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Public Comments

2026 Regular Session HB4372 (Education)
Comment by: Aidan Adkins on January 26, 2026 22:21
I mostly disagree with this bill that would allow K–12 teachers to carry concealed firearms as designated school protection officers. While I understand the intention behind having armed staff available during dangerous situations, I believe the risks far outweigh the potential benefits. Teachers already face many responsibilities in their daily work, and adding the duty of carrying and managing a firearm could increase stress and make the school environment feel less safe for both students and staff.
2026 Regular Session HB4013 (Finance)
Comment by: Rev. Darick Biondi on January 26, 2026 22:12
Data centers will provide no long term employment for this state and absolutely should not be subsidized by tax payers. No more handouts, especially for industries that take more than they give. Data centers must be regulated to protect West Virginians. West Virginians should not foot the bill for yet another carpetbagger.
2026 Regular Session HB4093 (Education)
Comment by: Aidan Adkins on January 26, 2026 22:11
I strongly oppose this bill in its entirety. Allowing individuals with concealed carry licenses to bring firearms into public schools poses significant safety risks. Many parents and community members are understandably concerned, given the long and tragic history showing that guns and schools do not mix. There is also the possibility that a person carrying a firearm—regardless of their licensing status could become emotionally overwhelmed or angered in a school environment, creating a dangerous situation. For these reasons, I believe this bill would put students, educators, and staff at unnecessary risk and should not move forward.
2026 Regular Session HB4412 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Barry Holstein on January 26, 2026 22:00
Chair, members of the committee, thank you for the opportunity to comment. My name is Barry Holstein, and I’m writing to express support for legislation that requires reasonable age verification for access to online pornography in West Virginia. It seems that we overprotect our children in their physical environment while grossly under protect them in the online environment. For years, the adult content industry has relied on a weak system of self-attestation, simply clicking a button that says, “I’m 18.” That is not a safeguard; it is a loophole that children can bypass in seconds. When the default in practice is “easy access,” it should not surprise anyone that children are exposed early, repeatedly, and often accidentally. Families can and should use filters and parental controls, but parents should not be left alone to solve a problem created by platforms that profit from frictionless access. Age verification is a commonsense standard already used in other states as well as other contexts: we verify age for tobacco, alcohol, gambling, and print pornography because children are not capable of consenting to harms and adults accept those reasonable steps to protect minors. This bill applies that same principle to explicit online content that is clearly inappropriate for children. Importantly, this bill is not about banning speech for adults. Adults retain the right to access lawful content. The question before you is whether West Virginia will require providers of explicit content to take reasonable, modern steps to keep that content from minors. The internet has changed dramatically. Our expectations of safety should change with it. I respectfully urge you to pass this bill and put West Virginia clearly on the side of child safety and parental empowerment. Thank you.
2026 Regular Session HB4013 (Finance)
Comment by: Caitlyn Graulau on January 26, 2026 22:00
House Finance Members, I live in the Eastern Panhandle, a decently populated and ever-growing part of West Virginia. Data centers threaten to fill up the spaces that could be used for othe industries that bring in jobs, or better yet, homes. Further more, a good portion of the area’s population cannot afford to subsidize yet another industry that promises only to extract our wealth and our health rather than create real economic opportunity and raise the quality of life in an era of steep grocery, housing, and healthcare costs. If passed, this bill would only serve to perpetuate the economic exploitation we've suffered for generations. It may even turn people away from our beautiful state. West Virginia deserves to grow in industries other than data centers. I urge you to vote no. From one West Virginian to another! Sincerely, Caitlyn Graulau
2026 Regular Session HB4013 (Finance)
Comment by: Karen Runion on January 26, 2026 21:48
West Virginians cannot afford to subsidize these centers, especially working for far less than a livable wage. We’d be paying the price of a system failure, once again picking up the tab of companies taking advantage of our economy. This isn’t a blue/red issue, it’s a common sense human rights issue.                                          Don’t take advantage of the hard working people in WV. We’ve had quite enough of that!
2026 Regular Session HB4435 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Barry Holstein on January 26, 2026 21:48
I support the increase in ballot auditing percentage from 3% to 10%. I believe this will provide greater assurances to the voting public that the WV elections are conducted properly.  I would recommend that all audits performed by the county clerks are provided to the SOS and published online for inspection by the public.
2026 Regular Session HB4013 (Finance)
Comment by: Janet Gibson on January 26, 2026 21:42
I see the everyday problems first hand we are dealing with in southern MINGO Co., from more and more people needing help with food (I run the Blessing Barn food pantry), to the lack of clean, reliable, affordable water, now to the “new” road construction that has created huge problems for all of us in the Wharncliffe (Ben Creek) area to just get out of our community! The proposed Data Center will only create more problems for us and everyone else of MINGO Co, the noise, the water, the air, the rise of taxes, and numerous other problems! We have been thrown to the wolves it seems to us! I’m asking to please vote NO on this bill! We deserve to have y’all stand up for us!
2026 Regular Session HB4013 (Finance)
Comment by: Julia Yearego on January 26, 2026 21:27
I am opposed to this bill that would allow tax payer  funded credits for data centers. I am also opposed to the pay agreement that would not pay the median wage of the area. -Julia Yearego Bridgeport, WV
2026 Regular Session HB4013 (Finance)
Comment by: Lisa Haddox-Heston DDS on January 26, 2026 21:20
I live in southern WV. We, who live here, cannot another industry that extracts our wealth and health and creates no real employment/economic opportunity for my friends and neighbors.
2026 Regular Session HB4013 (Finance)
Comment by: Jackie Long on January 26, 2026 21:16
Dear House Finance Members, The people of West Virginia need sustainable jobs, not another industry that strips our state of its residences and doesn’t support our people with fair wages. If passed, this bill would only serve to perpetuate the economic exploitation we've suffered for generations. I urge you to vote no. Sincerely, Jackie Long
2026 Regular Session HB4013 (Finance)
Comment by: Belva Parsons on January 26, 2026 21:10
Please do not give tax breaks or incentives to data centers! Please do NOTHING to attract them to West Virginia! We do not want or need these resource hogging centers which will only cause our electricity rates to sky rocket, ruin our water and add to noise pollution. West Virginia has been taken advantage of too many times throughout history by one industry after another. It only served to line the pockets of the rich, not the citizens of our great state. DO NOT PASS THIS BILL! Thank you.
2026 Regular Session HB4002 (Education)
Comment by: Nicole Kirby on January 26, 2026 21:05
I think I understand the intent of this bill, but I think it misses the mark. Chiefly, the state’s IHEs already undertake research and collaborate, so most of the text seems misguided. Second, and most importantly, there is a workforce and industry component mentioned; but labor, unions, and industry are not included. This suggests that funding will be siloed to the IHE’s and labor/industry/unions will take a backseat to the academics rather than a foundational role that is key to bridges to employment.
2026 Regular Session HB4013 (Finance)
Comment by: Christy Cardwell on January 26, 2026 21:04
West Virginia can ill afford another industry that takes much more than it gives back. Extractive industries have destroyed our water and have exploited our people. They don’t deserve tax breaks. If we intend to allow these industries to operate here, they need to be expected to provide more to our people than a prayer and a promise. Please vote this bill down.
2026 Regular Session HB4013 (Finance)
Comment by: Steven Wendelin on January 26, 2026 21:01

I oppose House Bill 4013 as written.

