbrier.

Justice, 68, a billionaire with businesses in coal, farming and hospitality, has been dogged by lawsuits levied against his personal companies. When he took office, Justice stopped short of putting his enterprises in a blind trust, calling it too complicated. He said his children would run his business empire.

He is running as a Republican for the first time, after winning as a Democrat in 2016. He switched party affiliation after seven months in office at a rally with Trump. Labor groups that endorsed his first run have largely abandoned him.

Some in the Republican party still question his conservative bona fides. He portrays himself as an outsider and often says, “we don’t need to be Democrats and Republicans.”

But he also relishes partisan attacks, portraying Salango as a puppet of national Democrats.

Salango said he has a shot even in a state expected to heavily favor Trump: “Even if they’re going to vote for Trump, when they get to the governor’s office, they look at who do they think is the best person for the job?”

“We’re confident they’re going to conclude it’s me,” he said.

Justice’s campaign declined an interview request with the candidate.

Salango supporters say they want to put a governor back in the mansion, a dig at Justice not living in the state capital of Charleston as the constitution seems to require, prompting a lawmaker two years ago to sue him. Justice lives in Lewisburg and has said people shouldn’t be preoccupied with where he sleeps at night. The case is still before the West Virginia Supreme Court.

During the pandemic, Justice has often delivered three press conferences a week, imploring more residents to wear masks and get tested and decrying the spread of the virus as “a crying shame.” His color-coded state map showing the spread of the coronavirus in counties recently angered teachers’ unions when he shifted the map’s metrics, with the aim of reopening some schools earlier.

“West Virginians recognize Governor Jim Justice’s experience and strong leadership throughout the COVID-19 pandemic,” the campaign said in a statement.

The residents surrounding the Hobet mine have long sought its redevelopment to lift up the region once flush with coal mining revenues.

Salango says Justice “pulled the plug” on the project, while Justice said that “it was not doable the day I walked into office.”

At his announcement, the governor said his Department of Commerce has made it a top priority.

“He took the first three years of his term off, and then because of the campaign, he’s flown all over West Virginia,” Salango said. “Jim Justice has had four years to do something and he’s literally done nothing.”

Republican Gov. Justice Defends Record On Coronavirus, Education And Business In Debate With Democrat Salango

Republican incumbent Gov. Jim Justice’s record on the coronavirus, education and other policies were under scrutiny Tuesday night as he faced off in a debate against his Democratic challenger Ben Salango.

The candidates took shots at one another, but also found some common ground on issues that have created partisan divides across the nation.

The debate — hosted by the West Virginia Broadcasters Association and moderated by Hoppy Kercheval of WVMetroNews — is likely to be the only debate in the race for the state’s chief executive.

Throughout the hour-long broadcast, billionaire businessman-turned-politician Justice defended his administration’s response to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, which as of Tuesday morning had killed at least 387 West Virginians.

Since the pandemic hit the state in mid-March, public health officials have recorded 18,555 cases — of which 4,687 are considered active.

With schools resuming learning as of early September, Justice’s administration has made a variety of tweaks to a set of metrics to guide reopenings, including a map that has drawn criticism from public educators.

“You know the situation is fluid. You know you have to change and everything. We listen to the experts, we don’t listen to the union bosses to tell us what to do. We listen to the medical and the educational experts. Along the way, you have to adjust. You know, that’s all there is to it,” Justice said. “I’ve said it many, many times, but a pandemic is no different than a trip to the moon.”

Salango — an attorney, businessman and Kanawha County Commissioner — said schools being open is a high priority, but he argued that the map guiding the school reopenings is being manipulated so that more counties have opened for in-person instruction.

“We need to make sure that we’re putting public health ahead of politics — and anytime you take a map and then you do political polls and adjust the metrics based on the polls, you’re putting politics ahead of public health. That’s something we don’t need to do,” Salango said.

Salango took aim at Justice’s legal woes, including a long history of lawsuits over unpaid debts. He also noted a federal investigation into Justice’s businesses that yielded no indictments.

“We need a governor we can be proud of — not someone who’s constantly bogged down in controversy,” Salango said.

Salango also poked at Justice for an ongoing lawsuit attempting to compel him to abide by a constitutional mandate and live in the state capital of Charleston.

“For people preoccupied where I go to bed at night, I have spent all my time in Charleston using the mansion to my benefit,” Justice rebutted. “I don’t use the mansion for perks. I have been on the state helicopter one time. I don’t use the mansion for a party every night. What in the world does that have to do with anything?”

The case regarding Justice’s residency is slated for oral arguments Wednesday in the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals.

“You don’t get to pick and choose which parts of the Constitution you follow,” Salango said. “And so, you know, if you’re going to run for governor, you have to understand that comes with it that you have to live in the seat of government — you have to live in Charleston.”

The two candidates also split on major national issues, including ongoing protests of police brutality and racial injustice.

“We have a division in our country and with us looting and burning in our cities and not demonstrating in a peaceful manner,” Justice said. “I’ve got a real problem with it. I’ve got a real problem first not funding our police. Yeah, do Black Lives Matter? Well, of course Black Lives Matter — and they matter just like all lives matter. And we should absolutely always try to work together.”

Salango also argued that Justice has a record of being insensitive to other races, including an incident earlier this year in which the governor called a predominantly Black girls basketball team “thugs” after a heated game.

“I reject the proposition that’s out there that you either have to be pro-law enforcement or pro-Black Lives Matter. I’m endorsed by law enforcement. I’m proud of that endorsement,” Salango said. “But I’m also proud of the fact that I stand up against inequality.”

While Justice and Salango parted ways on many issues, they did agree on a few items affecting West Virginia and the rest of the nation.

When it comes to legislation that would ensure equal rights for state residents who identify as lesibian, gay, bisexual, transgender or queer, both Salango and Justice said they support such a measure. Salango said the state needs to be welcoming to everyone.

“One of the things that companies look for when they come in is whether or not it’s welcoming. They look at whether or not you know it’s an equal opportunity — equal rights state — and I support the LGBTQ community,” Salango said.

For nearly two decades, a “Fairness Act” to ensure employment and housing protections for the LGBTQ community has been introduced in the Legislature, although multiple attempts to move the bill to a vote in recent sessions has failed. However, Justice said Tuesday he would support such legislation if it came across his desk.

“I think, really, truly that we have no place in our society to be discriminatory towards anyone at any time. I mean that’s terrible to do and it’s degrading and so I concur,” said Justice, agreeing with Salango.

Asked by moderator Kercheval whether he would sign such legislation, Justice clearly said that he would.

Both candidates expressed support of the state’s as-of-yet launched medical cannabis program, but neither said they support joining 12 states and the District of Columbia to legalize the plant for recreational use.

“We have a terrible drug situation in West Virginia right now and we do not need something else to add to that situation,” Justice said.

Salango said he worries about the potential for those driving under the influence of marijuana to cause accidents.

“Until there’s a roadside test so we don’t give up on public safety, I won’t be in favor of full legalization,” Salango said “But I will say, you know, it is an opportunity for additional revenue. It is an opportunity to help people get off of opioids and get off of more hardcore drugs, but I do worry about the public safety aspect of it.”

Libertarian Party candidate Erika Kolenich and Mountain Party candidate Danny Lutz are also on the ballot for governor in the 2020 general election. Neither candidate was invited to take part in Tuesday’s debate.

Those registered to vote can apply for an absentee ballot through Oct. 28. Completed absentee ballots must be postmarked on or before Election Day. Early in-person voting runs from Oct. 21 through Oct. 31.

Election Day is Tuesday, Nov. 3.

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