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Public Comments

2026 Regular Session HB4470 (Judiciary)
Comment by: J. McMurray on February 14, 2026 12:20
Please do not pass this proposed legislation. If elections are fair and secure why is this needed for an unknown number of persons affixing a "unique" mark? What if the mark isn't that unique and other very similar marks appear? Could that raise questions? Current election rules make it impossible to identify anyone from a ballot they cast. If a person chose to use a mark on their ballot similar to an owned brand, trademark, logo or other known associative symbol could that possibly lead to identifying a voter? Every ballot for a precinct is then publicly available on a state web site. I personally do not want my ballot published publicly, even if my name or other identifier is not attached to it. Public publication undermines the spirit of keeping my ballot private and election decisions personal.
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Sabrina H. on February 14, 2026 12:18
Cannabis is helpful to so many in pain but there are those that due to breathing issues are unable to find relief. Edibles are a safe and easy to consume and will allow pain relief for so many,  please take this into consideration when reviewing this bill.
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Tammy Montgomery on February 14, 2026 12:17
Edibles are a method by which to consume the numerous benefits of medical marijuana for those who do not want to or cannot ingest via inhalation.
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Kim Cline on February 14, 2026 12:16
Allowing marijuana edibles in licensed medical dispensaries is a practical, compassionate step that prioritizes patient health while maintaining strong public safety standards. Many medical patients—such as those undergoing cancer treatment, managing chronic pain, or living with severe gastrointestinal conditions—cannot tolerate smoking or vaporizing cannabis, making edibles a safer, longer-lasting alternative. Concerns about children mistaking edibles for candy are valid, but they can be effectively addressed through strict regulations: child-resistant packaging, clear THC labeling, limits on shapes and colors that mimic commercial sweets, and secure in-store dispensing by trained staff. States that already permit regulated edible sales have implemented these safeguards successfully, demonstrating that thoughtful policy can reduce risk while expanding access. By approving edibles within a tightly controlled medical framework, lawmakers can both protect children and ensure that vulnerable patients have safe, dignified treatment options prescribed and monitored by professionals.
2026 Regular Session HB5525 (Energy and Public Works)
Comment by: Katherine McGraw on February 14, 2026 12:15
1. A vast increase in the initial amount of $10 million to $250 million 2. Eliminate the provision for fines. You can't fine struggling utilities to essentially force them to pay for their own upgrades, it reads as forced privatization or inevitable rate increases. 3. Eliminate the need to apply for grants and loans. This is a public health emergency. 4. This bill must define the metrics for determining which systems are "rural" or "underserved". 5. This bill must define specific scientific research referenced for setting maximum contaminant levels beyond the EPA, as already referenced in the original bill. 6. Although lead contamination should remain a priority, the state's most significant contaminants are PFAs (Occurrence of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances and inorganic analytes in groundwater and surface water used as sources for public water supply in West Virginia) and nitrate (EWG Tap Water Database | West Virginia), indicating the emergent need for speedy implementation of existing projects. +-
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: April Wright on February 14, 2026 11:52
I feel edibles would be great for those who can't smoke. Also would help greatly with pain as well. Thank you & pray can start getting them just cause some people with COPD & edibles are better for people with cancer.
2026 Regular Session HB4983 (Energy and Public Works)
Comment by: Melinda Vincent on February 14, 2026 11:23
Why would anyone vote against requiring DATA centers to have complete transparency on water usage? We have had a drought in the state the last two years and how many communities don't even have clean drinking water. I don't know what benefits these DATA centers will bring to the state. They will only provide a very few jobs, take up acres of land, use exorbitant amounts of water, cause noise pollution, light up our beautiful night skies with light pollution and use exorbitant amounts of electricity which will make our electric bills go up even more. So I ask, what do the people of this state get out of having DATA centers here?
2026 Regular Session HB4983 (Energy and Public Works)
Comment by: Melinda Vincent on February 14, 2026 11:23
Why would anyone vote against requiring DATA centers to have complete transparency on water usage? We have had a drought in the state the last two years and how many communities don't even have clean drinking water. I don't know what benefits these DATA centers will bring to the state. They will only provide a very few jobs, take up acres of land, use exorbitant amounts of water, cause noise pollution, light up our beautiful night skies with light pollution and use exorbitant amounts of electricity which will make our electric bills go up even more. So I ask, what do the people of this state get out of having DATA centers here?
2026 Regular Session HB4712 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Pam Gibson on February 14, 2026 11:21
  1. Please pass this Bill. An innocent young women lost her life because of someone driving drunk on drugs. And where was the punishment in this case.  I just don't understand.
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Rochelle tenney on February 14, 2026 10:43
There should be edibles in the dispensary
2026 Regular Session HB5433 (Finance)
Comment by: Kristina Shriver on February 14, 2026 10:43
As a Teacher of the visually Impaired, we are so limited for our students curriculums, adaptations and ability to have opportunities every other student has daily. As families in our state and county children with hearing impairments struggle to afford groceries, how do we expect them to get hearing evaluations, and then hearing aids if needed ( costing upward of 2500-5000.00.) Please consider passing this bill and allowing funding for not only our hearing impaired population but additional funding for our blind and low vision. Braillers, Braille paper, canes and adaptive technology and devices cost thousands and a normal household cannot afford all that is needed and required for a child’s success emotionally, and academically
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Colleen Yates on February 14, 2026 10:43
In a state that has one of the highest issues with lung problems you would think giving a non inhalant option wouldn’t need convincing. The full plant experience in edible forms is the most natural for pain relief when it comes to cannabis. Getting both the THC and terpenes to give you the full effect in your Endocannabinoid system is so beneficial for most patients. I have personally witness people go from walking with a cane to walking unassisted because of the ingestion forms. Let’s not keep being last in everything, help people find natural unaddictive ways to find relief.
