Stakeholders Talk Energy Cost Concerns

On this episode of The Legislature Today, energy costs have gone up for West Virginians in the past couple of years. Local governments in the state have been some of the most vocal opponents of utility rate increases. Energy & Environment Reporter Curtis Tate speaks with Emmett Pepper of the Charleston City Council and Kent Carper, president of the Kanawha County Commission, who say they’d like the West Virginia Legislature to get more involved in the effort.

On this episode of The Legislature Today, energy costs have gone up for West Virginians in the past couple of years. Local governments in the state have been some of the most vocal opponents of utility rate increases.

Energy & Environment Reporter Curtis Tate speaks with Emmett Pepper of the Charleston City Council and Kent Carper, president of the Kanawha County Commission, who say they’d like the West Virginia Legislature to get more involved in the effort.

Also, the abortion debate returned to the House floor Thursday, along with concerns on how taxpayer dollars are spent and more.

The Senate passed a bill aimed at correcting a bill passed during last year’s legislative session. What was intended as a bill to help facilitate access to records ended up doing the exact opposite. Chris Schulz has more.

Finally, the Senate Committee on Health and Human Resources took up the much anticipated issue of PEIA reform.

Having trouble viewing the video below? Click here to watch it on YouTube.

The Legislature Today is West Virginia’s only television/radio simulcast devoted to covering the state’s 60-day regular legislative session.

Watch or listen to new episodes Monday through Friday at 6 p.m. on West Virginia Public Broadcasting.

Senate Moves To Remedy ‘Insufficient’ Bill From Last Year

The Senate passed a bill Thursday aimed at correcting a bill passed during last year’s legislative session. What was intended as a bill to help facilitate access to records ended up doing the exact opposite. 

The West Virginia Senate passed a bill Thursday aimed at correcting a bill passed during last year’s legislative session. What was intended as a bill to help facilitate access to records ended up doing the exact opposite. 

Sen. Charles Trump, R-Morgan, chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee, said Senate Bill 495 aims to do what 2022’s Senate Bill 441 failed to do.

“The bill addresses, generally, the confidentiality of records necessary for the secure and safe management of inmates and residents committed to state correctional facilities and juvenile facilities,” Trump said. “This bill, if enacted, will make it clear that records remain available as consistent with the Freedom of Information Act.”

Trump explained on the Senate floor Thursday morning that last year’s Senate Bill 441 left their chamber in what he called “pretty good shape,” but returned to the Senate from the House of Delegates on the last night of the 2022 session with amendments; amendments that removed references to the state’s Freedom of Information Act.

“The bill came back to us from the House on the last night of the session in a different form, and we concurred with the House amendment and passed the bill,” Trump said. “What I’ve been told since is that the Division of Homeland Security has been using our bill as a means to deny access to information. That was never our intention.“

Trump said that’s the opposite of the bill’s intent, and was originally designed to provide an extra mechanism for people to obtain records or information from correctional or juvenile facilities. 

Trump said it was never his or the Senate’s intention to further restrict public access to information. He believes everything the government does should be accessible and transparent to the public. 

“The general rule, my philosophy, is that government should be transparent at all levels,” Trump said. “It is, after all, a government that belongs to the people. The people are sovereign in our system, and they make the decisions, they inform us and tell us how they want us to represent them. But this government belongs to the people, and so the general rule should always be that the more information that’s available to the people, the better.”

Trump conceded that the new bill could have been avoided if he had acted last year, and offered his apologies to the body for having a law enacted in what he called an “insufficient form.”

“I would be less than candid if I didn’t admit or confess and say that I should have caught the change,” Trump said. “When it came back from the House last year, on the last day of the session, I missed it and consequently, the bill that got enacted was different from what we were hoping to achieve when we launched it to the House of Delegates last year. I’m hoping we’re gonna get that corrected this year.”

Senate Bill 495 now heads to the House of Delegates for its consideration.