West Virginia does need economic development. What we do not need are open-ended tax incentives that primarily benefit capital-intensive projects with minimal long-term benefit to working families and local communities.

This bill creates a broad, discretionary tax credit that heavily rewards equipment purchases and construction costs, not sustained job creation. That matters, because projects like data centers—explicitly included in this bill—are well known to generate very few permanent jobs relative to the size of the public subsidy they receive. Independent economic studies consistently show that data centers often employ dozens, not hundreds, of full-time workers once construction ends, despite consuming massive amounts of electricity and infrastructure capacity.

HB 4013 allows tax credits to be calculated largely on non-manufacturing equipment and construction spending, even when permanent job creation is minimal. That is a poor return on investment for taxpayers.

The bill also allows these credits to offset multiple state taxes, including—remarkably—up to 20 percent of employee withholding taxes. That means the state can end up subsidizing a company using money that would otherwise support schools, roads, emergency services, and healthcare. That is not economic development; it is cost-shifting.

Transparency is another major concern. Information shared between the Tax Department, Workforce West Virginia, and the administering authority is explicitly exempt from the Freedom of Information Act. If taxpayer dollars are being used to subsidize private corporations, the public has a right to see the terms, the performance, and the outcomes. Sunlight is not optional when public money is involved.

The bill places “sole and exclusive jurisdiction” in the hands of the Department of Commerce to decide who qualifies, how much they receive, and whether clawbacks are enforced. That level of discretion, combined with limited public oversight, is exactly how incentive programs drift from economic policy into political favoritism.

Finally, this bill includes no enforceable community benefit requirements. There are no guarantees for:

  • local hiring or apprenticeships,

  • labor standards or neutrality,

  • protections against layoffs after credits are used,

  • limits on noise, infrastructure strain, or quality-of-life impacts,

  • or binding assurances that utility upgrade costs will not be passed on to ratepayers.

West Virginians have seen this movie before. We are promised jobs and prosperity, and what we get instead are tax breaks, higher infrastructure costs, and communities left with the consequences.

I support real economic development—projects that create good-paying jobs, respect workers, strengthen local communities, and deliver a measurable public return on public investment. HB 4013 does not meet that standard.

If the Legislature wants to attract investment, it should do so on West Virginia’s terms: with transparency, strict job-creation requirements, automatic clawbacks, and clear protections for taxpayers and communities.

Until those standards are written into law, this bill should not advance.