2026 Regular Session HB5525 (Energy and Public Works)
Comment by: Melissa Wms Corbett on February 14, 2026 10:35
As a resident of the Southern Coalfields, I have seen firsthand the impact of not having clean water in the communities. The bill HB 5525 aims to address this issue and provide funding for water infrastructure improvements in the areas. This bill is crucial for ensuring the health and safety of our residents. What we must have is:
2026 Regular Session HB5525 (Energy and Public Works)
Comment by: Michael Eugene Estep on February 14, 2026 10:32
I respectfully but strongly urge revisions to HB 5525 on behalf of the communities of the southern West Virginia coalfields. While the bill acknowledges a serious public health crisis, its current provisions fall far short of what is needed. First, the proposed $10 million initial investment is inadequate. Addressing decades of infrastructure failure requires a meaningful commitment, and we continue to request an initial allocation of $250 million. Second, the provision allowing fines should be removed—struggling utilities cannot be penalized into compliance without worsening the problem. Finally, this legislation must recognize the situation as a public health emergency. Emergency conditions require immediate, direct funding—not delayed relief through grant and loan applications. The people of the southern coalfields need action now. Respectfully, Mike Estep
2026 Regular Session HB5525 (Energy and Public Works)
Comment by: Jonah Kone on February 14, 2026 10:25
I am a resident of Bluewell and a constituent of delegate Gearheart. These are some changes that are absolutely necessary to ensure we actually address this issue: 1. A vast increase in the initial amount being put in the fund they're creating...$10 million doesn't do anything. We still want $250 million 2. Eliminate the provision for fines. You can't fine struggling utilities to force them to pay for their own upgrades with money they don't have. 3. Eliminate the need to apply for grants and loans. This is a public health emergency. Emergency funding must be provided now
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Billy Ramey on February 14, 2026 10:07
As a registered medical cannabis patient in West Virginia, I support expanding the program to include regulated edibles for safer, non-inhalable options. Since developing asthma in 2026, inhalation methods like vaporizing dry leaf (the main accessible form) have become risky and aggravating to my lungs. Smoking is already prohibited, and while patients can make edibles at home using oils or tinctures, this is impractical: it requires expertise in dosing and infusion, risks inconsistent potency or contamination, and lacks the safety of professional manufacturing, testing, and labeling. Many other states allow regulated edibles, which provide reliable, sustained relief without respiratory harm—especially important for patients like me with breathing issues. Recent bills like Senate Bill 892 (introduced February 2026) and House Bill 5260 aim to authorize licensed processors to produce and dispensaries to sell edibles, with strong safeguards: Bureau approval per product, food safety compliance, child-resistant packaging, clear labeling, max 10 mg THC per serving (with limited variance), and no appealing shapes or marketing to minors. Amending the Medical Cannabis Act (§16A-3-2 on forms and §16A-3-3 on unlawful use) to include these regulated edibles would improve patient safety, access, and health outcomes while keeping strict controls and prohibiting smoking or recreational use. I urge the Legislature to pass this change to better serve patients with respiratory conditions and align with evidence-based medical cannabis practices. Thank you for your consideration.
2026 Regular Session HB5433 (Finance)
Comment by: DONALD Hardman on February 14, 2026 09:43

Im responding for my grandsons. He has been hearing impaired since birth. during covid and the "wear a mask" period,  he cried uncontrollably because he couldn't read faces or smiles. It is almost impossible to get insurances to cover the expenses of the Hearing assistance he needs. We've come a long way in Healthcare. However,  for the hearing impaired and legally deaf , we fall well short of their needs..

2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Justin Sargent on February 14, 2026 09:24
Hello. As a patient of medical marijuana in the hreat state of West By God. The pros of having edibles would vastly outweigh the cons. Older patients with more sensitive lungs would benefit immensely
2026 Regular Session HB4712 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Thomas Perkins on February 14, 2026 09:04
I strongly oppose HB 4712 in its current form. While "Baylea's Law" is undoubtedly well-intentioned, the proposed sentencing of 5 to 30 years is excessive and creates a dangerous legal overlap with second-degree murder, which traditionally requires a finding of malice. A more balanced approach would increase the minimum sentence to five years while maintaining the current 15-year maximum, thereby aligning the penalty with existing voluntary manslaughter laws. Furthermore, the proposed fines are disproportionately low for a felony involving a loss of life; instead of a nominal increase to $6,000, the legislature should implement significant financial penalties ranging from $10,000 to $100,000. Under WV Code §61-11A-4, a mandatory portion of these increased funds should be designated as direct restitution to the victim’s estate to provide meaningful support. True reform must also acknowledge that West Virginia lacks a comprehensive statutory Dram Shop Act, forcing victims to rely on the limited criminal provisions of WV Code §60-3A-25. We must hold businesses and inexperienced bartenders accountable for over-serving patrons who may be unaware of their own level of impairment, rather than solely focusing on a punitive 30-year sentence that undermines the rehabilitative purpose of our justice system.
2026 Regular Session HB4712 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Carol Pettry on February 14, 2026 08:53
Please pass this bill!
2026 Regular Session HB5053 (Public Education)
Comment by: Kendra Zeigler on February 14, 2026 08:20
I am writing to respectfully express my opposition to House Bill 5053. This bill is based on the assumption that families who file a Notice of Intent to homeschool during a truancy process are simply seeking an “easy out.” That premise overlooks the reality that some students with absences are experiencing serious issues such as bullying, unsafe environments, or mental health struggles. In these cases, requiring continued attendance could cause real harm. Current West Virginia law already provides a balanced solution. Superintendents have the authority to petition the court if a homeschooling decision is not in the best interest of the child. That process preserves due process and allows for individualized review. House Bill 5053 instead creates a blanket restriction that removes flexibility and may negatively impact vulnerable students. Additionally, the bill unfairly targets homeschooling while leaving other education alternatives untouched, raising equal protection concerns. Its language is also vague, particularly regarding when the “pre-petition process” begins, which invites inconsistent application. Truancy is an important issue, but solutions should protect student well-being, preserve due process, and avoid overbroad restrictions. I respectfully urge you to reconsider House Bill 5053 in its current form. Thank you for your time and service to our state.
2026 Regular Session HB5513 (Government Organization)
Comment by: Victoria I Waybright on February 14, 2026 08:17
Thank you. Smart move. We need to pass this. We are entering a very dangerous path of digital bondage and this is a start to maintaining some autonomy.
2026 Regular Session HB4712 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Tai Honaker on February 14, 2026 08:15
  1. Please help justice be served in passing this bill.
2026 Regular Session HB4712 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Tiffany on February 14, 2026 08:06
This law needs passed to ensure the safety of our citizens and community. Destany's sentencing was a slap on the wrist while Baylea's family will suffer the rest of their lives. Destany's sentence was a disgrace to our community and disrespectful to Baylea's name. She did not deserve to die due to someone else's negligence. This a law needs passed to prevent this from happening again. We should not let Baylea die in vain.
2026 Regular Session HB5433 (Finance)
Comment by: Melanie Bonar on February 14, 2026 08:00
This will help many families.
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Cody Roberts on February 14, 2026 07:49
I think so because this planet has made more money for the state plus it’s easier for the ones that can’t smoke it like myself
2026 Regular Session HB4712 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Melissa Prichard on February 14, 2026 07:20
Please pass house bill 4712. It’s time we hold people accountable.  In 2016, my 11 year old daughter and I were hit head on by a drunk driver when leaving my brother’s wedding rehearsal.  Thankfully, we both walked away with our lives still intact.  This was not the drunk drivers first offense, yet, he was given a smack on the hand and was back out on the road within a week.  Our whole lives almost changed in an instant.  Drunk driving has affected so many families not just Baylea’s.  If we have stricter laws, maybe, just maybe, people would stop and think a little harder before they step into a vehicle while intoxicated. Let protect innocent lives.  Thank you!
