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Public Comments

2026 Regular Session HB5485 (Energy and Public Works)
Comment by: Susan Divita on February 15, 2026 19:14

increase the minimum wage, WVians cannot pay their bills.

2026 Regular Session HB5485 (Energy and Public Works)
Comment by: Carol Culvyhouse on February 15, 2026 19:12
Please pass this bill.  We need to update the state minimum wage.  It is long overdue.
2026 Regular Session SB4 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Margaret Reese on February 15, 2026 19:11
This bill is unconstitutional as it limits a person’s right to assemble and free speech.  This bill should never be passed.  Montani Semper Liberi should be something lived by every West Virginian, not just words on the WV Seal and Flag.
2026 Regular Session HB5204 (Education)
Comment by: Carol Culvyhouse on February 15, 2026 19:08
Please pass this bill.  This bill protects are most precious, our children.
2026 Regular Session SB4 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Ryan Elkins on February 15, 2026 19:07
I find this bill in direct violation of our constitutional rights as free Americans and should not be passed into law. 30 feet is impossible for anyone to abide by in situations were many poeple are around when something first happends. Specifically if at a home where more than one person lives. Please vote NO to this obsurd bill.
2026 Regular Session SB4 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Michael Mosteller II on February 15, 2026 18:57
This bill infringes on our 1st amendment rights.
2026 Regular Session HB5053 (Public Education)
Comment by: Rachel McQuain on February 15, 2026 18:48
While I understand the intention of this bill is to protect student well-being, it falls short in providing that protection in the context of students being bullied or those who may be rapidly falling behind in subjects due to a misalignment between learning and instruction style among many other issues. As a parent, my children's education and well-being are my responsibility and while I can delegate the authority to the public school system to provide those things to my child I can never delegate the responsibility. Nor would I want to. Meaning that if I believe for medical, mental health, educational, practical, or any other reasons that my child would benefit from being removed from the public school system then as their education and well being are my responsibility, the authority to make those decisions should remain with me. While a 90 day wait period might inconvenience people looking to circumvent the truancy system, it could be a life or death difference in cases where student mental health is concerned. As it is nearly impossible for the public school system to effectively prevent bullying despite it's best intentions, this rule can and likely will result in student suffering. Additionally, while I understand the potential of people abusing the system with regards to summer instruction, there is substantial evidence of the state struggling to appropriately and effectively enforce the current homeschooling laws and requirements with regards to ensuring timely submission of testing results or portfolios during required years and following up on cases where submissions were not received. This issue must be addressed and corrected to ensure no student falls through the cracks and it should be addressed and corrected before any additional changes to state laws regarding homeschooling are made.
2026 Regular Session HB5525 (Energy and Public Works)
Comment by: Torli Bush on February 15, 2026 18:40
To the Committee, I am writing this comment to ask the committee to consider amendments/revisions to the currently proposed bill that:
  • Allocate initial funding for the bill as $250 million instead of the $10 million as is. $10 million is only 4% of the original $250 million idealized in the original Coalfield Clean Water Act proposal. It cannot substantiate any of the most critical needs projects, which according to the DEP currently stands at $287 million; this total of $287 million in critical needs is also for just four of the coalfield counties.
 
  • Remove the provision that fines Public Service Districts. As is, this provision of the bill is self defeating due to A. the financial state of coalfield PSDs and B. the current quality of the existing water systems, which necessitate these overhaul projects in the first place. There should be an avenue for accountability that the work is being done, but as long as a PSD and its partners in the projects are working in good faith and making progress in the systems remediation, they should not be penalized.
 
  • Remove the need to apply for grants/loans rather, these monies should be allocated directly to the coalfield counties based on the severity of needs and types of contaminants dealt with.
 
  • In addition to lead pipe mitigation, other remediation efforts need to be given consideration such as for the clean up of heavy metals, PFAs, and chemical solvents.
Thank you for considering these comments.
2026 Regular Session HB5169 (Finance)
Comment by: J. McMurray on February 15, 2026 18:27
No. It's bad enough that my federal tax dollars are helping to fund the "Trump Account".  "Trump Account" you say? The Treasury provides a $1,000 seed for newborns, with additional contributions up to $5,000 annually. Funds are invested to grow tax-deferred. Now, on top of that, you want to extend a state tax deduction for parents whose children qualify for the "Trump Account". Enough is too much.
2026 Regular Session HB4712 (Judiciary)
Comment by: marsha boggess on February 15, 2026 18:10
I support this bill whole heartily.  It's time that people who make decisions to drink and drive suffer consequences equal to the destruction they cause in the lives of others.  Maybe if laws were stiffer on drunk driving they'd think twice before driving intoxicated or impaired.   A slap on the wrist doesn't cut it.
2026 Regular Session HB5147 (Judiciary)
Comment by: J. McMurray on February 15, 2026 18:04
Definitely Yes. Any costitutional amendment(s) on a ballot initiative should include ALL verbage that is to be part of any proposed amendment. What's more, constitutional amendments should be few and far between. This bill fits well with what Thomas Jefferson said, “Whenever the people are well informed, they can be trusted with their own government”.
2026 Regular Session HB5133 (Judiciary)
Comment by: J. McMurray on February 15, 2026 17:45
A common sense proposal that looks out for older voters. This deserves a yes from both sides and the middle.
2026 Regular Session HB4712 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Samantha Jones on February 15, 2026 17:33
My name is Samantha Jones, and I am writing in full support of House Bill 4712, “Baylea’s Law.” On July 23, 2009, a drunk driver made the choice to get behind the wheel and drove into our yard, killing my Aunt Dianne Wyatt while she was standing behind my vehicle guiding me. I survived, but I spent six months in physical therapy and continue to live with PTSD and survivor’s guilt. My aunt was the heart of our family — the one who showed up for every milestone, every celebration, every hard season. My cousin lost his mother. My mom, aunts, and uncle lost their sister. We did not lose her in an “accident.” We lost her because of a decision that never should have been made. The driver served only a few years. Our family has been serving a life sentence of grief ever since. I offer my deepest condolences to the family of Baylea Bower and to every West Virginia family carrying this same kind of preventable loss. House Bill 4712 recognizes that when someone chooses to drive impaired and takes a life, the consequences must reflect the permanence of that harm. Stronger accountability will not bring our loved ones back, but it affirms that their lives mattered and that our state refuses to minimize the devastation caused by impaired driving. I respectfully urge you to pass this bill.
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Jacob Lutsy on February 15, 2026 17:33
Edibles should have always been a part of our medical cannabis program. We are already limited in options, and it most certainly won’t cause this mass hysteria across the state that you that are against this incredible form of medicine are so inclined to believe will happen. For a moment, just think about this. You want to make West Virginians healthier? Why wouldn’t you let the medical cannabis market offer a safe consumable alternative to the plant and vapor materials that some people don’t want to put into their lungs? For once please something for us.
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Richard Wyatt on February 15, 2026 17:28
Edibles should be available at local dispensaries in WV.