2026 Regular Session HB4034 (Education)
Comment by: Nicole Kirby on January 26, 2026 20:58
If God wanted the 10-Commandments forced down people’s throats he would have taken our free will and made us adore and worship him. He wanted us to choose, he wanted this to be a conversation between him and the individual. Shoving the commandments into classrooms is only going to turn people away, not bring them closer.  Vote no.
2026 Regular Session HB4013 (Finance)
Comment by: Jessica Houck on January 26, 2026 20:55
As a lifelong West Virginia resident, I have seen this same movie with different titles - especially in the southern part of the state- and I am tired of our people being used and abused.  WEST VIRGINIA RESIDENTS CAN’T AFFORD - monetarily or health-wise-  TO SUPPORT THIS !!!
2026 Regular Session HB4013 (Finance)
Comment by: Rachel Maynard on January 26, 2026 20:49
Please don’t make West Virginians pay the price of this corporate greed with our health and our wealth. West Virginian’s are some of the most welcoming, helpful, and take-care-of-our-own people anywhere. We don’t deserve another industry that will steal more of our land and resources and leave us poorer and sicker. We deserve better. It’s hard to remember “Montani Semper Liberi” when our own legislature votes against our best interests and makes us beholden to another cash cow for the rich while stealing from the working people of this state. WV deserves better.
2026 Regular Session HB4013 (Finance)
Comment by: nancy haggerty on January 26, 2026 20:44
You're not just letting these destructive businesses into our state, you are begging them to come here to exploit our resources. Our resources should be for tourism and displaying the beauty of our state. Instead, data centers?? Our state has been destroyed enough be these greedy corporations. NO MORE.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Nicole Kirby on January 26, 2026 20:41
Vote No. Trafficking is terrible and already illegal. This bill is written in such a way that is too opened ended as what constitutes “trafficking.” In this current climate, human rights are quickly be stolen and this makes it that much easier.
2026 Regular Session HB4013 (Finance)
Comment by: Reverend Deacon Mary Sanders on January 26, 2026 20:38
  1. I write in opposition to this bill.
  2. West Virginia has a long and unfortunate history of extraction by outside entities that results in the detriment of our people and environment.
  3. To preserve our culture, we must preserve our environment. Data centers consume natural resources, offering nothing of value to WV's people. We struggle to provide clean water to our own people and this would steal it from them to cool computers.
  4. Montani semper libri, yet we are continually sold and traded to those who see us as expendable.
  5. The Earth groans with us (Romans) as we wait for redemption. Those of the Christian faith are called to live as if the Kingdom is now and that all of Creation is our sibling. We have abused and misused this charge we were given and the damage we have inflicted is reflected in our own bodies and minds.
  6. The AI bubble will not last forever and we will be left with nothing but mess, much like an abandoned well or unclaimed spoil pile.
  7. I urge you for the sake of all West Virginians, present and future, to reject this betrayal of WV. West Virginians deserve so much better.
  8. Thank you.
2026 Regular Session HB4013 (Finance)
Comment by: Emily Whittington on January 26, 2026 20:35
Delegates, I am imploring you not to pass this bill. For decades West Virginians have been sold to the highest bidder. Given data centers unecessary tax breaks when West Virginians struggle with basic needs such as food, housing, and healthcare is deplorable. Data centers will decrease our water quality, increase our power bills, and WILL NOT create long term jobs. If we are to attract industry to WV via tax breaks it mustn’t be industry that does not create jobs, while creating pollution, expense, and an eye sore on our beautiful state.
2026 Regular Session HB4013 (Finance)
Comment by: Cara Sedney on January 26, 2026 20:32
This bill amounts to economic exploitation of West Virginians. We do not want this.
2026 Regular Session HB4013 (Finance)
Comment by: CHRISTINA B MICKEY on January 26, 2026 20:32
No tax Breaks for DATA CENTERS!   No money for public services but always money for companies that harm WV communities! Please oppose HB 4013
2026 Regular Session HB4727 (Education)
Comment by: Nicole Kirby on January 26, 2026 20:30
The turn over rate for teachers is very high, largely because they can better pay for their needs doing other work. It becomes expensive to perpetually train and hire new teachers, with many jobs unfilled by certified teachers.  This bill needs to pass to provide a living wage to families and to help retain teachers.
2026 Regular Session HB4013 (Finance)
Comment by: Wes Holden on January 26, 2026 20:30
All due consideration must be given to local communities the opportunity to approve or deny a data center in their area. This bill must require that data centers pay for their own energy costs and ensure that those costs are not passed on to local customers. Legislators must require that the data centers have enough energy to prevent brown and blackout during high peaks of demand. Data centers pollute local streams. Strict environmental inspections must be conducted and maintained by the state.
2026 Regular Session HB4013 (Finance)
Comment by: Pamela Ruediger on January 26, 2026 20:28
Bill 4013 is a blatant BETRAYAL of West Virginia’s citizens because data centers will NOT provide a living wage for hirees and WILL poison the water, air and all persons living in proximity to any data center. It is your DUTY to VOTE NO ON 4013!!!
2026 Regular Session HB4013 (Finance)
Comment by: Nicole Kirby on January 26, 2026 20:26
WV’s history is built on businesses promising the world to take our resources and leave us poor. Data centers coupled with  these credits are the next generation of theft from our people. If data centers do come here, they should pay their due and pay to modernize our grid and the water systems of the communities they go into. Additionally, they should have to pay more for the electricity used to offset the costs to the people (who will be paying more.)
2026 Regular Session HB4013 (Finance)
Comment by: Susan Shelton Perry on January 26, 2026 20:22
Data centers do not need this much financial assistance from our state.  These types of operations are in demand, require huge amounts of power and water and bring with them few jobs after construction is complete.  Our southern coalfield counties need funds for water projects, our entire state needs money for roads and infrastructure.  Why on earth would you even consider giving them a tax break?   Our state needs this tax revenue to prepare to meet the demands that these data centers will bring.  We need to be ready for fuel spills (like what happened in Wayne last week).  We need to be ready to independently monitor for signs of air and water pollution, not just relying on data supplied by the company. if you are intent on letting them “have their way” with us, we should at least get some tax money out of it.
2026 Regular Session HB4013 (Finance)
Comment by: Rev. Caitlin Ware on January 26, 2026 20:19
This doesn't boost the economy, it extracts wealth. Cutting taxes for corporations when our people can't drink their water is unacceptable. Vote no.
2026 Regular Session HB4013 (Finance)
Comment by: Lani Wean on January 26, 2026 19:59
I oppose special treatment for Big Tech under HB2013, and I urge you to vote NO on this bill. The new business tax cuts in this bill are a free pass for Big Tech data center hyperbuilds in West Virginia. West Virginians across the state are opposed to how data centers are being pushed into communities that don’t want them.   Massive power and data center industrial complexes pose significant risks to the communities surrounding them. These large-scale energy and data industrial clusters, especially when powered by inefficient, high-emission power sources, such as methane gas or diesel generators, increase air pollution, raising health risks especially for vulnerable people like the elderly, children and people with respiratory issues like asthma or black lung. These big complexes also put a strain on local utilities like local emergency services, volunteer fire departments, local roads, and municipal water supplies. Furthermore, data centers pose a dangerous risk to the health of their surrounding communities, and West Virginians have been clear that we do not want them here. Current data shows that the air pollution associated with data centers is expected to result in as many as 1,300 premature deaths per year by 2030. Hazardous pollutants and particulate matter from turbines are known to increase the risk of heart attacks, respiratory infections, asthma attacks, or death for those exposed. We do not approve of our communities being used as guinea pigs for projects like these.  West Virginia desperately needs more funding for schools, healthcare, and infrastructure. Corporate tax breaks already cost our state millions each year in lost revenue. Decades of West Virginians have faced the consequences of undelivered industry promises, of pollution in their streams and silica in their lungs. These credits give long term tax breaks for big projects that create few local jobs. The credits will be stacked onto existing tax cuts for data centers, lowering state funds and local county tax bases at the same time.  This bill gives special treatment to industry, meaning they don’t need to support the communities hosting them, while we pay the price – literally. Please vote NO HB 4013. West Virginians deserve sound, sustainable industry development that will generate new, in-state jobs for West Virginians, and keep wealth in the state rather than creating loopholes to funnel cash out of town The burden on local resources and impacts to our land, water and air from power and data center industrial hubs are not worth the destruction of our state’s landscapes and communities. Give us growth that lifts families and real economic wins for West Virginians, not handouts to out-of-state billionaires or Big Tech. 
2026 Regular Session HB4013 (Finance)
Comment by: Rev. Sarah Wilmoth on January 26, 2026 19:59
Dear House Finance Members, While the people of the southern coalfields still do not have clean water, we should not be giving tax cuts to an industry that will only exasperate the problem. It has been shown how damaging data centers are to the environment around it. The people of this state have said over and over again that we do not want data centers. Yet corporations continue to ignore us. The people of this state have been exploited for too long. This will only continue our exploitation. I urge you to vote no to this bill. Reverend Sarah Wilmoth
2026 Regular Session HB4013 (Finance)
Comment by: Brad Davis on January 26, 2026 19:42
The people of my home, southern West Virginia, cannot afford to subsidize yet another industry that promises only to extract our wealth and our health rather than create real economic opportunity and quality of life for a region and people in desperate need. If passed, this bill would only serve to perpetuate the economic exploitation we've suffered for generations. I urge you to vote no. Sincerely, Rev. Brad Davis
2026 Regular Session HB4013 (Finance)
Comment by: Jenny Williams on January 26, 2026 19:40
As a West Virginian, I care about our lands and waters – our mountains and valleys hold centuries of history, heritage and wildlife. HB 4013 would open the floodgates for data center development in WV, an initiative that has already seen immense pushback from community members throughout the state.   New data center development is known to result in increased air and water pollution, rising utility costs, and health risks in fenceline communities. West Virginia is all too familiar with the health and economic consequences of similar construction projects left abandoned. Tax cuts don’t solve complex issues like the need for expanded employment and economic opportunities in our state.   Please oppose HB 4013 and support solutions that will help create a more sustainable future for West Virginians. 
2026 Regular Session HB4727 (Education)
Comment by: Jamie Hazelwood on January 26, 2026 19:21
Please support this bill and raise teacher pay.
2026 Regular Session HB4086 (Education)
Comment by: Jamie Hazelwood on January 26, 2026 18:57
Please support this bill! Teachers deserve to be able to use their days to help with retirement.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Kerri Carte on January 26, 2026 18:55
Please Vote NO!! If someone gives a ride to a neighbor or community member you can’t expect them to ask for verification that they are a US citizen!! This goes way too far! Please use common sense and vote NO!
2026 Regular Session HB4077 (Public Education)
Comment by: Jamie Hazelwood on January 26, 2026 18:52
I am an elementary school teacher in Raleigh County and have been in a testing grade for 14 years. I can tell you that over the years testing has been pushed more and more to the point where I know instruction is being impacted. Second semester turns into teaching to the test. We spend a lot of time on the testing platform doing countless practice tests to get the students used to the types of questions and tools they might see on test day. While I agree some kind of tool needs to be used to have accountability, I think a lot rides on this one test. There needs to be some measure of proficiency in each grade level that also factors in growth. There is also the issue that K-2 does not have this same accountability. I have seen first hand that there is less pressure on early elementary teachers to have their students mastering standards and when they show up to 3rd grade behind, it becomes a problem because they are going to be taking the big test at the end of the year. More needs to be done early to ensure students are getting foundational skills in reading and math, so when they get to upper elementary and secondary, they are prepared, not just for a test, but for the actual content standards they are expected to master.
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Laura Farr on January 26, 2026 18:10
Wayne County has oil in their water supply. Why is the legislature concerned with memorializing a podcaster that wasn’t born in the state?
2026 Regular Session HB4034 (Education)
Comment by: Chrissy Sandy on January 26, 2026 17:36
What happened to the SEPARATION OF CHURCH AND STATE???? What do the 10 commandments have to do with education?  The only place the 10 commandments  need to be seen is in a church!! Not everyone in this state believes in christianity and it ABSOLUTELY SHOULD NOT be forced on people, especially CHILDREN in a public setting. I DO NOT AGREE WITH THIS!!  
2026 Regular Session HB4081 (Education)
Comment by: Chrissy Sandy on January 26, 2026 17:26
Dear Legislators, This bill should pass with flying colors. I support this 100% as should you. Higher education is the backbone of the economy and food insecurities should NOT be a reason to not go to school. It is YOUR responsibility to make sure that ALL children have access to food so they do well in class. PASS THIS BILL!!
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Carrie Hancock on January 26, 2026 16:28