ACLU Receives Documents Regarding Recent Treatment Of BLM Protesters In Martinsburg

The American Civil Liberties Union of West Virginia received documents from the City of Martinsburg Friday afternoon — all related to treatment of Black Lives Matter protesters in late May

The ACLU-WV filed a freedom of information act request more than a month ago, and having not received the documents within the legally mandated time frame, filed a lawsuit earlier Friday. The documents arrived thereafter. 

The ACLU-WV filed a lawsuit against the city of Martinsburg in Berkeley County Circuit Court because city officials had notresponded to a public records request submitted more than 50 days ago, according to an ACLU spokesperson. 

Within about an hour of filing the lawsuit, the City agreed to provide the requested documents. The ACLU-WV said they received documents late Friday afternoon related to police treatment of 11 protesters. 

The organization required such records as bodycam and dashcam footage from Martinsburg Police officers involved in the arrest of 11 Black Lives Matter protesters on May 30 and 31. The request asks for names and badge numbers, official procedures when interacting with protesters, and use-of-force policies. 

The request was submitted by the ACLU-WV on behalf of the Berkeley County Unity Coalition, a newly formed group of civil and human rights organizations, educators and faith leaders. 

The group said the 11 arrested protesters were forced to sit in jail with excessively high bails amid a health pandemic, and that officers used excessive force and escalated tensions.  

The ACLU-WV said they aren’t prepared to dismiss their lawsuit until the documents are reviewed.   

The Martinsburg Police Department did not immediately respond for comment.

In an emailed statement from Kin Sayre, Martinsburg’s city attorney, he states the City of Martinsburg replied to the ACLU-WV’s FOIA on Jun. 23, 2020 acknowledging the request and indicating “the City would need time to assemble the data.” 

Sayre also noted “the City has not been served on the lawsuit.”

ACLU Sues W.Va. Parole Board, Seeks Denial Decision Records

The American Civil Liberties Union of West Virginia is suing the state Parole Board to obtain records regarding its denial of parole to an HIV-positive inmate.

The lawsuit says the board hasn’t responded to the ACLU’s Freedom of Information Act request for the information.

The Charleston Gazette-Mail reports that ACLU attorney Jamie Lynn Crofts filed the lawsuit last week in Kanawha County Circuit Court.

Department of Military Affairs and Public Safety spokesman Lawrence Messina declined to comment to the newspaper on the pending litigation.

The newspaper says the lawsuit identifies the inmate only as John Doe, who believes he was denied parole because he is HIV-positive.

West Virginia DEP Ordered to Release Pollution Data

  A judge says the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection violated the state’s Freedom of Information Act when it denied a law firm’s request for water pollution data.

Kanawha County Circuit Court Judge Charles King ordered the DEP this week to provide the data to Appalachian Mountain Advocates.

The law firm sued the DEP after the agency denied its 2013 request for the most recent quarterly data showing water pollution levels at coal mines statewide. In the past, the DEP provided similar data in a spreadsheet format.

The DEP denied the latest request and referred the law firm to a searchable agency website. To provide the data, the agency said it would have to research its databases and create a new record.

The Charleston Gazette reported King’s ruling.

W.Va. Court Allows Fee for FOIA Records Searches

The state Supreme Court has ruled that government agencies can charge an hourly fee for locating public documents requested under the West Virginia Freedom of Information Act.
 
The court ruled 4-1 in a decision released Thursday.
 
The justices overturned a Kanawha County circuit judge’s ruling that said the city of Nitro didn’t have the authority to enact an ordinance to establish an hourly search fee for documents.

The circuit judge had concluded the city could only charge for the cost of copying the documents, but the Supreme Court disagreed.
 
The justices said the Legislature has previously approved rules that allow various state agencies to charge search fees in FOIA document requests.
 
In a dissenting opinion, Justice Brent Benjamin said the fees should only apply to copying costs, not searches.
 

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