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Makenna Brown on February 15, 2026 17:03
I am writing this today to express my opinion and the medicinal needs of many west Virginians today. Medical marijuana has helped many others and myself in many ways and I believe legalizing the sale of edible cannabis products will give many patients a more pleasant way of consuming their dose at home. What we have now as consumables are very unpleasant and I believe it excludes those who cannot smoke via flower or vaporizer as there are patients out there with lung issues etc. passing the bill to allow edible cannabis products in dispensary’s across wv will allow for a greater economy in this state as well. Today I ask you to consider the people of West Virginia
2026 Regular Session HB5037 (Judiciary)
Comment by: J. McMurray on February 15, 2026 17:01
I strongly oppose this bill. Imagine being born somewhere else but you've decided to make the United States your home, you've done the right things including becoming an American citizen, you raise and educate your children, you work hard and pay taxes; you sincerely care about this country. Each election you diligently cast your vote. But, now imagine you're told that not only can't you hold political office, you can't vote any longer in any elections. As an American I'm embarassed that I even have to address such a ridiculous notion.
2026 Regular Session HB4106 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Christy Cardwell on February 15, 2026 16:55
I’m deeply concerned about HB4106, which would allow an 18-year-old to concealed carry a gun with no permit. As a mother and a teacher, I assure you that this bill is problematic. I fully support our Second Amendment rights, but those rights come with a great responsibility and a need for common sense in exercising them.
What bothers me most is that an 18-year-old, while considered to be an adult, is still a teenager—an adolescent. Firearms are the leading cause of death for children and adolescents in the US.
I realize we send 18-year-olds to defend our country,  but "Old enough to serve, old enough to carry" ignores the fact that soldiers get PLENTY of weapons training that civilians DON'T get.
I mentioned common sense when exercising our rights. We tend to understand common sense with other dangerous activities, such as driving, and it makes sense to require a permit for carrying a concealed weapon.
Furthermore,  this bill is prohibited normative because it undermines the campus carry law requiring carriers to get a concealed carry permit.
I ask you to consider this data from a published WVU study:  after enactment of permitless carry in WV in 2016 (21 and older), homicides increased by more than 40% as did handgun- inflicted fatalities, while long gun fatalities remained unchanged.  (Lundstrom et al, Amer J of Pub Hlth 2023). I hope you agree that removing permitted carry at ANY age, much less at 18, does much more harm than it does good.
Finally, I’ll leave you with this thought: many 18-year-olds are still in high school. As a teacher with children of her own, I fear that allowing 18-year-olds to carry concealed weapons could allow a student to carry a weapon into school and, worse, use that weapon to harm children and the school personnel who try to protect them.
Please, I implore you: don’t pass this dangerous bill.
Christy Cardwell
Mullens
Wyoming County
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Michael Howard on February 15, 2026 16:49
We need edibles and allowed to burn our flower! WVs cannabis laws are outdated and too restrictive.
2026 Regular Session HB4975 (Education)
Comment by: J. McMurray on February 15, 2026 16:08
At first glance this may seem like a way to save money. I would recommend against it without greater details and transparency. A regional school board comprised of how many reps? Current school board members are elected, how would regional board members be elected/selected? Who would be doing the electing/selecting?  Equal representation from multiple schools? Equal distribution of finances? Determined by student enrollment? Each area is different and I believe needs representation by people who understand those differences. That is why I think school board members should be elected from there own area. People are political so I can see favorites in a region and those less favorite with decisions perhaps based upon such criteria. If a bill raises more questions than providing answers I don't think it deserves support.
2026 Regular Session HB4106 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Danita Nellhaus on February 15, 2026 15:50
HB 4106 should be opposed on so many levels.  18-20 year olds can hunt with their guns but should not be permitted to carry concealed weapons without a license.  The risk of self injury and injury to others is too great.  This is the age group who could act on suicidal thoughts if guns were readily accessible
2026 Regular Session SB633 (Education)
Comment by: Laurent Levy on February 15, 2026 15:47
In 1998, Governor Cecil Underwood established the West Virginia Commission on Holocaust Education (WVCOHE), appointing my mother, the late Dr. Edith Levy, a Holocaust survivor, as its first chairperson. In 2001, with overwhelming bipartisan support, the legislature followed suit, formally adopting and incorporating it within West Virginia code 5-28. West Virginia’s Commission was one of the first in the nation, joining only New Jersey, Florida, New York, and Pennsylvania as one of the pioneering states to recognize the need for such a commission. Since then some 20-22 states have established similar commissions. In its early years, the Commission was extremely vibrant, hosting live teaching seminars and workshops, sponsoring student arts and writing competitions, and presenting live survivor testimonials (most notably from my mother).  The Commission helped to develop the state Holocaust curriculum standards, both at the middle and high school levels, still in place today. My mother published a textbook, The Holocaust in Perspective, specifically targeted to middle-school students, again one of the first of its kind in the nation and still being sought after. Over the years, as my mother’s health declined, the flaws in the original 2001 legislation began to show themselves, most notably with the lack of a consistent and reliable means for the Commission to sustain itself, relying almost exclusively on political appointments by the governor. Naturally, as new governors were elected, many had no idea such a commission existed or that it was part of their job to make the appointments. Indeed, new legislation introduced this month at the behest of the current governor includes the WVCOHE among the list of commissions believed to be completely defunct and targeted for termination.  Before these bills were introduced, however, SB633 passed the Senate unanimously and is now before the Education Committee. SB633 revitalizes the WVCOHE by relieving the governor of the job of staffing its membership. This function is replaced with a block of ex-officio members, educators, and experts who are appointed by their various organizations. Notably, three Coordinators from the WV Department of Education (Social Studies, English and Language Arts, and Fine Arts) would serve on the Commission by virtue of their position. The WV Council for Social Studies would appoint two high school and one middle school teacher, each with proven Holocaust Education training. Two experts from national organizations would be appointed from their respective organizations. While two public appointments would still be made (one from the governor and one from the legislature), the commission members themselves would elect and appoint the chair and vice-chair.  And as before, SB633 asks for no taxpayer outlay, as the Commission relies on organizations like the Hoolmann Foundation (hoolmann.org) to secure such funding. The result is a heavily education-oriented body, not political or partisan, self-sustaining, well-qualified by default, and ready to adapt to the dynamic and complex nature of Holocaust education. We need only consider the expanding body of research, the advent of AI, or the misappropriation of the Holocaust for political purposes to appreciate these ever-changing challenges. And this education is surely desperately needed. As the bill’s preamble notes: “Antisemitism has risen significantly in the United States and globally, … the October 27, 2018 synagogue attack in Pittsburgh, the deadliest antisemitic attack in American history, and the terrorist attack of October 7, 2023 in Israel constitute the deadliest mass murder of Jews since the Holocaust. As recently as January 2026, the firebombing of a synagogue in Mississippi demonstrates that this trend is continuing. Education concerning contemporary manifestations of antisemitism is necessary to understand the enduring relevance of Holocaust education.” Although antisemitism is without a doubt the oldest example of such targeted hatred, the process that results from the devaluation of an expendable “other” stands undeniably as one of the pillars of antisemitism, but is not exclusive to it. Any group, having obtained sufficient political critical mass, can be similarly “othered.” (Do you really need examples?) Additionally, as time passes and the Holocaust recedes further into history, the absence of Holocaust education threatens to render that event as some kind of historical punchline.  One need only consider the embarrassment from the 2019 photo of the WV Department of Corrections cadets giving the “Heil Hitler” salute to realize the extent of this threat. The cadets, along with the instructors, simply had no idea what that salute symbolized and the horror of its history. Only qualified, adaptive, and ongoing education can provide the tools necessary to help students identify the warning signs of the kinds of group devaluation tactics that lead to atrocities like the Holocaust (and distinguish them from the decoys). And only a qualified, adaptive, and committed organization dedicated to this effort can provide the tools educators need to impart this education. I urge this Committee to take this bill up and to recommend it for full passage by the House.  Permit West Virginia to lead the nation once again in this vital endeavor.