We strongly oppose HB 4433, the bill targeting individuals who transport undocumented immigrants. This legislation does not reflect the values of fairness, compassion, or common sense that many of us in this state hold dear. HB 4433 risks criminalizing ordinary people—neighbors, coworkers, church members, and community volunteers—who may be offering transportation, assistance, or humanitarian support. It creates fear rather than safety, division rather than solutions, and punishment rather than progress. West Virginians do not want to see our state used as a testing ground for policies that treat immigrants as threats rather than humans. This bill is part of a broader and deeply troubling effort to wage a political war on immigrant families. This is not who we are. Our state has a long history of welcoming people who come here seeking opportunity, safety, and a better life. HB 4433 undermines that tradition and sends a message that West Virginia is turning its back on those values. I want to be clear: West Virginians are paying attention. We are prepared to vote for leaders who prioritize humane, practical, and community-centered approaches to immigration—not punitive measures that harm families and erode trust. The decisions made in this legislative session will shape how voters respond in the next election. I respectfully urge you to stand against HB 4433 and to support policies that reflect dignity, fairness, and the best of our state’s character.
2026 Regular Session HB4691 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Lillian on January 26, 2026 16:13
This bill reduces the ability of both college students and elderly residents to participate in elections. Claims of widespread voter fraud are false. Shouldn't we be encouraging West Virginians to get involved in the civic process? Why are you trying to reduce the number of people eligible to vote, especially in a state that has historically low voter turnout?
2026 Regular Session HB4691 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Lisa Jan Haddox-Heston, DDS on January 26, 2026 16:13
This bill reeks of voter suppression and is anti-democratic in nature. For the eleven years that I was in Morgantown pursuing my education, I relied on absentee ballots. Their availability ensured that I never missed an election. I believe that all people who cannot be in their precincts on election day should have the opportunity to cast absentee ballots.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Lillian Bayer on January 26, 2026 16:02
Upon reading this bill it struck me how similar it is to laws from the late 1930's. I would like to ask our legislature to vote "no" on this Anne Frank bill.
2026 Regular Session HB4069 (Finance)
Comment by: Nolan Rose on January 26, 2026 15:15
This bill has the rare quality of being self-evidently a terrible idea. If this bill were to pass into law the only outcome would be an increase in motorcycle accidents leading to deaths. The only beneficiaries of this bill would be hospitals and EMS companies. Not to hammer this point excessively, but we can point out that no reasonable person is demanding that seat belt laws be reversed, or headlight requirements be voided, or we go back to before people needed rear view mirrors and side mirrors. To make it clear, it is for these reasons that I reject this bill and ask the house to do the same.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Renee K Bergner, MD, FAAP (ret.) on January 26, 2026 14:41
I oppose HB 4433. This bill weakens the values our country and WV, in particular,  stand for, Should a person be criminally charged for giving a ride to a neighbor in need? During a medical emergency, are we supposed to ask " are you undocumented?" When a woman about to deliver a baby and needs a ride to the hospital, are we to ask "Do you have papers?" When a child is stranded and needs a ride home, are we to ask "What language do you speak at home?" Are we even talking about the USA? Please vote against HB4433. Thank you. Renee K Bergner, MD          
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Heather Perdue on January 26, 2026 14:40
West Virginia has much more pressing issues to deal with than to entertain this nonsense. Jobs, healthcare, clean water, education, housing - just to name a few - and the Legislature thinks a State  holiday for a podcaster is what is important?  How about doing something to actually help West Virginians for a change? This is a shocking and ridiculous waste of time and money that helps no one in this State.
2026 Regular Session HB4013 (Finance)
Comment by: Amy Margolies on January 26, 2026 14:19
I strongly oppose HB 4013, the Mountaineer Flexible Tax Credit Act of 2026, as an excessive giveaway to data centers. It grants massive tax credits—offsetting state income, sales, franchise, and withholding taxes for minimal job creation (just 10 positions) or $2.5 million investment. Meanwhile, our towns and communities will have to pay the price with the costs of these hyperscale industrial facilities in our counties. That means the pollution, water consumption, power demands, and infrastructure strain all our on counties, with the state already taking 70% of tax revenues through HB2014. Is there anything left for us? For the counties, for the families? For the young people growing up in our counties who want jobs and opportunities? They are the ones that need a break, not billion dollar corporations. The state is about to cut budgets to schools and infrastructure, and we need funds for flood relief and the foster care system. Yet this bill, HB4013 prioritizes corporate incentives over sustainable investments in workforce development and public services, undermining West Virginia's fiscal health. Lawmakers should oppose this bill and support the local businesses and people of our Mountain state. Invest in us, not in out of state corporations. Mountaineers are the ones that deserve special treatment, not Big Tech CEOs.
2026 Regular Session HB4013 (Finance)
Comment by: Cory Chase on January 26, 2026 14:13
I oppose this bill and so should anybody who wants to really grow the economy in WV. With regards to attracting data centers, this bill would be an unprecedented and unfair boon (read: NOT the free market and absolutely not a conservative value) for any large (billions of dollars) projects, shortchanging our state hundreds of millions in tax revenue that this bill claims would be to "promote the welfare of the people through investment in businesses." Once constructed, how would a giant data center (or many of them, for that matter) help us WV residents when the company is literally paying no state taxes? Hint: it won't. After the construction jobs end, there won't be a lot additional employment. We, the people of WV, will be left holding the bag and watching our already strapped public services continue to bleed out while these private businesses rake in record profits and laugh all the way to the bank. Don't fall for it.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Paula Napier on January 26, 2026 14:12
West Virginia is populated by immigrants.  We are all immigrants. West Virginians have always helped their neighbors, no matter their "status." This war on immigrants in the result of overreach by the federal government and the state government does not need their help.  They are fully qualified to mess things up without our help. I know you hear from conservative voices on a daily basis, but many of them are misled by watching biased new coverage and smoke and mirror tactics coming from the top.  Please do not vote for more intrusiveness into our personal choices.
2026 Regular Session HB4468 (Courts)
Comment by: Leslie Rubin on January 26, 2026 14:11

I am submitting these comments in my capacity as a journalist who has spent nearly 20 years covering courts, law enforcement, and crimes involving sexual violence and children in West Virginia.