2026 Regular Session HB5465 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Cristy Anderson on February 14, 2026 03:23
I support this bill. This is no different than alternate paths to teaching or other careers.  This bill would simply allow someone to sit for the bar exam if he or she possesses a graduate degree.  If someone has the knowledge to pass the exam, why prohibit this?
2026 Regular Session SB84 (Judiciary)
Comment by: marquele barnes on February 13, 2026 23:51
I do like this bill but what if they the law has good information on a crime being done on private property.
2026 Regular Session SB66 (Government Organization)
Comment by: marquele barnes on February 13, 2026 23:48
This bill is more efficient and the pros out weight the cons.
2026 Regular Session SB390 (Government Organization)
Comment by: marquele barnes on February 13, 2026 23:43
This is a great bill to be passed. I feel like there isn't many cons to this.
2026 Regular Session HB4712 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Julie Seagraves on February 13, 2026 22:59
There needs to be tougher penalties for taking a life.  The minimum penalty definitely deserves to be longer, and actually enforced.
2026 Regular Session HB4712 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Jessica on February 13, 2026 22:46
To pass Baylea's law! Because she didnt deserve what had happened to her! Especially with the trial atleast give her some justice! The family and friends are so devastated because her life was taken that day! And even more when the defendant basically gotten off scott free with 6 to 12 months of house arrest and in a program!
2026 Regular Session HB4712 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Wayne G Long on February 13, 2026 22:25
This bill is needed to impose stricter penalties for people getting behind the wheel under the influence of alcohol and/or drugs not only risking their lives and others as well. Please pass the bill 🙏 🙏 🙏 
2026 Regular Session HB4712 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Trais on February 13, 2026 22:16
I fully support this law being passed. When someone chooses to drive drunk and takes a life, it’s not just a mistake, it’s a decision with irreversible consequences. Families are left grieving forever, while the person responsible often faces far less than the lifetime sentence the victims’ loved ones endure. Increasing penalties sends a clear message that these choices will have serious consequences. We must hold offenders fully accountable.
2026 Regular Session HB4712 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Lana Cook on February 13, 2026 21:47
Please pass this bill
2026 Regular Session HB4712 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Bradley Brown on February 13, 2026 21:20
I, Bradley L. Brown, do agree with the following newly requested law by the Craig Family. Upon this law, it shall make people consider making such a decision as to where peoples lives can be jeopardized and/or resulted into a serious life altering injury. Enforcing a more strict law, with more consequences to a reckless decision of an individual that is impaired by any substance which will cause the mind to be altered/affected enough to not allow the person to operate any Vehicle/Machinery without being aware of any dangerous potential of injury, or have the ability to have control of any emergency situation. This request is absolutely valid, and should be recognized by authorities!
2026 Regular Session HB4712 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Alyssa Lail on February 13, 2026 20:46
Driving under the influence is a choice. When that choice results in someone’s death, the consequences should reflect the true severity of that loss. No family should have to bury a loved one because of a preventable decision. The pain and lifelong impact on victims’ families cannot be measured, and it far outweighs a lenient sentence. Increasing the penalty for DUI causing death honors the value of the life taken and reinforces that these tragedies demand real accountability and justice.
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Andre Dent on February 13, 2026 20:20
Having access to safe & legal edibles would be a game changer. Especially for those like myself who would enjoy an alternative that isn't going to harm your lungs.
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Zachery McConnell on February 13, 2026 20:07
This would be an amazing help for the people who have asthma or black lung and provide a healthier choice over vaping.
2026 Regular Session HB4712 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Sandi Barnett on February 13, 2026 20:06
This bill definitely needs to happen...#justiceforbaylea
2026 Regular Session HB4712 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Allison Boling on February 13, 2026 19:31
Protecting West Virginian citizens should be a priority, but with the recent judge ruling regarding Baylea Bower has set a precedent amongst residents. West Virginians are losing faith for the state’s judicial system. DUIs are a serious matter, especially when individuals are left seriously injured or worse. Light sentences do nothing to prevent DUI crashes - harsher jail time and raised fines are a perfectly reasonable deterrent. Yes, mistakes do happen, but mistakes have consequences. That’s why I implore our states House and Senate to consider this bill. Protect West Virginians and prevent other families from enduring what the Bower family is currently enduring. They are left grieving a young woman who should still be alive, and the woman who did this received a light sentencing. It’s not right nor is it acceptable. Things need to change or more innocent lives will continue to be ruined.
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Andrea McKinney on February 13, 2026 19:25
Edible medical marijuana products should be available. This would seem like a safer consumption route rather than inhaling vapors into your lungs.
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Matthew B Cole on February 13, 2026 19:16
I support this bill. Edible cannabis is better suited for some people.
2026 Regular Session HB5528 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Jayli Flynn on February 13, 2026 19:15
I oppose HB 5528 because it creates new, special legal protections for law-enforcement and certain officials without first demonstrating that West Virginia has achieved baseline transparency, accountability, and effective discipline in policing—and because West Virginia already has an existing address-protection framework in law. 1) HB 5528 expands special protections for a class of officials, while public accountability remains weak HB 5528 would add §61-2-31 to prohibit government entities from knowingly disclosing a “covered individual’s” home street address and certain phone numbers on publicly accessible records, and it creates a civil remedy (injunction, actual damages, and attorney fees/costs).  Public safety matters. But policy must also reflect public accountability—especially when the state is adding more “special rules” for law-enforcement. 2) West Virginia already has Daniel’s Law protecting this information West Virginia already has Daniel’s Law (W. Va. Code §5A-8-24) protecting personal information for judicial officers, prosecutors, and law-enforcement officers (with civil enforcement provisions).  If the Legislature believes current protections are not being implemented consistently, the solution should be compliance and enforcement of existing law—plus transparent reporting—rather than layering a second, overlapping statute that may create confusion across agencies and databases. (HB 5528 is also unusually narrow for judges/prosecutors by focusing on “retired” categories in its definition of “covered individual.”)  3) WV data shows a serious accountability gap: many force/misconduct incidents, relatively few disciplinary actions The ACLU of West Virginia’s 2020 Police Misconduct Report (built from WV FOIA requests) reports:
  • Use-of-force incidents (92 agencies reporting): 665 (2015), 738 (2016), 723 (2017), 899 (2018), 966 (2019)  
  • Formal complaints of misconduct (91 agencies reporting): 204 (2015), 173 (2016), 198 (2017), 134 (2018), 152 (2019)  
  • Only 47% of complaints resulted in a review  
  • Total disciplinary actions (2015–2019): 243  
  • The report highlights a stark ratio: “16 times as many use-of-force incidents as disciplinary actions.”  