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Jacob Lindsay on February 15, 2026 15:45
Introducing patients to edible cannabis will help those patients who don’t smoke medical cannabis find relief from chronic pain
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Sarah on February 15, 2026 14:47
I really think this is a good idea cause sometimes smoke can be rough for others to heal but eating it would be easy for a lot of people that need the medicine without the smoke
2026 Regular Session HB4712 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Jessica Fleming on February 15, 2026 14:40
Our hearts and prayers go out to Baylea’s family!
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Danica C Davis on February 15, 2026 14:18
We need to pass the bill for edibles because some people would benefit from it. A lot of people with health issues are not able to smoke or inhale smoke. If you gave patients the option to be able to get edibles patients would by as much as the could. It’s a body relaxation medicine that would be very beneficial.
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Taylor on February 15, 2026 14:15
Edibles should be legalized in WV!! West Virginia residents should have a non inhalation option to take the medication they need! Legalizing will also cut out the illegal trafficking of edibles from neighboring states and create higher revenue for our state!
2026 Regular Session HB4712 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Tamara Simmons on February 15, 2026 13:16
This should be made into a law !! It might make a person think before they behind the wheel of a vehicle & save lives
2026 Regular Session HB4712 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Michelle Leckrone on February 15, 2026 13:10
I agree
2026 Regular Session SB704 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Merle Jones on February 15, 2026 12:46
My name is Merle Jones, and I am a United States Army Veteran with over 23 years of service.  Thank you for the opportunity to provide my thoughts regarding Senate Bill 704. I respectfully submit my comments in opposition to SB 704 based on concerns about the bill’s impact on individual choice and access to trusted assistance concerning veterans’ benefits. SB 704, known as the Veterans’ Empowerment and Trust Safeguard Act, proposes to prohibit certain individuals from receiving compensation for assisting others with obtaining veterans’ benefits, as well as to regulate referrals and written fee agreements related to such assistance. The bill also seeks to define violations under the West Virginia Consumer Credit and Protection Act. As someone who has served this country and sworn an oath to defend the Constitution, I believe deeply in the principles of individual liberty, informed choice, and personal agency. While it is important to protect veterans from predatory or unscrupulous actors, I am concerned that the broad prohibitions in SB 704 may unintentionally limit veterans’ ability to choose from a range of qualified and reputable advocates or service providers when seeking assistance with navigating complex benefit systems. Veterans’ benefit processes are often detailed and nuanced, and many veterans rely on trusted advisors — including attorneys, accredited representatives, and experienced advocates — to help them understand their options and pursue their claims. Prescribing overly restrictive rules about who may be compensated for this work could narrow those options and reduce meaningful choice at a time when veterans most need support.  As a veteran, I value the freedom to choose the services I use, and I served to defend that freedom for all Americans. In nearly every area of life—taxes, Social Security, Medicare, healthcare—I can choose to use free services or pay a professional for assistance. I believe I should have that same choice when it comes to claims processing. Seeking and paying for help with a disability claim is no different than hiring someone to prepare my taxes. It is a personal decision, and it should remain my right to make. Public policy works best when it protects against abuse while still preserving flexibility and choice for those directly affected. I urge the committee to carefully reconsider moving forward with SB 704. Thank you for your time, consideration, and service to the State of West Virginia. Respectfully submitted, Merle Jones CSM (R) U.S. Army Veteran
2026 Regular Session HB4991 (Energy and Public Works)
Comment by: J. McMurray on February 15, 2026 12:43
I think this bill should include solar generation and less emphasis on coal dependancy. Why? A major West Virginia electric utility supplier just announced construction of a new 1,200-megawatt natural gas power plant and 70 megawatts of new solar generation around the state. At the same time hundreds of West Virginia coal miners are losing their jobs. Why not build a new coal fired power plant? The political climate for coal hasn't been this good for decades. It is generally much cheaper and faster to build a natural gas-fired power plant than a coal fired plant. Gas plants have lower capital costs, often ranging from $500 to $2500 per kW. In over 99% of cases, new utility-scale solar projects have lower capital costs, and in many regions, they are even cheaper to operate than existing, already-built coal plants. It's the market that is dictating use of energy sources other than coal. West Virginia had better keep up.  
2026 Regular Session HB4983 (Energy and Public Works)
Comment by: Lynn Cayton on February 15, 2026 12:16
House Bill 4983 — one of the proposed data center bills — has passed out of the House Energy & Public Works Committee on Tuesday. It will be on the House floor for 2nd reading on Monday, February 16. (All Delegates can propose an amendment to the bill at this time.) During committee, a bipartisan amendment to add stronger transparency around water use was introduced. After nearly two hours of discussion, the amendment failed on an 8-12 vote, with 5 members absent. The bill advanced without added water-use disclosure requirements. PLEASE SUPPORT AN AMENDMENT TO HB 4983 FOR WATER USAGE TRANSPARENCY IN THE CERTIFICATION PROCESS.
2026 Regular Session HB4983 (Energy and Public Works)
Comment by: J. McMurray on February 15, 2026 11:57
Politicians jamming these data centers down the throats of West Virginians who clearly do not want them as "neighbors" speaks to their lack of true representation. Even this bill refers to them as 'a high impact data center'. Another example of representatives allowing out-of-state interests to take advantage of West Virginia with little benefit to the people living near these centers. Are we that desperate for new business?
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Timothy Chittum on February 15, 2026 11:49
Edibles would be an excellent addition to the medical cannabis family in West Virginia. Capsules are fine but they are not time released so what’s wrong with adding a little flavor to our lives in different edible forms. I don’t understand how we are always falling behind, are the pill addicts really that profitable? Let our cannibis continue to grow! (Pun intended)
2026 Regular Session HB5433 (Finance)
Comment by: Jamie on February 15, 2026 11:28
I am in full support of the passage of this bill.
2026 Regular Session HB4961 (Finance)
Comment by: J. McMurray on February 15, 2026 11:18
Please vote YES on this bill. In 2023–2024, the median household income in West Virginia was approximately $57,917 to $59,608, with some estimates for real median household income reaching $63,150. So, the cap at $150k is generous. If you make more than $150,000 annually you are doing much better than most of your neighbors.  Those at the median household income pay the same prices for food, utilities, or gasoline as do those making over $150,000 annually. This is one area to help level the playing field.
2026 Regular Session HB4712 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Jessica Meadows-Harbert’ on February 15, 2026 11:14
I stand for

House Bill 4712

Vote Yes
2026 Regular Session HB4712 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Katie Estep on February 15, 2026 10:59
This bill is needed desperately so that anyone who drinks & drives while under the influence of either drugs or alcohol causing death gets a stricter sentence than the current law carries.