The intent behind §61-8B-19 — protecting the identities of victims of sex crimes — is valid and necessary. No responsible journalist disputes that goal. However, in practice, the statute has produced unintended consequences that undermine transparency, consistency, and public safety.

By sealing arrest-stage court records for a wide range of serious offenses, the statute restricts access to documents that have historically been public, including criminal complaints and warrants. These records do not exist to satisfy curiosity; they exist to ensure accountability, public awareness, and trust in the justice system.

The result has been a significant public safety gap. In many cases, the public does not learn that a person has been accused of a serious sex crime until weeks or months later, often when the case reaches circuit court. By that point, opportunities for community awareness, institutional safeguards, and additional victim reporting may already have passed.

The statute has also created widespread inconsistency in magistrate courts across the state. Some magistrates release records with redactions. Others refuse to release them at all. Magistrates and magistrate court clerks frequently express uncertainty about what the law permits. As a result, access to public records varies depending on geography rather than law, which erodes confidence in the system.

Importantly, repeal of §61-8B-19 does not require the disclosure of victim identities. Victims can and should be protected through targeted redaction, the use of initials, and removal of identifying details — practices already used successfully by many courts and police officers tasked with writing these documents.

Sealing entire records is not the only method of victim protection, and it is not the most precise one. A more narrowly tailored approach would protect victims while preserving the public’s right to know when serious criminal charges have been filed.

House Bill 4468 restores balance. It supports victim protection, promotes consistent court practices, and reinforces the long-standing principle of open courts. For these reasons, I respectfully urge the passage of House Bill 4468.