  • It also reports that the WV State Police had more misconduct complaints than all other responding agencies combined in 2015 and 2016.  
These are not “anti-police” talking points—this is WV data collected through open records. When discipline is this comparatively rare, it is not responsible to keep adding new legal shields for law enforcement without pairing them with enforceable public protections and oversight. 4) WV has had recent, documented law-enforcement scandals and confirmed wrongdoing Recent reporting on the West Virginia State Police scandal describes allegations ranging from purchasing-rule circumvention (“ghost accounts”) to misuse of purchasing cards, overtime abuse, and other misconduct—along with confirmed allegations including theft by troopers from an individual at Mardi Gras Casino (2021).  Separately, reporting shows a former Wheeling police officer / drug task force commander pleaded guilty to stealing more than $75,000 from task force funds (federal-program theft charge), including a stated total of $75,124.44.  And federal cases show that West Virginia law-enforcement officers have faced federal civil-rights and excessive-force charges/sentences (examples include DOJ announcements of indictments and sentencing in WV).  Given this context, expanding special protections for law enforcement—without expanding independent oversight—moves WV in the wrong direction. 5) Equity problem: more protections for the state, fewer for residents HB 5528 is a one-way policy: it increases legal protections for a defined group of officials, while ordinary West Virginians who face profiling, harassment, retaliation, or revenue-driven enforcement do not receive parallel safeguards (such as consistent, independent complaint review; transparent discipline reporting; limits on secrecy; or meaningful remedies when harmed). When the public is asked to accept reduced transparency in the name of “safety,” the Legislature should also provide public safety from abuse of power through strong accountability systems. What I’m asking the Legislature to do
  1. Vote NO on HB 5528 as drafted.  
  2. If the bill is considered at all, amend it to include public accountability requirements, such as:
  • Mandatory annual reporting by agencies on: number of redaction requests granted/denied, databases impacted, and response times (so “privacy” doesn’t become an untracked secrecy tool).
  • A requirement that agencies publish discipline and complaint outcomes in aggregate (no personal addresses needed) so residents can see whether misconduct is being addressed.
  • A parallel pathway for ordinary residents facing credible threats (e.g., stalking/domestic violence survivors) to request similar removal of home addresses from public-facing databases—so this isn’t an “officials-only” protection.
West Virginia already has Daniel’s Law. The problem is not the lack of statutes—it’s the lack of consistent transparency and accountability. 
2026 Regular Session HB5491 (Government Organization)
Comment by: Troy Osborne on February 13, 2026 19:14
Hi, Having open captioning on movies is a great accessibility for wide diversity of audiences including seniors, children, and adults. We are looking forward to welcoming all of them and sharing our inclusion and support with them. Thank you. Sincerely, Troy Osborne
2026 Regular Session HB5397 (Finance)
Comment by: Matthew B Cole on February 13, 2026 19:13
I oppose this bill. Other types of hobbies are not exempt from sales tax; neither should gun accessories be exempt.
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Emma bostick on February 13, 2026 19:10
I support this bill!!
2026 Regular Session HB4712 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Jenna Ford on February 13, 2026 19:09
Baylea was a wonderful person . A person who would do anything for anyone. She tragically lost her life due to the ignorance of a dunk and high adult who had got away with a slap on the wrist. Baylea and her family did not get justice but we will continue to speak her name. Please pass this bill to insure harsher consequences to individuals who choose to make poor choices that take someone else’s life.
2026 Regular Session HB5525 (Energy and Public Works)
Comment by: Jayli Flynn on February 13, 2026 19:09
While HB 5525 acknowledges serious drinking water infrastructure and contamination concerns in designated southern West Virginia counties, the bill’s geographically limited scope raises concerns about equity, consistency, and statewide public health protection. Independent reporting has documented that West Virginia ranks among the highest in the nation for public water system health-based violations, affecting communities across the state — not only the counties named in this bill. Data compiled through EPA reporting and investigative journalism shows that infrastructure failures, contaminant exceedances, and capacity issues impact small and large systems statewide. If enhanced monitoring, infrastructure upgrades, and additional funding are necessary to protect residents in certain counties, the Legislature should clearly articulate the objective criteria used to exclude other communities facing documented violations and similar infrastructure deficiencies. Public health protections should not depend on geography. Safe drinking water is a statewide necessity under both federal Safe Drinking Water Act standards and existing West Virginia public health law. A regional approach risks creating unequal regulatory protection for residents in counties experiencing comparable contamination or aging system failures. Rather than limiting enhanced oversight and investment to a defined region, lawmakers should consider: • Establishing uniform statewide minimum monitoring and reporting standards • Creating a needs-based funding formula driven by violation data and infrastructure age • Ensuring transparent criteria for eligibility so all affected communities are treated equitably Water quality challenges in West Virginia are systemic. Addressing them through geographically narrow legislation does not provide consistent protection for all taxpayers and residents. For these reasons, I respectfully oppose HB 5525 in its current form and urge consideration of a statewide, data-driven water infrastructure and monitoring reform approach.
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Landon Plank on February 13, 2026 19:09
Edibles, yes. Please! We need them!
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Emily Moore on February 13, 2026 19:05
Edibles would be great for people with things like astma, copd, and black lung. Definitely want to see them in dispensaries.
2026 Regular Session HB5520 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Jayli Flynn on February 13, 2026 19:05
I respectfully submit this comment in opposition to HB 5520. HB 5520 creates a “Foreign Adversary Contracting Prohibition Act,” a “Foreign Adversary and Terrorist Agent Registration Act,” and a “Transnational Repression Act” within West Virginia Code. While framed as a state procurement and ethics measure, the bill imports national-security terminology traditionally governed at the federal level. Under the U.S. Constitution, foreign affairs authority is vested primarily in the federal government (Article I, Section 8; Article II; Supremacy Clause, Article VI). The U.S. Supreme Court has held that states may not intrude into foreign policy in ways that conflict with federal authority (Zschernig v. Miller, 389 U.S. 429 (1968)). Federal agencies such as the U.S. Department of Treasury (OFAC), the U.S. Department of Commerce, and the U.S. Department of Justice already regulate sanctions, export controls, and foreign agent registration at the national level. HB 5520 risks duplicating or overlapping with existing federal enforcement systems. When states create parallel foreign-adversary registries or prohibitions, they risk:
  1. Federal preemption challenges if state enforcement conflicts with federal determinations.
  2. Vagueness concerns if definitions of “foreign adversary” or “foreign agent” are not tightly aligned with federal law.
  3. Compliance burdens on local businesses, universities, and contractors who already must comply with federal sanctions and disclosure rules.