2026 Regular Session HB4922 (Finance)
Comment by: J. McMurray on February 15, 2026 10:35
Please vote yes, this is a common sense bill which honors those who have paid their dues for decades. Many seniors advancing in age face costly health related issues. Any financial relief is welcomed.
2026 Regular Session HB4712 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Cristy Anderson on February 15, 2026 10:31
Baylea’s mother lost a child to a drunk driver. Parents in WV family courts are losing children to drunk drivers too….. when the court gives full custody to the drunk driving parent, despite police reports, safety plans, and CPS substantiated abuse.  This will happen when the other coparent has no legal history, no substance abuse history, is financially stable, and is not a troublemaker at all. Why would this happen? Because the non-drunk driving co-parent pushed for prosecution of the drunk-driving parent. The non-drunk-driving parent is accused of “alienating behavior” or “not encouraging a positive relationship” between the children and parent who could have killed the children. Yes, seeking accountability for a drunk driver becomes weaponized against the safe, protective parent. The safe parent will be accused of “teaching the children that the drunk driver could have killed them.” When innocent lives, like Baylea Bowers, are taken, the system pretends to be shocked and outraged.  The system feigns, “What could we have done differently to prevent this?” If Destany Lester grew up watching the legal system of WV give free passes or even reward drunk drivers, the system itself bears some onus in each death that occurs in the state. It is teaching the next generation to normalize drunk driving.  It is teaching the next generation that if you drive drunk and risk killing someone, the system will punish those who seek prosecution, and it will reward those who choose this risky behavior. Studies and statistics show that the greatest deterrent to drunk driving is “certainty of punishment over severity of punishment.” All drunk drivers need to know that they will certainly be charged, prosecuted, and laws will be equally enforced, regardless of familial status, regardless of job status, regardless of any other factors. The confidence we place in our judiciary depends upon equal enforcement of our laws, no matter who commits the crime. WV needs tougher punishments for drunk driving and we need to see those consequences equally enforced, possibly removing or severely limiting judicial discretion in sentencing.  We also have to completely prohibit retaliatory acts against those who push for prosecution of true and factual dangerous behavior.
2026 Regular Session HB4916 (Finance)
Comment by: J. McMurray on February 15, 2026 10:17
So the state wants to eliminate assessing certain taxes, but allow for more tax exemptions. The math doesn't work. Alcohol, tobacco, vapes and gambling are not necessities for life. Keep collecting taxes on these non-necessities. We live in a very rural state that requires we drive to the grocery store, doctor's office, and drug store to name a few. In view of that, I would consider gasoline a necessity. Yet, we pay roughly 35.7 cents per gallon for gasoline. Am I supporting eliminating taxes on gasoline? No, but a reduction or elimination makes more sense than on non-essential items.
2026 Regular Session SB704 (Judiciary)
Comment by: John Blomstrom on February 15, 2026 09:58
I am a United States Marine Corps veteran who has spent my post-service career working with and advocating for fellow veterans. I appreciate West Virginia’s efforts to protect veterans from predatory practices, and I share that goal. My concern is that SB 704, as drafted, may unintentionally reduce veterans’ access to assistance rather than improve it. Many veterans seek help beyond traditional free resources because they experience confusion, delays, or limited communication in the VA claims process. For some veterans, additional support—whether from accredited representatives or private consultants—can be the difference between successfully navigating the system and abandoning a claim they rightfully earned. Federal law already governs who may formally represent veterans before the VA as an accredited agent or attorney. Those rules apply to individuals acting as a veteran’s legal representative or agent of record in the preparation, presentation, or prosecution of claims. Entities that do not act in that legal representative capacity fall outside that framework under federal statute and regulation  . There are also important constitutional considerations. Courts have repeatedly recognized that giving specialized advice and exchanging information are protected forms of speech. Broad prohibitions on compensated assistance can implicate veterans’ rights to speak, associate, and petition their government for earned benefits  . My concern is not about any one company or business model. It is about ensuring veterans retain freedom of choice while being protected from deception. Strong consumer safeguards—such as transparency requirements, written agreements, and prohibitions on misleading practices—can protect veterans without limiting their lawful options. West Virginia veterans deserve both protection and choice. I respectfully urge lawmakers to consider whether SB 704 strikes the right balance and whether narrower, targeted protections could achieve the same goal without restricting access to assistance. Respectfully submitted, John Blomstrom U.S. Marine Corps Veteran
2026 Regular Session HB4906 (Finance)
Comment by: J. McMurray on February 15, 2026 09:45
Please vote yes. Many seniors advancing in age face costly health related issues. Any financial relief is welcomed.
2026 Regular Session HB5493 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Suzanne Markowski on February 15, 2026 09:32
I urge you to OPPOSE this.  This is not a solution. They have committed a crime, and they have done their time. This is inhumane, cruel and unusual punishment. I truly can’t believe this is even introduced. Proper housing, support, psychological help and resources are what is needed. This is listed in the DSM as a mental illness. Look under treatment for this.  Is this what is recommended?  No, above and probably an antidepressant.  Unfortunately they don’t go for treatment in the first place, because of the shame. Honestly, I feel like we’re going back in time, like the slavery days, and before, with beheading, or cut off their tongues. Instead, please give the people the resources they need, not this outrageous punishment. Thank you for listening. Research has shown that less than 3 % reoffend.
2026 Regular Session HB4855 (Education)
Comment by: J. McMurray on February 15, 2026 09:17
Please put this on the scrap pile of ill conceived ideas. It's bad enough the president signed an exucutive order to dismantle the federal Department of Education. This was a push to reduce federal oversight and return educational control to states. And now you want to eliminate the West Virginia Department of Education? Either education in this state is a priority, or it is not. This bill would suggest that it is not. The West Virginia Department of Education is the last line of defense for education in our state. Not all school districts are prepared or equipped to perform at a high level without oversight.
2026 Regular Session HB4712 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Loretta Jewell on February 15, 2026 08:57
To whom it may concern, There needs to be stricter laws for  the people who are driving under the influence of alcohol, cocaine, marijuana, meth, or any other drug there is. When involving a murder it should be 25 years max. The ruling in this case is right down ridiculous. That murderer (Lester) got put in time out basically, for killing another human being. Robing (Bower) of her life but yet Lester still gets to go on about her life like nothing happened. There are people in Jail today that's been there for years over selling marijuana. A murder (Lester) gets 6 months home confinement, and 6 months in a rehabilitation center. Really? really? Make it make sense please. The ruling in this case just give permission that it's ok to drink and drive high and drunk and kill someone and face no consequences. Who will be the next victim?
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: J. McMurray on February 15, 2026 08:49
Wow, there seems to be no end to terrible ideas and a waste of time. This is a glowing example. Please do not advance this.
2026 Regular Session HB4712 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Sara Duncan on February 15, 2026 08:22
Tougher laws needed for vehiclar homicide
2026 Regular Session HB4199 (Finance)
Comment by: Rebecca Martin on February 15, 2026 07:57
At the very lease, everyone should at least get minimum wage. Also raise the minimum wage!