2026 Regular Session HB4554 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Marie on January 26, 2026 13:42
There’s a reason they call it The Bad Idea Factory, but this has to be the worst idea ya’ll have come up with. Absolutely no way in the world I’m trusting any of you with my kids’ medical information. Or the same state police that were peeping on their own coworkers. Throw this out or get ready for a bunch of miracles because everybody’s gonna be “cured” just to avoid being rounded up.
2026 Regular Session HB4175 (Government Organization)
Comment by: George Caldwell on January 26, 2026 13:20
This is a must pass! Vehicle inspections across the country have been eliminated from other states. The inspection process does not eliminate poorly maintained vehicles on the roadways. It's an added cost and burden to citizens. This bill will bring relief and a small amount of revenue back to West Virginians.
2026 Regular Session HB4773 (Finance)
Comment by: Tim Reianrd on January 26, 2026 13:13
If anyone is serious about the governor's move to decrease state taxes then this bill must be denied / rejected.  Although I receive a pension from the state and would benefit from the bill there are more important items like our education formula,  job opportunities for our young people, clean water, electric rates and a host of other items that need looked into for improvements to our state.
2026 Regular Session HB4002 (Education)
Comment by: Tim Reianrd on January 26, 2026 13:06
A committee that does not have to abide by the open meetings act is a problem, plus appointments made by the speaker and President sounds like political appointments plus  their notes etc are  not open to the freedom of information act and spending monies seems way to free and how monies are allocated are not clarified.  Isn't this what Monroe county is fighting.  Seems almost like a collaboration on data centers.
2026 Regular Session HB4005 (Government Organization)
Comment by: Jim McKay on January 26, 2026 12:41
I am writing on behalf of Prevent Child Abuse West Virginia. We urge Delegates to vote NO on HB 4005 because it places teenagers at risk of serious injury while operating dangerous machinery without adequate supervision. HB 4005 eliminates West Virginia's list of hazardous occupations prohibited for workers under 18 and weakens safety protections for children. The bill surrenders our state's authority over child workplace safety to federal bureaucrats. Despite an amendment addressing metal foundry work, the bill still allows 16-year-olds to work in:
  • Logging operations (Logging has the highest occupational fatality rate in the nation! 10x the national average.)
  • Excavation sites and operations involving explosives
  • Industrial equipment causing amputations (power saws, metal presses, meat processing, etc.)
  • Radioactive materials exposure
Teen workers are injured at twice the rate of adults. When seriously injured, they face permanent disabilities, disrupted education, and reduced lifetime earnings. These are consequences that last a lifetime. The bill allows Youth Apprentice Program students to operate dangerous machinery that had previously been limited to "on an occasional basis" without restriction and removes the requirement that they have "mandatory direct supervision". Industrial accidents happen in seconds. Direct supervision is essential to prevent injuries in inherently dangerous environments. Current law already allows teens to work in thousands of occupations, including retail, food service, office work, healthcare support, most construction trades, technology, and skilled trades, in safe environments. Quality apprenticeships don't require logging operations and industrial equipment that causes amputations. Please vote NO on HB 4005. Do not surrender West Virginia's authority to protect our children. Prevent Child Abuse West Virginia urges lawmakers to protect children and vote No on HB 4005. Thank you for keeping West Virginia's children safe. Sincerely, Jim McKay State Director Prevent Child Abuse WV
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: James Ramos on January 26, 2026 12:16
Do not pass HB4433. This bill unfairly penalizes those who may offer aid to someone else in their time of need.
2026 Regular Session HB4691 (Judiciary)
Comment by: James on January 26, 2026 12:08
Do not pass HB 4691. There is no reason to make it harder for people to vote. Students, workers, caregivers, hospitalized individuals, sick and the elderly may all be impacted.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Leslie Williams on January 26, 2026 11:58
I opposed HB 4433. West Virginians value fairness, accountability, accountability and limits on government overreach. As a person of faith, I can't support a bill where an act of kindness is deemed a crime. I am not against having sound policies in place that manage the influx of people into our country. That said, being undocumented in this country is a civil offense, not a criminal one. And EVERYONE on American soil, regardless of immigration status, is constitutionally entitled to due process. I urge you to reject HB 4433 and uphold the civil liberties of everyone who calls West Virginia home.
2026 Regular Session HB4013 (Finance)
Comment by: Kelly Allen, West Virginia Center on Budget and Policy on January 26, 2026 11:53
Members of the House Finance committee and the full House of Delegates: While well-intentioned, HB 4013 is incredibly costly, flawed legislation that will undermine our ability to provide public services while failing to deliver the jobs and economic opportunities this body is seeking. Testimony to this body from the conservative Mercatus Center in 2022 on corporate subsidies outlined as much (paraphrased): Research consistently shows that economic development subsidies fail to achieve any of their stated goals: they do not improve state and local welfare, nor do they meaningfully impact corporations’ decisions of where to locate. Instead, they disrupt the normal workings of a healthy market, essentially encouraging companies to make risky bets their investors wouldn’t fund. (see: https://www.mercatus.org/system/files/farren_-_testimony_-_an_interstate_compact_to_phase_out_corporate_giveaways_west_virginia_-_v1.pdf) Worse, this legislation gives special treatment to big data centers and other corporate developers that residents and small businesses do not receive. We’ve seen all over West Virginia and across the country how these large developments, data centers in particular, put strain on the quality of our roads and infrastructure, water and electricity usage, and public services like emergency response. But with HB 4013, those entities would have their tax liability dramatically reduced or even fully zeroed out— erasing the very tax dollars that pay for those services they benefit from and that the rest of our residents and small businesses pay for without special tax treatment. With no caps on the tax credit per development or the overall cost of the program, HB 4013 could quickly balloon out of control, costing the state hundreds of millions of dollars annually (or more) just as those developments increase the cost of programs and infrastructure funded via the state budget. In FY 2027, the entire corporate net income tax statewide is expected to bring in $274 million, while a single data center with a $2 billion investment could see a tax credit of $150 million—revenue the state sorely needs for infrastructure and public services, even before these data centers begin taking a toll on our water, electricity, and other public services. West Virginia already has a number of existing business tax incentives costing the state millions each year in forgone revenue, while promised jobs and economic benefit nearly always fail to materialize for the reasons highlighted in the Mercatus testimony cited above. Instead of giving away even more tax cuts for businesses that are already looking to locate in the state, West Virginia can raise the revenue needed from these big businesses to invest in its workforce, infrastructure, and quality of life, all of which will make the state more attractive to businesses of all sizes and industries in a more effective way than more narrowly targeted tax incentives.
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Maleea Martin on January 26, 2026 11:41
I respectfully oppose any proposal to designate a Memorial Day or official state recognition for Charlie Kirk in West Virginia.
Memorial days and state honors should be reserved for individuals or events that unite our communities and reflect broadly shared values of service, sacrifice, and respect for all West Virginians. Charlie Kirk is a highly partisan national political figure whose work and public statements have been deeply divisive and controversial. Granting an official day of recognition risks politicizing state honors and alienating many residents who do not share or support his views. West Virginia has countless veterans, first responders, educators, miners, community leaders, and public servants whose contributions directly benefit our state and whose service brings people together rather than deepening political divisions. Our limited capacity for official recognition should prioritize those who have demonstrated clear, positive, and unifying impact on the people of West Virginia. For these reasons, I urge lawmakers to reject this proposal and keep state-recognized memorials and honors focused on individuals and causes that genuinely reflect the shared values and interests of all West Virginians.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: joseph golden on January 26, 2026 11:23
As a West Virginian, and as a person of faith, I feel HB4433 goes against Judeo-Christian moral and religious teachings to care for the stranger, for one's neighbor, and for a person in need.  "Do unto others, as you would have others do unto you", the care of the Good Samaritan, "Love your neighbors as yourself," caring for the least of you is what we should be following.  Making care of immigrants equal to assisting human trafficking is incorrect, inhumane, degrading, and profiling people,  and an affront to these Judeo-Christian teachings. Vote NO on HB 4433.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Lyn Widmyer on January 26, 2026 11:20
I am opposed to adding the term "human smuggling" to House Bill 4433.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: MaryLois Gannon on January 26, 2026 11:07
I oppose HB 4433. I could list innumerable reasons but I need to get back to helping my neighbors with transport, groceries & other emergent necessities as we deal with the fallout from this storm, and push out of my mind that if this Bill was law right now there's a chance I'd be breaking the law.
2026 Regular Session HB4551 (Government Administration)
Comment by: George Caldwell on January 26, 2026 11:06
PASS THIS BILL This bill is vital to the protection of our Mountaineer drivers. This is long over-due regulation and is gaining traction nationwide. West Virginia needs to lead the way in standing up for American citizens. Commercial Drivers Licensing is a large responsibility and must be awarded to those who comply with your laws. By implementing this we can be one step closer to ensuring our CDL holders are the right people for the right job.
2026 Regular Session HB4554 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Lori on January 26, 2026 10:59
No, this is a terrible idea.
2026 Regular Session HB4013 (Finance)
Comment by: Eric Engle on January 26, 2026 10:55
“After promises last legislative session that HB 2014, the so-called Power Generation and Consumption Act, would make West Virginia ‘the most attractive state in the country for data centers,’ lawmakers are back with a new package of tax incentives for data centers (along with manufacturers and other big corporations). ”HB 4013 would give major tax cuts to these entities by allowing them to dramatically reduce or even eliminate their state tax liability by deducting most of their costs from their tax bill including capital investments, construction costs, and employee wages. Policymakers have seen an upswell in pushback from community members across West Virginia raising concerns about data centers’ impact on noise and light pollution, water consumption, and electricity costs. It is evident that these developers use–and in some cases, degrade–many of our public services: roads, infrastructure, emergency response, water, and electricity; enacting massive tax giveaways means they get to benefit from these public services without contributing financially to them like residents and small businesses do. “What’s more, it remains unclear how HB 4013 squares with the promises and priorities of 2025’s HB 2014. In that legislation, lawmakers sought to bolster state revenues by seizing the property tax revenue that data centers generate (which normally gets directed to local public services and school districts) and diverting it to a state fund to help replace the state’s income tax, among other priorities. But with HB 4013, legislators would be undercutting state revenues, slashing the same taxes that fund our state budget.” -Sean O’Leary, Senior Policy Analyst, WV Center on Budget & Policy
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Steven Wendelin on January 26, 2026 10:47

House Bill 4433 should not become law.

Let me be clear at the outset. Human trafficking is real. It is evil. It destroys lives. Those who traffic human beings deserve aggressive prosecution, long prison sentences, and the full force of the law. Nothing in opposing this bill weakens that commitment. In fact, this bill weakens it itself.

HB 4433 does not strengthen our fight against human trafficking. It politicizes it.

At its core, this bill introduces a dangerous and unethical idea into West Virginia law: that a victim’s humanity and right to justice depends on their immigration status. The provision denying restitution to trafficking victims labeled as “illegal aliens” is not only morally wrong, it is counterproductive and cruel. No human being is illegal. No victim of exploitation becomes less worthy of justice because of paperwork or status.

This bill tells traffickers something dangerous: exploit undocumented people, because the law will deny those victims restitution and discourage them from speaking up. That is not justice. That is an incentive structure that benefits criminals.