Additionally, procurement restrictions must be applied carefully to avoid Equal Protection concerns under the Fourteenth Amendment. Any law referencing “foreign adversaries” must clearly distinguish between foreign governments or sanctioned entities and individuals of particular national origin. State law must avoid even the appearance of nationality-based discrimination. Beyond constitutional considerations, there is also a question of legislative prioritization. West Virginia faces pressing state-level issues including infrastructure, public health, water quality, workforce development, and economic opportunity. Federal agencies already manage national security determinations and foreign sanctions enforcement. Expanding state code into areas closely tied to federal geopolitical disputes may not be the most effective use of limited session time and taxpayer resources. If the Legislature wishes to address procurement transparency, it could do so by:
  • Explicitly incorporating federal sanctions lists rather than creating independent state determinations.
  • Narrowly tailoring definitions to align directly with federal designations.
  • Including clear anti-discrimination safeguards.
For these reasons, I urge careful reconsideration or amendment of HB 5520 to ensure it remains within traditional state authority, avoids constitutional ambiguity, and prioritizes core state governance responsibilities.
2026 Regular Session HB5519 (Finance)
Comment by: Jayli Flynn on February 13, 2026 19:01
I oppose House Bill 5519 (the so-called West Virginia Tax Neutrality Act) on the following factual policy grounds and conflicting public interest concerns: 1. The bill risks significant revenue loss at a time West Virginia faces budget pressures HB 5519 would exclude most capital gains from West Virginia taxable income — effectively reducing the state’s income tax base. This occurs despite documented budget shortfalls and fiscal caution highlighted in recent state budget negotiations, including vetoes by the governor to preserve budgetary stability. Reducing the tax base in this manner may undercut funding for essential public services (education, health, infrastructure) without a clear replacement revenue stream. 2. The tax changes primarily benefit high-income individuals and investors Capital gains exclusions tend to disproportionately benefit taxpayers with significant investment income. This tends to shift more of the tax burden onto wage-earning residents with little to no investment income — which contradicts equitable tax policy principles and may exacerbate inequality. No independent economic impact study has been publicly released demonstrating broad benefits or revenue neutrality. 3. Conflicts with public accountability given financial histories of leading proponents a. Jim Justice
  • In public court filings, Justice agreed to pay more than $5 million in overdue federal income taxes going back to 2009, and IRS liens totaling over $8 million were recorded against him and his wife for unpaid taxes. 
  • Forbes reported his personal net worth fell below zero due to liabilities exceeding assets, and historical financial disputes involving businesses he owns include large judgments for unpaid bills. 
Given this context, a proposal that reduces tax liabilities on substantial investment gains raises legitimate concerns about whether the policy is tailored to benefit individuals with significant asset holdings rather than the broader population. b. Patrick Morrisey
  • Governor Morrisey has publicly advocated additional income tax cuts and tax relief measures. 
  • Independent analysts have noted that proposals to shift away from a progressive income tax toward broader exclusions would primarily benefit higher-income taxpayers and risk destabilizing the tax structure. 
These financial contexts are relevant in assessing whether such tax policy reflects broad public interest or disproportionately favors specific economic actors. 4. Lack of transparency and absent economic impact analysis HB 5519 lacks an accompanying fiscal note or independent economic impact study demonstrating how the capital gains exclusions would affect:
  • State revenue projections
  • Education, healthcare, and infrastructure funding
  • Tax fairness across income levels
Without transparent impact analysis, the bill would advance a major tax change without evidence supporting its purported neutrality. Conclusion For these reasons, I oppose House Bill 5519:
  • It likely erodes the state tax base,
  • It favors wealthier taxpayers at the expense of working families,
  • It is advanced by public officials with documented personal and corporate tax controversies, and
  • It lacks independent economic justification.
I respectfully request that legislators vote against HB 5519 and instead pursue tax policy reforms backed by transparent analysis and equitable treatment for all West Virginians.
2026 Regular Session HB4177 (Finance)
Comment by: Brian Powell on February 13, 2026 19:00
This bill unfairly transfers the burden of taxation to younger West Virginia families. I oppose it. Property should be taxed equitably regardless of its owner's age.
2026 Regular Session HB5514 (Energy and Public Works)
Comment by: Jayli Flynn on February 13, 2026 18:57
I respectfully oppose HB 5514. HB 5514 seeks to prohibit mandatory participation by West Virginia in the federal Real ID Act of 2005 (Public Law 109-13), declaring it unconstitutional under the Tenth Amendment. While states may decline to use state resources to enforce certain federal programs, federal law remains supreme under Article VI, Clause 2 of the U.S. Constitution (the Supremacy Clause). States do not have authority to nullify federal statutes through unilateral declaration; constitutional challenges must be resolved in federal court. The Real ID Act establishes minimum security standards for state-issued driver’s licenses and identification cards when used for federal purposes, such as boarding federally regulated commercial aircraft and entering secure federal facilities. If West Virginia restricts or impairs compliance, residents could face practical consequences, including reduced access to federally regulated services and travel disruptions. Currently, West Virginia offers both Real ID-compliant and non-compliant licenses. Participation is already optional for residents. Therefore, HB 5514 appears unnecessary from a consumer choice standpoint and risks creating confusion or administrative instability within the Division of Motor Vehicles. Additionally, implementation of Real ID standards has already required substantial administrative investment. Reversing or restricting compliance could create fiscal inefficiencies, legal uncertainty, and potential conflicts between state and federal systems. Public policy should provide clarity and stability for residents, not introduce uncertainty regarding identification validity for federal purposes. For these reasons, I oppose HB 5514.
2026 Regular Session HB5397 (Finance)
Comment by: Brian Powell on February 13, 2026 18:54
I oppose this bill. My hobbies aren't exempt from sales tax. Gun enthusiasts' shouldn't be either.
2026 Regular Session HB5508 (Finance)
Comment by: Jayli Flynn on February 13, 2026 18:54
House Bill 5508 proposes to amend West Virginia Code §15-2A to include members of the Division of Protection Services in the State Police Retirement System Plan B. Plan B is a defined-benefit retirement plan established specifically for State Police members. Defined-benefit plans create long-term pension obligations that are funded through employee contributions, employer contributions (paid by the state), and investment returns. Expanding eligibility to a new class of employees increases the number of beneficiaries participating in that system. Unlike standard Public Employees Retirement System (PERS) participation, State Police Plan B is structured as a law-enforcement retirement tier with enhanced provisions. Expanding participation therefore increases long-term actuarial obligations of that system. This bill does not, within its text, identify:
  • A dedicated funding source to offset expanded eligibility,
  • A specific actuarial impact analysis,
  • Or a revenue-neutral mechanism to absorb increased liabilities.