2026 Regular Session HB4712 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Linda Carter on February 15, 2026 07:39
Needs to pass on behalf of the family of Baylea Bower, prayers continues for just.
2026 Regular Session HB4712 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Linda Carter on February 15, 2026 07:35
This needs to pass what a disgrace at the sentencing for Destiny Lester.
2026 Regular Session HB5053 (Public Education)
Comment by: Brandon franklin on February 15, 2026 07:35
Dear Members of the West Virginia House of Delegates, I am writing to express serious concern about House Bill 5053, which would create a blanket 90-day limit preventing families from withdrawing a child from public school for homeschooling while an active truancy or pre-petition process is underway. West Virginia Legislature This bill may seem intended to address absenteeism, but it fails to protect children who are struggling in public schools due to bullying, unsafe environments, social stress, or mental health issues. For many students, especially those who are bullied or feel unsafe, continuing to attend school can cause significant emotional harm. One public commenter pointed out that this bill assumes families choosing homeschooling during truancy cases are simply seeking an “easy out,” when in reality these decisions are sometimes made to protect a child’s well-being. home.wvlegislature.gov Families should have the freedom to choose the learning environment that best supports their child’s growth, safety, and happiness. Homeschooled children are already part of a regulated system under West Virginia law, where parents must file a notice of intent and maintain educational standards. Removing the option to homeschool for 90 days because of attendance issues removes that freedom for all families, regardless of their individual circumstances. U.S. Department of Education This bill also raises concerns about equal protection because it singles out homeschooling as a response to truancy without applying similar limitations to other educational alternatives. home.wvlegislature.gov In many cases, a child struggling socially or emotionally in school needs more flexibility and support, not restrictive timelines. Rather than cutting into parents’ rights and limiting educational choice, legislators should focus on targeted solutions that help at-risk students feel safe and supported — whether in public school or through homeschooling. I urge you to vote against House Bill 5053 in its current form and support policies that truly protect all children’s rights, safety, and educational future. Thank you for your service.
2026 Regular Session HB5525 (Energy and Public Works)
Comment by: Kathleen Porter on February 15, 2026 06:55
ALL West Virginians deserve access to clean drinking water. Throwing a band-aid over a mortal wound is not going to be helpful. Adequate funding should be allocated to completely restore clean water access for everyone. This is the job of politicians in this state. Also, allowing data centers to take over in our state is a death sentence for WV. Unregulated bottom feeders will use our water and pollute it without any oversight. Look out for our future of this state like you are paid to do.
2026 Regular Session HB4712 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Jennifer Workman Mills on February 14, 2026 22:24
I support this bill! Long live Baylea!! ✝️🕊💔
2026 Regular Session HB5525 (Energy and Public Works)
Comment by: Rev. Caitlin Ware on February 14, 2026 20:51
I appreciate the effort being made to address this public health crisis. This bill could be improved with the following amendments:
  • Directing emergency funds directly to municipalities and PSDs based on need as determined by the DEP Drinking Water Intended Use Plan ranked projects.
  • Removing fines for failing systems to pay this fund. We cannot "rob Peter to pay Paul." We cannot fine failing systems to pay for other failing systems.
  • Allocate $250 million in emergency infrastructure funding for immediate use to address this ongoing public health crisis. (In just 4 of these counties it would cost $287M to fund what the DEP labels "high priority" projects there).
  • Seeking "private sector partnerships" hastens the privatization of our public water systems. Remove this.
  • Continuing a loan/grant program only leads to unequal distribution of funds. Send funds to each of these counties and allow them to address their top DEP ranked projects.
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Jana O’Dell on February 14, 2026 19:55
Allowing edibles in WV for medical marijuana patients is the right thing to do. Patients should not be limited to what they can use.
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Mary Jane on February 14, 2026 19:49
Please bring edibles to my store  
2026 Regular Session HB4712 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Christina Creasy on February 14, 2026 19:30
This was so heartbreaking. I’m confused how you can be under the influence of all this, cross three lanes of traffic, take someone’s life, and not do any jail time.  Please make this make sense.
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Martina Bailey on February 14, 2026 19:16
I support this bill, and I think it would benefit the area.
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Chris Gorrell on February 14, 2026 19:09
Edibles need to be legalized due to reduce the amount of smoking it takes me to use.
2026 Regular Session HB4412 (Judiciary)
Comment by: West Virginia Resident on February 14, 2026 18:58
This poor legislation... STOP trying to “fix” the internet without understanding how it actually works. If you do/have not work(ed) in the tech industry, and you have not meaningfully consulted software engineers, security professionals, and privacy experts as part of serious due diligence on this bill, you are not equipped to legislate it responsibly.
Mandating age or identity verification across websites and apps is not a simple checkbox feature. At scale, it requires collecting, transmitting, and in practice often temporarily storing highly sensitive personal data such as government IDs, facial images, financial credentials, and device identifiers. That necessarily expands data retention and processing pipelines across multiple entities, including third party verification vendors. Each additional processor, API integration, and logging layer increases the attack surface and creates centralized repositories of high value identity data. Even brief retention windows do not eliminate risk. Data is still exposed during upload, transmission, verification, and logging, and a breach during any of those stages can result in irreversible harm. Those are not hypotheticals. They are predictable outcomes of system design.
Statutory prohibitions on selling or retaining data sound protective, but they do not neutralize structural incentives or technical realities. Vendors may retain metadata, hashed identifiers, fraud scores, or transaction logs under broad allowances for security, abuse prevention, or legal compliance. Those records can be correlated across platforms, enabling cross service profiling even if raw IDs are deleted. Enforcement is reactive and resource constrained, while misuse and overcollection are often invisible to the public. Once identity verification infrastructure is normalized, function creep is predictable. Systems built for one category of content can be expanded to others, steadily eroding anonymity and increasing long term privacy risk for lawful adults.
Yes, minors should not be accessing pornography. But that is one narrow example within a much broader online landscape. The internet contains many forms of content that are inappropriate for children. We do not solve that by forcing every digital service to build identity surveillance infrastructure.
In the physical world, we do not assign the government to monitor every household to ensure children cannot access medication, alcohol, chemicals, adult magazines, or other restricted items. Parents are responsible for safeguarding their homes. The same principle applies online.
Further, what safeguards prevent this same verification infrastructure from being used to identify and target minors? If a system can distinguish adults from children, it can just as easily isolate children as a category, creating the capacity to profile and algorithmically target minors at scale, a risk far more consequential than the narrow harm this overreaching bill claims to address.
Protect children, yes. But do not dismantle privacy and architectural neutrality in the process.
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Shawn james on February 14, 2026 18:36
Im a medical marijuanna patient and i would love for the state to look into making gummies for us
2026 Regular Session HB5525 (Energy and Public Works)
Comment by: Jennings Berry on February 14, 2026 18:28
I support the idea of addressing clean water infrastructure in southern West Virginia, but this bill doesn’t go far enough for the crisis our communities are facing. Spreading $10 million across 13 counties won’t come close to fixing systems that have been underfunded for decades. Many of these communities already struggle just to keep aging infrastructure running. Requiring them to navigate more grant and loan applications puts the burden back on the very places that lack resources and staff. Clean water is basic infrastructure, not something rural communities should have to fight for year after year. I’m also concerned about provisions that could increase privatization or fine systems that are already failing — those costs ultimately land on residents through higher bills. West Virginians don’t need more process; we need real investment that matches the scale of the problem. I urge lawmakers to strengthen this bill with larger direct funding and fewer barriers so help reaches communities quickly and fairly.