From a legal standpoint, this legislation is largely redundant. Human trafficking, human smuggling, forced labor, and sexual exploitation are already crimes under comprehensive federal law. Immigration enforcement is a federal responsibility. West Virginia does not govern deportation, lawful presence, or immigration status. Pretending otherwise is not governing. It is political theater.

When state legislators attempt to graft federal immigration enforcement onto state criminal law, they invite constitutional challenges, preemption conflicts, and uneven enforcement. Worse, they distract law enforcement from doing what actually stops trafficking: identifying victims, gaining cooperation, dismantling networks, and prosecuting perpetrators.

Ethically, this bill fails a basic test of justice. Punishment should fall on the guilty, not on the exploited. A legal system that denies restitution to a trafficking victim because of immigration status is not upholding the rule of law. It is abandoning moral responsibility. It confuses border politics with human suffering, and in doing so, it cheapens both.

There is a difference between being tough and being just. This bill chooses toughness as a performance while sacrificing justice in practice. It adds penalties without adding protection. It expands forfeiture without expanding victim services. It uses the language of public safety while undermining the very cooperation law enforcement needs to keep people safe.

West Virginia can and should be uncompromising in prosecuting traffickers. We can protect children. We can punish exploitation. But we must not do so by denying the humanity of victims or turning our criminal code into a vehicle for fear-based politics.

HB 4433 does not make West Virginia safer. It makes justice conditional.

For those reasons, this bill should not become law.

2026 Regular Session HB4691 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Christa Shafer on January 26, 2026 10:32
This is a form of voter suppression as it infringes upon the rights of those who have to be away from their voting poll place due to work related, education related or any other emergency related situations. We should be making it easier to be able to participate in our constitutional rights, not harder.
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Kayla Sistilli on January 26, 2026 10:28
  • I respectfully oppose any proposal to designate a Memorial Day or official state recognition for Charlie Kirk in West Virginia.

    Memorial days and state honors should be reserved for individuals or events that unite our communities and reflect broadly shared values of service, sacrifice, and respect for all West Virginians. Charlie Kirk is a highly partisan national political figure whose work and public statements have been deeply divisive and controversial. Granting an official day of recognition risks politicizing state honors and alienating many residents who do not share or support his views.

    West Virginia has countless veterans, first responders, educators, miners, community leaders, and public servants whose contributions directly benefit our state and whose service brings people together rather than deepening political divisions. Our limited capacity for official recognition should prioritize those who have demonstrated clear, positive, and unifying impact on the people of West Virginia.

    For these reasons, I urge lawmakers to reject this proposal and keep state-recognized memorials and honors focused on individuals and causes that genuinely reflect the shared values and interests of all West Virginians.

2026 Regular Session HB4034 (Education)
Comment by: 4034 on January 26, 2026 10:21
Separation of church and state! Those of us that want our children to learn the 10 Commandments are fully capable of teaching this at home. This is a waste of time, and money, that could contribute to more important topics and will actually improve education.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Bethany Clark on January 26, 2026 10:17
This is a blatant attempt to go after undocumented immigrants, regardless of whether they're on the track to citizenship in the United States. Stop. They are far less likely to commit crimes than citizens.
2026 Regular Session HB4554 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Bethany Clark on January 26, 2026 10:15
This is dangerous and unnecessary.
2026 Regular Session HB4034 (Education)
Comment by: Bethany Clark on January 26, 2026 10:14
This is an infringement of the separation of church and state. Not every student who goes to public schools in West Virginia follows religions that adhere to the Ten Commandments. I am a Christian myself, and I do not want this on display in my child's classroom. What is the point, other than to pander to Christian nationalists who expect everyone to follow their particular brand of white conservative evangelical Christianity?
2026 Regular Session HB4073 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Bethany Clark on January 26, 2026 10:09
Please do not allow for religious exemptions to vaccine requirements. The current exemptions, which are for understandable medical reasons, mean that as many other people as possible need to be vaccinated to protect themselves and those who are unable to get vaccines for genuine medical reasons.
2026 Regular Session HB4070 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Bethany Clark on January 26, 2026 10:07
So we're just letting people get diseases now instead of requiring vaccines to prevent them and others from getting sick? That seems extremely reckless, irresponsible, and downright dangerous to public health. Please listen to real doctors and scientists.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Carolyn. Rodis on January 26, 2026 10:05
HB 4433 should be defeated; it very should have gotten out of committee.  It criminalizes compassionate behavior, politicizes helping the vulnerable.  It has no place in West Virginia.  Del. Ridenour should withdraw this shameful bill.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Blanche Rybeck on January 26, 2026 09:33

Please vote to stop HB 4433.  Human trafficking must be addressed, but this bill is dangerous.  HB4433 would allow bad actors to use our laws to prosecute people of good conscience.

Under HB 4433 those West Virginian's who helped people find freedom through the Underground Railroad could be prosecuted.  Now it is clear that we must not pass bills that can be used against real patriots, like nurses trying to help victims.

Please use your vote to say NO to HB 4433.  Montani Semper Liberi.

2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Julie A Knight on January 26, 2026 09:27
This bill should not be passed. It is not morally centered.  Vote NO!
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Wyatt Sanders on January 26, 2026 09:24

My name is Wyatt and I am a resident of Martinsburg. I am writing to express my strong opposition to HB 4797 and HCR 7.

While I respect the importance of the First Amendment, I believe these measures are an inappropriate use of our legislative session for several reasons:

  1. Priorities: Our state faces pressing local challenges. Legislative time should be spent on issues that directly improve the lives of West Virginians, rather than honoring a person from Illinois with no historical ties to our state.

Educational Autonomy: I am concerned by the mandate in HB 4797 that requires the Department of Education to develop specific programs centered on a singular political activist. Our schools should focus on non-partisan civic education.

Fiscal Responsibility: Designating new memorial weeks and potential holidays involves state resources. I urge the committee to consider if this is the most effective way to spend taxpayer dollars.

  With so much going on in WV today do we really want to honor someone who does not represent what West Virginias are about.   Here are some of his quotes. Wil we teach this about him too?

