Justice Discusses Possibility Of Special Session, Trout Stocking And Secretary’s Traffic Stop

Gov. Jim Justice said he is open to a special legislative session later this year to address the state budget. 

Gov. Jim Justice said he is open to a special legislative session later this year to address the state budget. 

Last week, legislators were notified of a potential $465 million federal “clawback” of COVID-19 era funding regarding the state’s spending on education. Legislators like the House Finance Committee chairman, Vernon Criss, R-Wood, said the late notice has required adjustments and delays to the state’s proposed budget.

At his regular briefing Wednesday, Justice was open to the idea of a May session to address further funding but was confident that lawmakers could pass a base budget before the close of session Saturday.

“I think I know where we’re gonna stand,” he said. “We want to encourage the Senate in regard to our pay raises and our tax cuts that we have in, helping the hungry and those things that are already kind of built into my budget and everything. But as far as our one-time spending and so on like that if we want to, if we want to come back in May and try to hash that out you know I guess it’d be fine.”

Justice said Superintendent Michele Blatt has been working on the clawback issue, as has his chief of staff, and he does not believe a clawback will happen.

“We have absolutely had discussion after discussion after discussion,” he said. “We are absolute believers that absolutely the education fed folks are not going to claw back on us at all in regard to this. But let’s just see how it all plays out and everything.”

Fish Stocking 

Justice also announced an agreement had been reached with the federal government to allow the state’s trout stocking program to continue. The U.S Fish and Wildlife Service had removed certain waters from the trout stocking schedule due to concerns about endangered species.

As part of the agreement, West Virginia University will study trout feeding habits in an effort to protect the endangered candy darter, Guyandotte River crayfish and Big Sandy crayfish.

“At the end of the day, we don’t want to endanger any endangered species,” Justice said. “We don’t want to do anything that’s going to harm our environment in any way. We just want to do the right stuff.”

The agreement between the state Department of Natural Resources and Fish and Wildlife allows stocking to resume in four streams in four southern West Virginia counties. The stockings will now take place in May in Greenbrier, Nicholas, Wyoming and Mercer counties.

Update To Secretary Wriston’s Traffic Stop 

For the third week in a row, Justice also addressed the traffic stop of West Virginia Department of Transportation Secretary Jimmy Wriston by Charleston Police in February. 

“I just don’t get all this stuff but we have every reason to believe now that Jimmy Wriston was just set up,” Justice said. “That’s all there is to it. And from our standpoint, we’re waiting. We’re waiting on the Charleston Police Department and Kanawha County prosecutor to bring us a lot more information in regard to that.”

Wriston was not charged or cited at the time of the stop. A release from the Charleston Police the following day stated an investigation was underway, and a later update said “the person who contacted Metro Communications to report erratic driving by the vehicle involved in this incident was not a WV State Trooper.”

A later update stated that, “CPD officers were not able to find probable cause to arrest Mr. Wriston based on the fact that Mr. Wriston passed two field sobriety tests that were conducted.”

The update does note that an “odor of alcohol” was indicated by a preliminary breath test, “however, CPD Officers on the scene believed that the test was inconclusive and inconsistent with other tests being performed that Mr. Wriston passed.”

The Charleston Police Department has opened a criminal investigation into the person who called 911 to report the erratic driving “to determine if the information they provided CPD Officers was accurate and truthful.”

W.Va. Lawmakers Prepare For February Session (And Ongoing Pandemic)

State lawmakers gathered in Charleston on Wednesday to prepare for the oncoming legislative session. The mostly ceremonial event involved selecting new leaders, publishing the results of the 2020 election and debating pandemic procedure.

House delegates nominated and formally elected returning Speaker of the House, Roger Hanshaw, R-Clay, to lead them again.

State senators, meanwhile, formally elected Craig Blair, R-Berkeley, as their new Senate president.

Blair, former chairman for the Senate Finance Committee, was elected to the state Senate in 2012, after serving six years in the House of Delegates.

Both Hanshaw and Blair shared goals for the 2021 legislative session, which they hope will ultimately attract new residents to the state of West Virginia. For Blair, that included personal income tax reform and broadband deployment.

“What I know more than anything is what it feels like to be a West Virginian,” Blair said. “And that’s what we’re here to do. We’re here to make the lives of West Virginians better.”

Hanshaw in the House asked delegates to rethink the coronavirus pandemic as an “opportunity” for garnering the state some attention.

“We have lost friends, we have lost neighbors, we have lost businesses, we have lost jobs and we have lost over 1,500 of our friends and family members to the coronavirus pandemic,” Hanshaw said. “But, in the eye of that storm, there is opportunity, because nationally, men and women have begun to recognize what we have known for generations in West Virginia — that ours is a state of opportunity, that ours is a land where people can come and create a business.”

House Democrats — who hold a little more than 20 chairs alongside a Republican supermajority — asked their chamber Wednesday to be more cautious around the pandemic.

House delegates had the option Wednesday to either sit in their regular seats, on the House floor, wearing masks, or they could sit in raised galleries that provided more space for social distancing.

Democratic delegates pointed out, while voting on a resolution for COVID-19 rules, that some on the House floor were improperly wearing their masks.

“Looking around this chamber, we are not socially distanced and are not six feet apart,” said Del. Evan Hansen, D-Monongalia. “I understand why that’s the case. But that makes it even more important for us to wear a mask and wear it properly.”

The Democratic proposal to amend a resolution for House rules, to include stricter guidelines for mask-wearing, failed. Republican Majority Leader Amy Summers said she believed current rules were enough.

“What I’m afraid will happen all session is we’ll be doing ‘points of order’ left and right because someone’s mask happened to slip below their nose,” Summers said. “I think we all know the proper way to wear our masks. And we’re expecting each other to do that. If someone is choosing not to do that, or you’re concerned about that, we as the house have provided you other opportunities to be more socially distanced in the galleries.”

Secretary of State Mac Warner led a brief joint assembly between the two chambers, where lawmakers agreed to accept the results of the 2020 election.

In each chamber, members also accepted resignations from Sen. Paul Hardesty, who MetroNews reports did not run for re-election, and Del. Derrick Evans, who’s facing federal charges for his participation in the failed insurrection of the U.S. Capitol last week.

Lawmakers will return to Charleston for the official 60-day session at noon on Wednesday, Feb. 10.

Emily Allen is a Report for America corps member.

Teenagers to Take Over Capitol this Weekend in Mock Legislative Session

Over 300 teens will be at the Capitol this weekend for a mock legislative session. Teenagers from all over the state who are part of the Youth Leadership Association: Youth in Government will travel to Charleston to hold a student led, mock legislative session for three days.

All youth senators, delegates, and leadership seats were elected by their peers from all areas of the state over the course of the past few months.

“We have a mock legislature, a mock judicial branch, and a mock executive branch, and we debate and pass bills both in committee and on the floor,” said Youth Governor, Tyler Jenkins, a senior from Martinsburg High School, “The judicial section actually uses the actual chambers of the Supreme Court to run over cases. We use the actual chambers of the Senate and the House of Delegates and we debate the bills there and use the committee rooms to do the committees, and it’s really fantastic. And it’s empty at this time, so it’s basically like high school students are running the Capitol.”

The Youth Senate President and Youth House Speaker are also from Martinsburg High.

Jenkins says he and his peers plan to introduce 100 pieces of legislation, many of those inspired by the bills passed or rejected this past 2015 session; such as the abortion bill, the repeal of common core, legalizing cross-bow hunting, and others.

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