2026 Regular Session HB5345 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Marshall Browning on February 14, 2026 18:16
I support HB 5345 because stable childcare is essential for working families and for our local workforce. Childcare providers have fixed costs every day — paying staff, maintaining safe ratios, and providing a safe learning environment — regardless of whether a child attends three hours or eight. The current hourly reimbursement model creates unnecessary instability and makes it harder for providers to plan and keep programs open. Basing payments on enrollment rather than daily attendance is a practical, common-sense approach that helps childcare providers remain financially stable, supports parents who rely on consistent care, and strengthens our community and economy. Please support HB 5345 to help ensure reliable childcare for West Virginia families.
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Sarah Thibodeaux on February 14, 2026 18:04
West Virginia, a state ravaged by overdoses, addiction, cancer, and other health issues, currently denies medical patients access to important forms of medication while simultaneously restricting patients from using the most common method of consumption, smoking. I have work experience in the industry both in Colorado and in West Virginia and have been a patron of cannabis in many recreational states. I have had patients who have sobered up from other hard drugs such as methamphetamine and pain killers. Restricting access by limiting methods of consumption, which are not all created equal and affect everyone differently, only hurts consumers/patients. To put it bluntly, cannabis dispensaries aren't advertising to children either, as children aren't purchasing cannabis from us. There should be common sense cannabis laws just like there are gun laws - keep it put up and locked up, out of access from your children. Punish the bad actors, don't punish the majority. And where does the tax revenue go btw? Apparently, to train cops? Most states have tax laws that allocate taxes from cannabis to help things around the state that actually need it - not police or ICE. Our highways, our schools (Logan Co High School has mold growing all over it, there's several others that have been shut down due to the conditions of the schools), our substance abuse centers (many of which have shut down due to lack of funding, like the ones in Southern West Virginia), cancer research, programs for ex convicts, etc.   Our government is SEVERELY failing our state regarding cannabis regulations.
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Nick on February 14, 2026 18:04
I support this bill
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Candace Pendleton on February 14, 2026 17:53
Yes, edibles please!
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Cynthia Stutler on February 14, 2026 17:44
We need edibles to be available in WV. It doesn’t make any sense at all why it’s not. Some people need that form of medication. Not everyone consumes flower or pills. Please fix this injustice.
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: James a Downey ll on February 14, 2026 17:42
Hello my name is James  im am 60 years old  I wish  you will  pass the bill  we need  this for  ar sceneries its good for  back pain  and arthritis  thank you
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Regan Thomas on February 14, 2026 16:58
I support this bill and appreciate the effort to expand West Virginia’s medical cannabis program to include edible products. Patients need more options, especially non-smokable formats that are easier to dose and often better suited for pain, sleep, nausea, and other qualifying conditions. I am writing to respectfully request an amendment that ensures West Virginia hemp-derived cannabinoid manufacturers and operators are eligible to participate in the medical edibles program. West Virginia already has compliant hemp businesses that have operated responsibly in-state for years — investing in facilities, employees, testing, labeling, and regulatory compliance. These businesses have real-world experience producing edible products safely and consistently. If the medical program expands to include edibles but limits licensing only to current medical cannabis dispensary/grower structures, the state risks: •    shutting out experienced WV manufacturers who are already doing this work, •    forcing patients into a less competitive market, •    and sending economic opportunity to larger out-of-state operators. A straightforward solution is to add language that allows licensed/registered WV hemp operators in good standing to apply for a medical edibles license or endorsement, with clear requirements such as: •    third-party lab testing (COAs) for potency and contaminants, •    compliant packaging and labeling, •    batch tracking and recall procedures, •    WV-based manufacturing standards, •    and enforcement for noncompliance. This amendment would protect patients and strengthen the program by adding more qualified in-state producers, increasing competition, improving access, and keeping jobs and tax revenue in West Virginia. Please amend the bill so West Virginia hemp operators have a pathway into the medical edible program. We want to be part of the solution: safe products, transparent testing, and WV-grown/WV-made economic growth. Thank you for your time and for moving this legislation forward.
2026 Regular Session HB5525 (Energy and Public Works)
Comment by: Patricia Triplett on February 14, 2026 16:57
As a lifelong citizen of Wayne Co WV, I am asking that the leadership of our beautiful state change their decesion making process to be in line with the citizens. We are tired of bad leadership, you have allowed Wv water, air, and people to be harmed by your bad decision-making abilities. Anything that is not for. Higher water and air standards are a NO. We the citizens of WV that you work for need as a life essential clean water, clean air, and clean land. Please excuse yourself from your position if you are. against what the citizens are requesting. You should be ashamed to say that you represent a state that does not put its citizens first, citizens who have no clean water, no clean air.
2026 Regular Session HB5433 (Finance)
Comment by: Carol Morris on February 14, 2026 16:51
I feel that hearing aids are a necessity of life that we all need at one point or another and not having help to get them would impact your emotional and financial self. Insurance should be a help to the insured, not an obstacle. I feel that if you have insurance you should have coverage to assist in getting your health taken care of no matter what that need is. Insurance has gotten to where it is not helping the insured unless they go through hoops or not at all. Insurance needs to do better!
2026 Regular Session HB5525 (Energy and Public Works)
Comment by: Wendy Coleman on February 14, 2026 16:46
The initial amount of $10 million is insufficient and needs to be increased to at least $250 million. The need to apply for grants should be eliminated. Fining the utilities will only result in privatization or rate increases.  Neither outcome is in the best interest of the consumers. We are in a crisis and need this funding to be available immediately.
2026 Regular Session HB5525 (Energy and Public Works)
Comment by: Elizabeth Freeman on February 14, 2026 16:46
I think it is imperative to fund clean water to these communities who have been going without for so long. It is unconscionable that it’s not already done.
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Brian Taylor on February 14, 2026 16:19
I fully support the ability to add edibles for sale in Lewisburg Greenlight Dispensary.  It would be a perfect option for those who do not want to consume their medication by smoking it.  It also would provide more of a concise pain relief treatment as ingesting provides a total body calling experience
2026 Regular Session HB5525 (Energy and Public Works)
Comment by: Nikki Reynolds on February 14, 2026 16:13
Providing tax breaks to data centers but denying urgent accessible funding to the communities and people you “serve” for CLEAN DRINKING WATER is not good representation of the people. Please do the right thing. Stop lining pockets and start protecting and saving lives.  Respectfully.
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Deseray Hughes on February 14, 2026 15:54
I believe west virginians should have access to edible forms of cannabis. I also believe it should be regulated like alcohol and be readily available to adults with out having to purchase a medical card. West virginia is losing MILLIONS per year to our surrounding states. The time to act is NOW!!
2026 Regular Session SB4 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Matthew B Cole on February 14, 2026 15:37
This bill is a gross violation of our First Amendment rights to free speech and the right to peaceably assemble. Police have a difficult job but that does not give the WV Legislature the right to violate the provisions of the U.S. Constitution. I object to all of this bill.