On Race and Civil Rights

  • The Civil Rights Act: "We made a huge mistake when we passed the Civil Rights Act in the 1960s... [It] created a beast, and that beast has now turned into an anti-white weapon." (The Charlie Kirk Show, April 2024)
  • On Black Professionals: "If I see a Black pilot, I'm going to be like, boy, I hope he's qualified." (The Charlie Kirk Show, January 23, 2024)
  • On Martin Luther King Jr.: Kirk described the civil rights icon as "awful" and "not a good person," explicitly stating it was "true" that he viewed King as a "bad guy." (FactCheck.org / The Charlie Kirk Show, 2024)
  • On Diversity & Excellence: "If I'm dealing with somebody in customer service who's a moronic Black woman, I wonder is she there because of her excellence, or is she there because of affirmative action?" (The Charlie Kirk Show, January 3, 2024)

On Women and Family

  • On Feminism: "Feminism must be defeated for the West to be saved... Reject feminism. Submit to your husband... You're not in charge." (The Charlie Kirk Show, August 26, 2025)
  • On Women’s Education: At the 2025 Young Women’s Leadership Summit, he called on women to abandon career-focused education to "submit to a godly man" and raise "more children than you can afford."
  • On Female Success: "You do not have the brain processing power to otherwise be taken really seriously. You had to go steal a white person's slot to go be taken somewhat seriously." (Referring to prominent women of color, The Charlie Kirk Show, July 13, 2023)

On Gun Violence and Public Safety

  • On Gun Deaths: "I think it's worth it to have a cost of, unfortunately, some gun deaths every single year so that we can have the Second Amendment." (2023)

I ask that you vote "No" on these measures and instead focus on the local issues that matter most to our communities.

Sincerely,

2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Becca Ames on January 26, 2026 09:22
I oppose this bill because it punishes someone who is simply trying to help without invading someone’s privacy. It is not a citizen’s responsibility to enforce immigration law, and if someone simply needs a ride to a medical appointment, for example, I don’t see why discriminating against that individual does anyone any good.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Nancy Cummins on January 26, 2026 09:03
I oppose HB 4433 and urge lawmakers to oppose this bill because it weakens trust between communities and local government.  It raises real concerns about due process and constitutional rights. Expanding enforcement power without strong oversight puts fundamental freedoms at risk. Punitive, surveillance-based policies erode trust and weaken communities. Faith congregations should not feel intimidated – we have a responsibility to help and give assistance to marginalized people.    Public policy should uphold the civil liberties of all West Virginians -  bring people together, not divide them.  Lawmakers should reject HB 4433 and uphold the civil liberties of everyone who calls West Virginia home.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Mary Beth Lind on January 26, 2026 08:43
As a West Virginian, I've always been proud of our ability and desire to help our neighbors.  I always knew I could call a neighbor for help.  This bill makes it a crime to help a neighbor.  Please vote against this bill.  Let's continue to be a state full of people who care about and help their neighbors not matter who they are.  Thank you.
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Hunter Childers on January 26, 2026 07:47
As a former West Virginia resident I find this Bill despicable you’re wasting taxpayer money time and resources on such a useless piece of legislation. not to mention honoring a man who only spewed just because he didn’t use physical violence doesn’t mean he didn’t cause violence. Your time is better spent helping our citizens and bettering our country, which you are not doing.
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Rachel Lester on January 26, 2026 07:06
Absolutely ridiculous. There are many many MANY more pressing issues than making a holiday for an entertainer. He contributed nothing other than hate to our nation. He was not from WV, did not die in WV, he should not be honored in WV. Disgusting. Do not pass this abhorrent bill.
2026 Regular Session HB4093 (Education)
Comment by: nancy haggerty on January 25, 2026 23:20
Yes. Let them carry guns at schools as soon as you let people carry concealed weapons in court rooms and legislative offices.
2026 Regular Session HB4079 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: nancy haggerty on January 25, 2026 23:16
I don't see how this is a real problem. If you don't want to use said language, don't. This bill is unnecessary.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Rev. Richard Bowyer on January 25, 2026 23:03
It is remarkably contrary to the character and image of WestVirginia and an affront to Christian., Jewish, Islamic and other faiths to penalize and punish anyone who performs and simple but normal act of human decency.
2026 Regular Session HB4041 (Judiciary)
Comment by: nancy haggerty on January 25, 2026 22:56
This is open for abuse of power. I agree that someone hitting an officer is wrong and they should not do it. I also agree that they should be charged if they do. I do not agree that is a charge that should put someone in prison for 25 years. Please vote no.
2026 Regular Session HB4034 (Education)
Comment by: Nancy Haggerty on January 25, 2026 22:49
This is not needed. Separation of church and state includes our state. Put funding that would have paid for this into improving the schools.
2026 Regular Session HB4691 (Judiciary)
Comment by: nancy on January 25, 2026 22:40
This is a form of voter suppression. We oppose this. Vote by mail should be available to anyone who wants to use it. We don't want limitations on voting. We would prefer voting to be as accessible as possible.
2026 Regular Session HB4168 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Martha Elder on January 25, 2026 21:35
It’s the old adage, if it isn’t broke, don’t fix it.
2026 Regular Session HB4335 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Chelsea Rae Gunther on January 25, 2026 21:32
As a West Virginia Medicaid provider, I strongly support HB 4335. This bill sets clear timelines that reduce delays in care: 5 business days for provider enrollment determinations once an application is complete, and 60 days for MCO credentialing with limited extension and meaningful penalties when timelines are missed. It also requires a standard CAQH credentialing form, prevents MCOs from demanding extra information beyond that form, and moves enrollment and credentialing to electronic submission for clarity and accountability. These changes reduce administrative bottlenecks, enabling providers to serve Medicaid members sooner. Please pass HB 4335.

2026 Regular Session HB4093 (Education)
Comment by: Martha Elder on January 25, 2026 21:25
Just asking for trouble with this law.
2026 Regular Session HB4376 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Chelsea Rae Gunther on January 25, 2026 21:24

I’m writing in support of HB 4376. This bill is a simple, needed guardrail: elected officials should not be able to appoint their own family members into state or local offices. West Virginians deserve public service that is earned, transparent, and accountable, not handed down through personal ties.

Even when someone is qualified, nepotism creates a shadow of doubt that harms everyone, including hardworking public employees. Clear rules help protect the integrity of our institutions, reduce conflicts of interest, and rebuild public trust.

I urge you to advance HB 4376 and continue strengthening ethics standards in West Virginia so government works for the public, not for insiders.

2026 Regular Session HB4103 (Education)
Comment by: Martha Elder on January 25, 2026 21:21
It’s basic. The separation of church and state.  Religion does not belong in the schools. thank you
2026 Regular Session HB4715 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Elizabeth on January 25, 2026 21:21
I am writing to express my concern about HN 4715 which has been introduced for consideration.  This proposed legislation would eliminate physician supervision of physician assistants and nurse practitioners.  P.A.'s and N.P.'s receive much more limited training compared to physicians.  Allowing them to practice independently puts patients at risk.  Please instead support models which support rural incentives and loan repayment for new physicians to bring complete care to all patients.  
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Martha Elder on January 25, 2026 20:54
I do not think we need another state holiday for Charlie Kirk. We had Juneteenth and you took that away for what reason I do not know other than we switched governors!  It is silly to keep making up holidays for regular people!  They aren’t famous!  He was a political activist. Not worthy of a holiday in my opinion. Just my thought.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Catherine Fleischman on January 25, 2026 20:36
It appears this bill punishes the unknowing good Samaritan. As a respectful helpful WV neighbor I feel our laws should not find us criminal if we are helping our neighbor get a ride to work and respecting their privacy. I would expect the same.