Pension expansions are not one-time costs. They create ongoing obligations that extend decades into the future. If actuarial assumptions do not meet projections, employer contributions must increase to maintain system solvency. Because employer contributions are paid through state funds, any long-term funding shortfall ultimately affects future budgets and taxpayers. During this legislative session, multiple bills have addressed increases in compensation, commissions, or retirement structures for various law enforcement categories. HB 5508 continues that broader policy trend of expanding law enforcement retirement eligibility. Public safety professionals play an important role in state operations. However, responsible fiscal policy requires transparency regarding:
  1. The actuarial cost of expansion,
  2. The long-term impact on system solvency,
  3. Contribution rate adjustments,
  4. And generational fiscal sustainability.
Without a clearly published actuarial analysis and identified funding mechanism, expanding eligibility to a higher-cost retirement tier raises legitimate fiscal concerns about long-term obligations that will be borne by future state budgets. For these reasons, I urge careful review and full fiscal transparency before passage of HB 5508.
2026 Regular Session HB5423 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Brian Powell on February 13, 2026 18:52
Shame on Del. Funkhouser and co-sponsors of this bill for hiding changes to remove high school and college IDs in this unrelated bill. Aside from that, barring recognition of drivers licenses issues by other states without a public safety reason is bad policy. A person's immigration status has no bearing on their ability to operate a motor vehicle. In the event there were to be a collision involving an undocumented immigrant, this bill would just make it harder for any other person involved (including West Virginians) to pursue claims. This is a bad bill. Vote it down.
2026 Regular Session HB5507 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Jayli Flynn on February 13, 2026 18:48
I respectfully oppose HB 5507 for the following factual and structural reasons: 1️⃣ An Article V Convention Is Constitutionally Uncharted Territory Article V of the U.S. Constitution provides for a convention called by two-thirds of the states (34), but:
  • No Article V convention has ever occurred in U.S. history.
  • There are no judicial precedents defining:
    • How delegates are apportioned
    • Whether a convention can be limited by topic
    • Whether states can legally bind or recall delegates mid-convention
  • The U.S. Supreme Court has never ruled on enforcement mechanisms for delegate restrictions.
HB 5507 assumes enforceability of delegate limits that have never been tested in federal court. 2️⃣ Delegate “Limits” May Not Be Legally Binding While HB 5507 attempts to restrict delegate authority through commissioning resolutions and recall provisions:
  • Article V itself does not provide a state enforcement mechanism once a convention convenes.
  • Constitutional scholars disagree on whether delegates could exceed their instructions.
  • If a delegate voted beyond their instructions, enforcement would likely require federal judicial review — an uncertain and potentially delayed process.
This creates legal ambiguity and risk. 3️⃣ One-State-One-Vote Structure Creates Disproportionate Influence Historically, interstate conventions operate under a one-state-one-vote model. That means:
  • West Virginia (1.7 million people) would have equal voting power to California (39 million).
  • Amendments could be proposed by a coalition of 26 states representing a minority of the U.S. population.
This raises structural concerns about democratic proportionality. 4️⃣ Proposal Threshold vs. Ratification Threshold While ratification requires 38 states (3/4), only 26 states could propose amendments at the convention stage. This means:
  • A simple majority of states could introduce sweeping constitutional changes.
  • Political momentum and national pressure could influence ratification outcomes.
The proposal stage itself carries significant political weight. 5️⃣ Fiscal Considerations HB 5507 establishes:
  • Delegate compensation
  • Administrative oversight
  • Advisory committee functions
The bill creates a new statutory framework without clarity on long-term fiscal exposure if a convention occurs. 6️⃣ No Immediate Necessity Congress already retains authority to propose constitutional amendments under Article V with a two-thirds vote. An Article V convention is not required for constitutional reform. Establishing a statutory framework for an unprecedented constitutional process increases institutional risk without demonstrated necessity. Conclusion HB 5507 normalizes participation in an unprecedented and legally unsettled constitutional process. Given:
  • The absence of judicial clarity,
  • The inability to guarantee enforceable delegate limits,
  • Structural concerns regarding representation,
  • And potential fiscal implications,
This bill should not advance without:
  • Clear constitutional safeguards,
  • Transparent fiscal impact analysis,
  • And broader public deliberation.
For these reasons, I respectfully urge opposition to HB 5507.
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Sarah Price on February 13, 2026 18:43
Edibles would add to the variety and ease of use for those that dont vape or smoke Marijuana.
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Courtney Pieta on February 13, 2026 18:32
I am a medical cannabis user in our great state. My family has a long history of lung diseases, heart attacks, strokes, you name it. I suffered an injury to my spine a few years ago and without medical cannabis I would not be able to perform everyday life without pain and suffering. I currently use a dry vaporizer and sometimes a vape cartridge, I’ve noticed a large difference between before my injury when I didn’t use medical cannabis that I am coughing a lot more and experiencing some chest pains from time to time. I know that’s a given, but it is the only way I can get some relief. With the legalization of edibles, this would eliminate my need to use any vapor whatsoever. That’s just me. I am 23. Imagine someone who is 74 who cannot use any vapor products. I know someone personally whose grandfather is going through a really tough time gaining weight and feeling hungry. Medical Cannabis edibles would not only help him but so many others.
2026 Regular Session HB5053 (Public Education)
Comment by: Madeline Renner on February 13, 2026 18:22
There are already multiple safeguards in place for child who are truant. This bill completely disregards the Parents Bill of Rights and could be detrimental to the child mental & physical wellbeing, especially those who are being bullied within the school systems. This is a blatant infringement on parental rights.
2026 Regular Session HB4459 (Public Health)
Comment by: Soren Shade on February 13, 2026 18:18

Prohibition doesn’t work. It fuels black markets, reduces product quality, and makes life worse for people who rely on what’s being prohibited.

West Virginia already regulates kratom, and my business spends thousands of dollars a year to comply with licensing. If there are real problems tied to kratom, address them through regulation: investigate what harms are occurring, and fix them with specific rules and enforcement—not a ban.

If this bill is simply about disapproval of something that feels unfamiliar, that’s not a serious basis for policy—especially from anyone claiming to value freedom or personal responsibility.

2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Kimberly Rose on February 13, 2026 18:03
I have COPD and can't smoke so gummies would work
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Patrick smalls on February 13, 2026 18:02
I want gummy
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Susan J Carroll on February 13, 2026 18:01
I would actually love to get edibles at the medical dispensaries.
2026 Regular Session HB4712 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Rachel Belcher on February 13, 2026 17:58
Please pass this law. R.I.P  Baylea Bower
2026 Regular Session SB704 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Steven Wendelin on February 13, 2026 17:34

I strongly support Senate Bill 704, the Veterans’ Empowerment and Trust Safeguard Act. Our veterans deserve honest guidance when navigating the VA system, not high-pressure sales tactics or excessive fees. For generations, accredited Veterans Service Organizations like the VFW, American Legion, and DAV have provided claims assistance free of charge because their mission is service, not profit. When companies step in and charge large sums for the same work, it opens the door to abuse and undermines the trust our veterans place in the system.