2026 Regular Session HB5525 (Energy and Public Works)
Comment by: Paige Reiring on February 14, 2026 15:25
There are places in our southern coalfields who haven't had clean water in 50 years. FIFTY, F-I-F-T-Y, FIVE-ZERO YEARS.
These changes to the Coalfield Clean Water Act are an insult to the people who have MADE the wealth that the likes of our legislature sit on.  These amendments have been made with greed and capital in mind when this bill was designed for the health, wellbeing and safety of ourselves, our children, our land, and our WILD AND WONDERFUL West Virginia.

There is no such thing as a sacrifice zone.

2026 Regular Session HB4712 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Megan Settle on February 14, 2026 15:24
Baylea Bill needs to pass. If this pass was available 14 years ago my sister would still be here alive with my family.
2026 Regular Session HB5525 (Energy and Public Works)
Comment by: colin ross on February 14, 2026 15:19
My name is Colin Ross, and I am a lifelong resident of Cannelton, West Virginia. My family has lived in this valley for generations, and I still live in the same home I was brought to as a newborn. I want to be clear: this is a public health emergency. The language of this bill does not reflect the urgency of what we are living with. This is not a future concern. This is happening now. Come to Cannelton. Smell the air. Look at the water. Talk to the residents. Review the citizen reports that have been submitted for years. Ask yourself honestly — would you live there? Would you raise your family there under those conditions? No community should be expected to live this way. House Bill 5525, as written, does not provide the level of urgency or funding necessary to fix this emergency. The proposed $10 million fund is not enough. The original request of $250 million must be restored to reflect the seriousness of the situation. Requiring struggling Public Service Districts to apply for grants or take on loans only delays solutions. Penalizing them with fines makes it worse. Communities like mine should not be forced to carry the financial burden of fixing a public health emergency. This bill must clearly recognize this situation for what it is — an emergency — and respond accordingly. We are not asking for special treatment. We are asking for basic protection. Clean water is not optional. It is a necessity for life. I respectfully ask the legislature to increase funding, remove barriers to access, eliminate fines, and treat this as the public health emergency that it is. Thank you.
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Tommy Pinkcloud on February 14, 2026 15:13
  As a patient , I urge support for HB 5260 to allow regulated medical cannabis edibles in WV dispensaries. This would give patients safer, more accessible non-inhalable options with proper dosing controls. PLEASE advance this bill!
2026 Regular Session HB4712 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Monica Tatum on February 14, 2026 15:12
West Virginia is never going to improve as a state if we keep indulging the criminals. Drug addiction is a disease, but that is not an excuse to endanger other people's lives. Stricter sentencing guidelines are a must.
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: John white on February 14, 2026 14:57
Yes I would love for the state of WV to allow edibles I feel there is a stronger medicinal value and is much more controllable it also takes away the long term effects on the lungs when smoked or vaped it also allows for people who are not all that comfortable smoking it
2026 Regular Session HB4947 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Nicole on February 14, 2026 14:27
We need religious exemptions.
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Zachary P Hewlett on February 14, 2026 14:26
Edibles are a great and tasteful way to take our medicine when you cant smoke due to lung or throat issues. Regular extracts have a terrible taste that may not be good for those with nausea. Its about time we catch up to other states and stop limiting our patients.
2026 Regular Session HB4534 (Judiciary)
Comment by: J. McMurray on February 14, 2026 13:41
Please do not vote this into law. If it looks like voter suppression, then maybe it is. Does this proposal suggest that elections are not secure? Another solution to a problem that simply does not exist.
2026 Regular Session HB4712 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Kayleigh Allman on February 14, 2026 13:37
This is a bill that absolutely needs to be passed so that families who WILL experience a travesty like this will get the justice they deserve!!
2026 Regular Session HB5525 (Energy and Public Works)
Comment by: Christy Cardwell on February 14, 2026 13:26
This bill needs to be refined if it is to help the areas that are most deeply affected. These are the things I believe should be done: 1. A vast increase in the initial amount being put in the fund you’re suggesting. $10 million may seem reasonable, but people are suffering.  $250 million would go much further. 2. Eliminate the provision for fines. Please don’t  fine struggling utilities to force them to pay for their own upgrades. They can’t afford them. 3. Eliminate the need to apply for grants and loans. This is a public health emergency. Emergency funding must be provided now. Thank you for considering the need.
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Danica Riley on February 14, 2026 13:22
We need edibles here they are the very best in customer service.
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Randall R Smith on February 14, 2026 13:08
Yes I would love for gummies to come to West Virginia
2026 Regular Session HB4534 (Judiciary)
Comment by: J. McMurray on February 14, 2026 13:04
Please vote yes to protect property owners against this type of fraud. Many times I see fixes for problems that don't exist. I can honestly say that this addresses a real and growing problem. Thank you.
2026 Regular Session HB5377 (Finance)
Comment by: Edward Diaz on February 14, 2026 13:01
Chairman, Vice Chairman, and Members of the Committee: Thank you for the opportunity to submit public comment in support of House Bill 5377, establishing the Burial Equity Grant Program for National Guard and Reserve servicemembers. This legislation represents an important step toward ensuring fairness, dignity, and respect for those who have served our state and nation. Purpose of the Legislation House Bill 5377 addresses a longstanding inequity by providing modest burial assistance to members of the National Guard and Reserve whose families may not receive the same level of support afforded to active-duty servicemembers. These men and women serve alongside active-duty forces in combat operations, domestic emergencies, and disaster response, yet their families can face disparities in benefits depending on duty status at the time of death. This bill ensures that service is honored equally and that families are not left to shoulder disproportionate financial burdens during a time of grief. The Need for Burial Equity Members of the Guard and Reserve play a critical role in West Virginia’s emergency preparedness and national defense. They respond to floods, public health crises, and overseas deployments, often balancing military duties with civilian careers and family responsibilities. When these servicemembers pass away, their families deserve the assurance that the state recognizes their sacrifice with dignity. Funeral and burial costs can create financial strain, and the absence of equitable support can compound emotional hardship. HB 5377 provides a practical solution by offering targeted assistance to close this gap. Fiscal Considerations The proposed Burial Equity Grant Program represents a modest and manageable investment relative to the state budget. The fiscal impact is minimal, yet the benefit to families and communities is significant. Providing burial assistance is a cost-effective way to demonstrate the state’s commitment to servicemembers while helping prevent financial hardship that could otherwise require additional forms of public support. This legislation reflects responsible stewardship of taxpayer resources while fulfilling a moral obligation. Impact on Military Families and Readiness Equitable benefits contribute to morale and reinforce trust among servicemembers and their families. When Guard and Reserve members know their service will be honored equally, it strengthens confidence in state leadership and supports recruitment and retention. West Virginia relies heavily on its National Guard and Reserve forces for emergency response and community resilience. Policies that demonstrate respect for their service help maintain a strong and ready force. Alignment with West Virginia Values West Virginians have a proud tradition of military service and community support. Establishing a burial equity grant program reflects the state’s core values of honoring sacrifice, supporting families, and doing what is right. HB 5377 sends a clear message that every individual who answered the call to serve is valued equally, regardless of component status. Conclusion House Bill 5377 is a compassionate, fiscally responsible, and necessary measure that corrects an inequity affecting National Guard and Reserve families. By passing this legislation, the Committee and the Legislature will reaffirm West Virginia’s commitment to honoring all who serve with fairness and dignity. Thank you for your consideration and for your continued support of West Virginia’s servicemembers, veterans, and their families.  
