Gov. Justice Signs Bill Calling for Work Requirements for Some on Food Stamps

Governor Jim Justice has signed a bill to impose the federal 20-hour weekly work requirement for many food stamp recipients statewide. The work requirement applies to people ages 18 to 49 without dependents.

Currently, 46 of West Virginia’s 55 counties have waivers for the work requirement to receive food benefits. The other nine counties have been part of a pilot program that implemented the requirement with a goal of increasing workforce participation. However, a March 2017 memo from the state Department of Health & Human Resources stated that the pilot did not significantly impact employment figures.

The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program offers a maximum possible benefit of $192 a month or about $6.40 a day, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

Advocates for the work requirement say the law will help eliminate fraud and get people back to work, even if it is only volunteering.

Opponents say it will push struggling poor people out of the food stamps program, cut federal funding and grocery spending and increase demand on food pantries.

 

“The bill doubles down on a failed policy at the expense of some of the most vulnerable West Virginians,” said Seth DiStefano, director of public policy for the West Virginia Center on Budget and Policy.

 

On Oct. 1, waivers from the requirement could be sought only in counties with 12-month average unemployment rate above 10 percent. January data shows Calhoun as the only county with a monthly rate that high. All counties would become ineligible for the waiver on Oct. 1, 2022.

 

The Associated Press contributed to this story.

 

U.S. Supreme Court Case to Determine Future of Sports Betting in W.Va.

Gov. Jim Justice says a bill will become law to permit sports betting at the state’s five casinos in the event that a U.S. Supreme Court case leads to the repeal of a nationwide ban.

It would allow sports betting at West Virginia licensed casinos and on Lottery Commission-approved mobile device applications.

The state would collect 10 percent of gross receipts. Bettors would have to be at least 21.

Later this year, the court will decide New Jersey’s challenge to a law banning sports betting in most states.

Supporters say it will create jobs and tax revenues and bring sports betting into the open.

Critics say it will increase gambling and addictions and could compromise integrity of sporting events.

Justice says he’s asked the Legislature to consider partnering with major sports leagues.

West Virginia Legislature Readies to Complete Budget on Final Day of Session

The West Virginia Legislature is set to vote on a 2018-19 state budget on the final day of the 2018 regular session. The $4.38 billion spending plan accounts for an across-the-board average 5-percent pay raise for all public employees and makes cuts to programs that had earlier seen proposed increases by Gov. Jim Justice. The budget will allow for $156 million in spending as compared to the previous fiscal year.

In a Friday evening floor session, the House of Delegates adopted an amendment to the budget, Senate 152, that folded in the chamber’s own version of the bill — with minor differences in how general revenue surpluses would redirected, according to members of each party.

“For the first time in four years we are not touching our savings account. Our Rainy Day Fund is unchanged,” said House Finance Chairman Eric Nelson before the amendment was adopted.

The Senate is expected to formally agree with the House’s changes to Senate Bill 152 once it heads to a vote in the House. That vote is expected Saturday.

A motion Friday in the House to suspend constitutional rules and put Senate Bill 152 up for a vote failed on party lines, with Democrats blocking majority Republicans’ effort to have the budget completed going into the final day of the session.

The Senate cleared its original budget proposal Thursday on a 33-0 vote.

During his State of the State address this year, Gov. Justice touted proposed increases to programs such as tourism and other efforts in state Department of Commerce’s Development Office. A proposed $14 million increase to tourism would be slashed, as would roughly $32 million in the governor’s proposed increases to the Development Office.

The cuts come as lawmakers in both the House and Senate refused in the end to make use of $58 million increase in adjusted revenue estimates for Fiscal Year 2019. Senate Republicans were quickly skeptical of those numbers, which House leadership eventually backed off on using the adjustments in their final budget. Those adjusted revenue estimates were announced Feb. 27 by Gov. Justice as part of a deal between he and union leaders to end the teacher walkouts.

House Bill 4145, which was finalized Tuesday and ended nine days statewide walkout of school employees, offers the raise to teachers, service personnel and state police. Salary increases for the remainder of public employees is a result of increases to personnel line items for each state agency.

Public Schools in W.Va. Will Make Up Days Missed During Strike

West Virginia Superintendent of Schools Steven Paine told reporters Thursday afternoon that all nine days of the recent teacher and school employee work stoppage would need to be made up by each county school district. However, counties will have control and flexibility on how they do it.

Paine said counties can either eliminate spring break, add additional days to the end of the school year, or use something known as Accrued Instructional Time, which made its way into state law last year.

Accrued Instructional Time allows counties to add 30 minutes of extra time at the end of a school day, but it can only be used to make-up five days. Counties will have to mix-and-match to meet the nine missed days.

“The nine days are nine days, let’s be clear,” Paine noted, “They missed nine. They were paid for nine. They must make up nine days of instruction.”

Paine said it’ll be up to each district how those days are made up and notes the requirement to make up the days has not been a point of contention among teachers and service staff.

He also said any changes to school calendars will not impact graduation dates.

'We Can Get Back to Our Kids, Where We Need to Be' – Teacher Work Stoppage Appears to be Over

Updated on Mar. 6, 2018 at 8:30 p.m.

After nine long days of a teacher and service personnel work stoppage, it looks like it’s come to an end. Lawmakers have agreed to a five percent pay raise for teachers as well as a five percent pay increase for all public workers.

Thousands of teachers and other public employees erupted in cheers and tears as senators opened their chamber doors to announce approval of a bill that increases pay to teachers, school personnel, and state troopers by five percent.

A five percent pay raise for all state employees was also agreed to in a conference committee and will be managed in the upcoming state budgeting process.

Fifth-grade teacher Lori Jarrett from Boone County said she cried when the vote came. When asked how she was feeling, Jarrett said she was, “tired, exhausted, so happy, so happy that we won, and this is finally over, and we can get back to our kids where we need to be.”

Cheers at state capitol Tuesday afternoon.

Lawmakers have said there will be areas and services that will be cut, however, in order to give the promised pay raises.

Emily Tanzey, an eighth grade English teacher from Monongalia County, said that’s something that concerns her. “I am nervous about the funding source, because in the Senate Finance Committee, they mentioned cuts to things like Medicaid, which makes me really anxious, but overall, I think it’s a win for West Virginia.” 

Governor Jim Justice signed HB 4145, giving a five percent pay raise to teachers, school service personnel and state troopers shortly after the vote was announced. It will go into effect on July 1, 2018.

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.

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