On a personal note, I received outstanding support from a VFW Veterans Service Officer during my own VA process. The professionalism, integrity, and no-cost assistance made a real difference, and it is exactly the kind of veteran-to-veteran service we should be strengthening, not replacing. This legislation helps ensure that accredited representatives remain the gold standard while protecting veterans and their families from predatory practices. It is a practical, pro-veteran measure that reinforces accountability, transparency, and respect for those who served.
2026 Regular Session HB5485 (Energy and Public Works)
Comment by: Jayli Flynn on February 13, 2026 17:19
I oppose HB 5485 because it raises West Virginia’s minimum wage to $11.00/hour effective after December 31, 2026 (Jan. 1, 2027) without any accompanying plan to prevent benefits cliffs and cost-of-living passthroughs that can leave low-income workers worse off.  1) The bill creates a benefits cliff risk (Medicaid/SNAP) with no mitigation. West Virginia’s current minimum wage is $8.75/hour under state law.  Raising wages can push some workers over eligibility thresholds for programs like Medicaid (WV is an expansion state, generally up to 138% of the Federal Poverty Level for adults) and SNAP, causing coverage loss or churn—yet HB 5485 contains no transitional coverage, phased benefit reductions, or hold-harmless provisions.  2) SNAP reductions can be steep even when incomes remain low. SNAP benefit calculations assume households spend 30% of net income on food; as income rises, benefits drop accordingly.  In practice, many workers experience sharp reductions in food assistance from relatively small income changes—especially when housing and utility costs are already high. HB 5485 does not address this predictable outcome. 3) Housing and prices can absorb wage gains. In tight local rental markets, landlords can raise rents when they believe tenants have more income, and labor-cost increases can also raise prices in labor-intensive sectors. HB 5485 contains no parallel housing affordability measures, anti-price-gouging enforcement triggers, or targeted relief to ensure the wage increase translates into real purchasing power. 4) The bill text itself includes a discrepancy that should be corrected before passage. The bill’s note states it increases the wage from $8.25/hour to $11.00/hour, but current WV law sets $8.75/hour.  This should be corrected for accuracy and fiscal clarity. If the Legislature wants to raise wages responsibly, it should pair any wage increase with:
  • “Cliff smoothing” (gradual phase-outs) and/or transitional Medicaid coverage
  • Strengthened state EITC or targeted tax credits for low-income workers
  • Housing affordability actions to prevent rent from absorbing wage gains
Until HB 5485 includes a real plan to prevent loss of Medicaid/SNAP and rent/price passthroughs, I urge a NO vote.
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Zach Barnette on February 13, 2026 17:08
I think we should be able to purchase edibles at our dispensaries for our medial use
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Blaine Dean on February 13, 2026 17:07
I support this bill because for some patients can not inhale it safely. but as for me it would treat some of my illnesses like Crohn’s disease and IBD in a more direct manner then inhaling it
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Lexys Perdue on February 13, 2026 17:06
I have severe asthma and pulmonary sarcoidosis, edibles would be a complete game changer for me taking my medicine. Please consider patients like me as well as the elderly who would much rather get our medicine in this form.
2026 Regular Session HB4712 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Emily Howerton on February 13, 2026 17:02
This bill will save so many lives and will make people more accountable.
2026 Regular Session HB5479 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Jody Mohr on February 13, 2026 17:00
I urge you to support this bill. It is a common sense approach that will increase public safety by identifying legitimate law enforcement to the public.
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Corina Surface on February 13, 2026 16:55
I know many individuals who benefit from edibles. Individuals with lung problems who have trouble smoking, hand problems in individuals make it difficult to break up or grind flower well for vaping purposes. Many elderly or breathing difficulty clients would benefit from edibles options. Also those with transplants of any sort or compromised immune systems can struggle to smoke or are told not to and edibles would benefit them greatly.
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Christina Duncan on February 13, 2026 16:54
Should have anything marijuana related in the dispensary.
2026 Regular Session HB4712 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Christina Suttle on February 13, 2026 16:52
to whom it may concern I believe that this bill should carry a higher sentence no parent or family should have to burry their kid due to a drunk driver. There is so many people out here with dui’s on their records or that’s out drinking and driving and not being stopped or held accountable for their actions they go in and they are out same day or next day. Or they don’t serve anytime. It’s time for us as a state to stop the drunk drivers before someone else is killed.
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Samantha L Lowe on February 13, 2026 16:52
Edibles wanted I think they are better don’t have to worry about the smoke bothering anyone if you have edibles also helps you sleep good at night without the smell of smoke on you
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Stevie Looney on February 13, 2026 16:44
I absolutely support edibles in WV dispensaries. Please bring them into shops as soon as possible. Would be good to another option.
2026 Regular Session HB4712 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Miriam Adkins on February 13, 2026 16:34
Justice for Baylea Bower, Destiny Lester deserves jail time! There’s proof where she has no care in the world and flaunted how she’d get drunk WHILE BEING UNDERAGE and the judge think that’s cute, all he cares about is the money.
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Luís Soto on February 13, 2026 16:26
Consuming medical cannabis in edible form offers significant, sustained therapeutic benefits for both physical and mental health by providing a smoke-free, long-lasting, and accurately dosed alternative to inhalation. Clinical studies have shown that edibles, which are metabolized into potent cannabinoids (such as 11-hydroxy-THC), are highly effective for managing chronic pain, with one 2024 study revealing a 64% relative decrease in pain among users, alongside improvements in sleep. For mental health, the slower release of edibles allows for a more stable, calming effect, with research indicating that controlled, low-dose THC and balanced CBD-to-THC edibles can reduce anxiety, alleviate PTSD-related nightmares, and improve overall mental well-being without causing the intense psychoactive effects associated with smoking. Furthermore, studies have demonstrated that medical cannabis can significantly improve quality of life, with patients reporting reduced anxiety, better emotional functioning, and decreased reliance on other medications. Notably, edibles are particularly suited for managing chronic pain, nausea, and spasticity without causing the pulmonary damage associated with smoking. Key Takeaways on Edible Benefits & Studies: Long-Lasting Relief: Edibles generally provide a slower onset but more sustained, 6–8 hour effect, making them ideal for chronic pain management. Mental Health Improvements: Low-dose THC/CBD edibles are used to manage anxiety, with studies confirming their efficacy in treating PTSD-related symptoms, such as nightmares and anxiety. Reduced Nausea: Oral cannabinoids are proven effective antiemetics for chemotherapy-induced nausea. Safe Alternative to Smoking: Edibles offer a way to consume cannabis that avoids harmful toxins that can hurt lung health. Finally, and most importantly, it is one of the oldest forms of medicinal treatment with the usage of botanical agriculture, and we still don't know the fullest extent of what properties the plant can help us achieve.
