Lawmakers: I-81 Eyed as Major Drug Trafficking Route

Since 1986, legislators from the Eastern Panhandle have been meeting with their fellow lawmakers from what they call the quad-state region – Virginia, Maryland, and Pennsylvania – to discuss issues as well as accomplishments they share along the interstate 81 corridor. This year, the group focused on drug trafficking and what the four states can do to combat the problem.

Almost two-dozen legislators hailing from the four states met Friday to discuss the issues and achievements they share because of the closeness of their districts. They all live within minutes of each other thanks to interstate 81, which quickly connects the quad-state region.

The legislators invited many officials from their respective communities to speak about current and future projects the states are working on – from economic development to casino gaming to bridge building – all projects that connect the four states in some way. But there was one discussion that lasted longer than any other – drug trafficking.

In the Eastern Panhandle, Martinsburg is the leader in heroin overdoses. In fact, Berkeley County has the second highest number of heroin related deaths in the state just following Cabell County. Much of the heroin in the Eastern Panhandle comes down from Baltimore, and Maryland officials are well aware.

Lieutenant Michael Fluharty is commander of the Maryland State Police unit in Hagerstown. He and his fellow officers cover about thirteen miles along interstate 81, which he claims is one of the worst areas for heroin trafficking.

“Every trooper in, on the road in Maryland right now carries the Narcan that everybody’s speaking of. Just last night, we had an administration by a trooper to save somebody’s life. Just last week, one of my troopers, pulls to what he thinks is a disabled vehicle on the road, comes to find a young lady who’s decided that she wants to overdose on what we believe heroin – some kind of opioid drug,” Fluharty explained.

Fluharty says what would prevent the most drug trafficking in the region is if the data collected by each of the four states’ troopers would be shared through a database.

“That’d be an excellent opportunity for us as a group, as a quad-state to share information, so if you’re getting the southbound traffic, I’m getting the northbound, and we can share this information it’s going to help us all. It’s a partnership between obviously legislators to support law enforcement, law enforcement to get the information, the statistics needed, so we can get the help and the tool we need.”

Republican Delegate Paul Espinosa of Jefferson County says having quad-state meetings every year are important to combat the drug problem and others faced in the Eastern Panhandle.

“A lot of the concerns that we have here in eastern West Virginia, very similar to some of our surrounding jurisdictions in Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Virginia,” Espinosa noted, “so it really provides an opportunity to not only discuss common concerns but also to hear about some of the approaches that our colleagues in Maryland, Pennsylvania, and Virginia are taking to address those issues.”

Delegate John Overington, a Republican from Berkeley County, hosted this year’s Quad-State Legislative Conference, and he says working together with the other states should be a no-brainer.

“We have constituents that live in one area, that work in another area, and shop in a third state, so the area is sort of connected,” Overington said, “and I-81 is that connecting factor that is good in terms of jobs and economic development. It’s sort of a negative in terms of heroin distribution.”

The closeness of the states makes it easy for drug dealers to ship their drugs from one state to another, but Overington, and his fellow lawmakers from all four states, are hopeful they can work together to find a solution.

Bell Ringing Commemorates Lee's Surrender April 9, 1865

Two Civil War battlefields in Maryland are ringing bells to mark the 150th anniversary of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee’s surrender.
 
The Antietam National Battlefield near Sharpsburg and the Monocacy National Battlefield near Frederick are ringing bells for four minutes Thursday starting at 3:15 p.m. The four minutes symbolize the four years of the war. 
The National Park Service is asking churches and local governments to join in.
 
Lee commanded the Army of Northern Virginia. He surrendered to Union Lt. Gen. Ulysses Grant at Appamattox, Virginia, on April 9, 1865.

Confusion in the House Government Organization Committee

What started out as a simple committee meeting to examine the progression of a bill turned into an hour of confusion in the House Government Organization Committee Wednesday.

The Committee met to discuss House Bill 2182, which relates to an examination of the Potomac Highlands Airport Authority’s accounts by state officials. Delegate John Shott sponsored the bill after getting word there was some confusion going on at the airport located in Mineral County.

What the Delegates came to realize is they were confused, too.

“I guess what’s confusing with this is, maybe this is a question for counsel, but how can the state of Maryland have authority for property that’s situated in the state of West Virginia,” asked Delegate Justin Marcum.

“Well they own the actual property, so I mean Alleghany County owns the property,” said Rick Lechliter, the Mineral County Commissioner with the Airport Authority Board, “but that’s where, beyond that, that’s where the compact has been confusing all this time, because it splits up who operates it, and so neither state really has a say.”

Lechliter came to explain the confusion going on at the airport and ask for help from legislators.

Delegate Gary Howell, the chairman of the House Government Organization Committee, clarified the situation.

“The airport itself lies completely within Mineral County, West Virginia,” Howell said, “It’s in an unincorporated area of Wiley Ford, West Virginia. But the airport was originally built by the city of Cumberland, Maryland in West Virginia then transferred to Allegheny County, Maryland, and sometime, I believe it was in the 1970s, West Virginia got involved with funding the airport. West Virginia now through tax breaks and funding actually funds the majority of the operations of the airport, and there’s been an argument over whose laws take precedent, the airport being in West Virginia and West Virginia funding the majority of it, you would think it was our state, but some of the others have some disagreement, and that’s what led to this. And Delegate Shott thought it was a good idea to go ahead and change it in the code to make sure it could be audited to follow, make sure they’re following West Virginia law.”

Delegate Larry Faircloth was one of many in the meeting baffled to find out the accounting firm used by the airport was auditing itself.

“One company that performed the audit that is also doing the accounting,” Faircloth said, “in your opinion, I mean, if we dig deep enough…”

“I know that’s not the right thing by West Virginia regulations,” said Lechliter.

“No, it shouldn’t be the right thing by any regulation,” responded Faircloth, “You know with all due respect this smells.”

By the end of the meeting, Delegate Jim Morgan brought into perspective that most of what was discussed was not what anyone was expecting and not relevant to what the original focus was of the bill.

“It would seem to me that this committee should be deciding on what’s on line six on page two that they should submit an agency review, etcetera, etcetera, and that the gentlemen who is responding is being asked about the operation in the airport and several other things that really aren’t what we’re asking for in this piece of legislation, and that most of those questions really have really not been germane to what we’re doing,” noted Morgan.

Delegate Howell explains why the committee was so confused.

“We originally had attorneys from the auditor’s office come up and tell us that they didn’t cut the checks that the treasurer’s office did, so we had to make an amendment to the bill,” said Howell, “Apparently this was someone who was new to the auditor’s office and had it backwards, and there was different attorneys from the auditor’s office that were in there, and once we done that, they come up and told my staff, they said, that’s not right that’s backwards. So we kind of had to back out and correct the mistake. We’d originally gotten some bad information from the attorneys in the auditor’s office.”

At the end of the meeting, the bill was amended to change the word auditor to treasurer.

Delegate Howell says what happened in the meeting was a strange instance for everyone.

“We want to make sure we’re doing this the right thing, we want to make sure that the tax payer’s money is being protected and spent wisely and that’s essentially what this did. Let’s make sure this is going to be done wisely,” Howell said.

House Bill 2182 will now be considered by the House Finance Committee.

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