2026 Regular Session HB4712 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Terri Beller on February 14, 2026 12:55
The current sentencing for this crime is a joke. These changes should've happened long before now! Do better!! Although nothing will bring this beautiful young woman back, the least you could do is see to it that no other family has to experience this slap to the face!
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: JASON BOYCE on February 14, 2026 12:42
I myself dont enjoy smoking and would love the opportunity to get edibles.
2026 Regular Session HB5345 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Karen Rodgers on February 14, 2026 12:40
I am writing to strongly support passage of HB 5345, for multiple reasons.  Sufficient good, safe and reliable childcare in our state is essential for our State's continued economic growth.  When good workers are shut out of employment opportunities because there are insufficient resources for good, reliable and safe child care, the State suffers.  Those same workers also find themselves penalized through no fault of their own, essentially being penalized economically for choosing to give priority to ensuring their children have good, reliable and safe child care, even if that means a parent, who is then removed from the work force.  If West Virginia were to be known as a state that prioritizes the care of its children, that promotes opportunities for currently disenfranchised workers to remain, or become, part of our State's work force, it can only enhance our reputation as a state with good policies aimed at making the best workers available for employers and a good location for new businesses.  When children have good, safe and reliable care, they flourish, their families flourish, and the spill-over to the State is the strengthening of the family unit -  a win-win for everyone.
2026 Regular Session SB704 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Edward Diaz on February 14, 2026 12:32
SB 704 is designed to protect veterans and their families from predatory practices by unaccredited, for-profit companies that charge fees for assistance with VA disability claims. These companies — often referred to as “claim sharks” — have increasingly targeted veterans while lobbying policymakers with misleading claims about their role and value. Evidence from veterans organizations, consumer protection officials, and federal guidance demonstrates that many industry talking points misrepresent the risks and overlook the extensive free, accredited assistance already available. Supporting SB 704 would align West Virginia with best practices to safeguard veterans’ earned benefits and prevent financial exploitation. Background Federal law requires individuals assisting veterans with disability compensation claims to be accredited through the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs to ensure training, ethical standards, and oversight. Free assistance is widely available through accredited Veterans Service Organizations such as the Veterans of Foreign Wars and the American Legion, as well as state veteran service officers with the West Virginia Department of Veterans Assistance in locations across West Virginia. SB 704 reinforces these protections by limiting compensation for unaccredited claims assistance and strengthening consumer safeguards. Why SB 704 Is Necessary 1. Industry Lobbyists Misrepresent Their Services Claim: Companies only provide consulting or education. Fact: Many firms use semantic distinctions to avoid accreditation while still guiding veterans through claims preparation and charging significant fees. Activity — not terminology — determines consumer risk. Relevance to SB 704: The bill closes loopholes that allow companies to avoid oversight through rebranding. 2. Paid Services Are Not Needed Claim: Veterans must pay for help because the system is too complex. Fact: Accredited assistance is available at no cost through VSOs and government offices with trained professionals accountable to federal standards. Relevance to SB 704: The legislation reinforces the role of trusted, free assistance rather than allowing unregulated alternatives. 3. Promises of Higher Ratings Are Misleading Claim: Companies help veterans obtain higher disability ratings. Fact: No entity can guarantee a rating increase, and such claims are widely cited as predatory marketing tactics. Relevance to SB 704: The bill helps prevent misleading claims that could pressure veterans into costly contracts. 4. “Freedom of Choice” Without Safeguards Leads to Harm Claim: Veterans should be free to hire paid consultants. Fact: Some contracts require thousands of dollars in fees or a share of future benefits, which can significantly reduce the value of earned compensation. Relevance to SB 704: The bill ensures consumer protections so veterans are not financially exploited. 5. Documented Harm to Veterans Claim: The industry fills a harmless gap. Fact: Reports from veterans organizations and consumer protection officials document financial loss, aggressive sales tactics, and misleading contracts. Relevance to SB 704: Strengthening protections addresses documented risks rather than hypothetical concerns. 6. Enforcement Gaps Are Being Exploited Claim: Companies operate legally because enforcement is limited. Fact: Federal officials have issued warnings to numerous unaccredited firms, demonstrating ongoing compliance concerns. Relevance to SB 704: The legislation provides clearer standards and enforcement tools at the state level. Policy Benefits of SB 704 Supporting SB 704 would:
  • Protect veterans from excessive fees and misleading contracts
  • Reinforce the role of accredited, free assistance
  • Align state policy with federal accreditation standards
  • Reduce financial exploitation of earned benefits
  • Improve transparency and accountability
  • Demonstrate West Virginia’s commitment to veterans and their families
Broader Context States across the country are adopting similar consumer protection measures in response to growing concerns about predatory practices in the veterans benefits space. By advancing SB 704, policymakers in West Virginia can ensure veterans’ benefits remain protected and that assistance is provided ethically and responsibly. Conclusion The central question is not whether veterans deserve help navigating the benefits system — they unquestionably do. The question is whether unaccredited, fee-based actors should be allowed to profit from earned benefits without strong safeguards. Evidence from veterans organizations, regulators, and consumer protection officials demonstrates clear risks associated with unregulated claims consulting. SB 704 provides a balanced, commonsense approach that prioritizes veterans’ financial security and access to trusted assistance. For these reasons, I urge you to pass SB 704!
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Andrea Fleming on February 14, 2026 12:27
  • Allowing edibles in the state is a much healthier option for those that prefer not to smoke or vape. It would be a great benefit for a lot of cannabis users in the state.
2026 Regular Session HB5525 (Energy and Public Works)
Comment by: Rev. Stacy Tritt on February 14, 2026 12:26
As a United Methodist Pastor, I am very concerned about the ongoing public health crisis in our southern coalfields. Throughout scripture access to clean drinking water is prioritized by God, as seen from Moses bringing forth water from the rock, to Jesus meeting people at the well, to Paul's letters continually reminding us to give water to the thirsty. And yet, our citizens are provided water that burns their skin, stains their clothing, and is not safe to drink. I am grateful that this bill is being brought forth, but the changes that have been made to it are unacceptable. In the United Methodist tradition, access to clean water is recognized as a human right. West Virginians deserve clean water. This is absolutely a public health EMERGENCY. We need this bill to increase the initial amount being put into the fund to at least $250 million. $10 million is not enough to solve the problems of the impacted infrastructure. The provision for fines must be eliminated. Struggling utilities need help, not punishment for problems they are unable to solve. This problem has been a result of many issues over decades--many caused by corporations, not the populace. The people cannot afford to fund the fees that would be charged to their utility providers, which cannot even provide clean water. The provision that requires applications for grants and loans is an undue burden intended to limit access to needed funds. The provision must, therefore, be removed. This is a public health emergency. Emergency funding must be provided now.
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Samuel reed on February 14, 2026 12:24
Let’s get edibles in West Virginia!!!