2026 Regular Session HB4712 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Michele Cook on February 13, 2026 16:20
Please pass House Bill 4712
2026 Regular Session HB4511 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Donna Cornell on February 13, 2026 16:19
It is imperative that prospective foster parents undergo mandatory drug screening to ensure the safety and well-being of children placed in their care, thereby mitigating the risk of exposure to substance abuse or other detrimental circumstances.
2026 Regular Session HB4712 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Donna Farruggia on February 13, 2026 16:11
Please pass this bill and protect others that’s in the situation…
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Megon Allen on February 13, 2026 15:55
Yes please
2026 Regular Session HB5471 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Jayli Flynn on February 13, 2026 15:41
I respectfully oppose HB 5471 in its current form. HB 5471 proposes increasing salaries for magistrates, circuit court judges, family court judges, intermediate court judges, and Supreme Court justices beginning July 1, 2026. According to the bill text, this includes raising magistrate salaries to $75,880 and Supreme Court justices to $154,600, with corresponding increases for other judicial positions. While judicial independence and competitive compensation are important, this proposal must be evaluated in the context of West Virginia’s broader fiscal realities. West Virginia consistently ranks near the bottom nationally in median household income (approximately mid-$50,000 range according to recent U.S. Census data). Many state employees, teachers, first responders, and public health workers earn significantly less than the salaries proposed in this bill. Additionally, the state continues to debate reductions in revenue streams, including income tax cuts, while facing ongoing obligations related to infrastructure, public health, education, and pension liabilities. Increasing judicial salaries creates a permanent recurring budget obligation. Salary increases also raise long-term pension liabilities because judicial retirement benefits are tied to compensation levels. This has actuarial and fiscal impacts beyond the immediate pay increase. Before approving salary increases at this level, the Legislature should:
  1. Provide a published fiscal note detailing the total long-term cost, including pension impacts.
  2. Demonstrate that the Judges’ Retirement System is fully funded or on a stable actuarial path.
  3. Compare proposed judicial salary levels to surrounding states using objective cost-of-living and caseload metrics.
  4. Address workforce shortages in lower-paid public sectors before increasing upper-tier compensation.
West Virginia taxpayers deserve transparency regarding long-term financial commitments. In a state with persistent economic challenges, salary increases at the highest levels of government must be justified with clear data showing recruitment problems, retention crises, or constitutional necessity. Absent that evidence, HB 5471 prioritizes high-level salary growth over broader fiscal stability and workforce equity. For these reasons, I urge careful reconsideration or amendment of this bill
2026 Regular Session HB4175 (Government Organization)
Comment by: J. McMurray on February 13, 2026 15:39
Do not repeal the law requiring state inspections. Some cite expense and inconvience for an inspection every 2 years. What about a compromise, an inspection every 3 years? I've seen those clunkers from adjoining states. Loud exhausts, fenders flapping, missing bumpers, squealing brakes well past the warning indicator, burned out lights. A disaster involving them is a matter of when, not if. Approximately 37 U.S. states have some form of mandatory vehicle inspection, covering safety, emissions, or VIN verification. While it is true 14 states still require periodic (annual or biennial) safety inspections for vehicles.
2026 Regular Session HB5469 (Finance)
Comment by: Jayli Flynn on February 13, 2026 15:38
I respectfully oppose House Bill 5469. House Bill 5469 would amend West Virginia Code § 11A-1-17 to authorize sheriffs to receive a $15,000 annual commission in addition to their regular salary and compensation once they have collected 85 % of all real and personal property taxes assessed in their county. This effectively creates a performance-based bonus tied to tax collection rates, paid from the same tax funds sheriffs are responsible for collecting. 1. Creates Additional Compensation Without Clear Funding Source Although the bill specifies that the $15,000 commission is charged against the funds from which taxes are collected, there is no:
  • Dedicated revenue source or cap limiting how often commissions are paid
  • Protection to ensure that the commission does not reduce net funds available for county services
  • Impact analysis showing how this payment would affect county budgets
As a result:
  • Counties could face increased payroll costs.
  • Local tax revenues intended for education, public safety, infrastructure, and other county functions could be diverted to fund these commissions.
This shift imposes a financial obligation with ambiguous fiscal impacts on county taxpayers. 2. Ties Sheriff Compensation to Tax Collection Without Guarantee of Public Benefit HB 5469 conditions a $15,000 commission on the sheriff’s office collecting at least 85 % of property taxes assessed, but:
  • Tax collection performance is influenced by economic factors beyond a sheriff’s direct control (e.g., tax delinquency trends, property values, taxpayer hardship, state economic conditions).
  • The bill does not require:
    • Reporting on how this incentive impacts collections over time,
    • Accountability for how any additional revenue is used,
    • Safeguards to ensure the incentive does not disincentivize equitable enforcement of tax liabilities.
This creates a compensation structure that could reward outcomes not fully aligned with broader county and community priorities. 3. Lacks Transparency and Long-Term Fiscal Analysis As introduced, HB 5469 does not include:
  • A fiscal note estimating the total annual and multi-year cost of these commissions statewide,
  • A breakdown of how many counties currently achieve 85 % property tax collections,
  • An assessment of how often the commission would be paid under current law and economic trends.
Without that information, policymakers and the public cannot accurately assess the budgetary impact of this bill. 4. Sets Precedent for Performance Bonuses Without Universal Standards Paying a fixed commission tied to one metric (tax collection rate) but not others (e.g., public safety outcomes, community satisfaction, delinquency reduction strategies) risks:
  • Creating uneven compensation systems between counties of varying economic conditions,
  • Encouraging a narrow focus on one financial indicator rather than a comprehensive view of county governance.
Conclusion House Bill 5469, as introduced:
  • Creates additional compensation for sheriffs tied to tax collection,
  • Potentially diverts local tax revenue away from essential services,
  • Lacks fiscal transparency and long-term cost assessment,
  • Does not include accountability provisions linking the bonus to measurable public benefit outcomes.
For these reasons, I respectfully oppose HB 5469.
2026 Regular Session HB5468 (Finance)
Comment by: Jayli Flynn on February 13, 2026 15:36
I respectfully oppose House Bill 5468. HB 5468 would require the State of West Virginia to allocate an additional $5,000 per deputy sheriff position to each county, to be paid from the state’s general revenue fund, and used exclusively for deputy sheriff pay raises. 1. Creates a Recurring State Obligation from General Revenue The bill mandates a recurring expenditure from the general revenue fund. General revenue supports statewide obligations including public education, Medicaid, higher education, infrastructure, corrections, and pension liabilities. HB 5468 does not identify:
  • A new revenue source
  • A budget offset
  • A funding cap
  • A sunset provision
This means the cost would continue annually and grow if the number of deputy positions increases. 2. No Fiscal Impact Transparency in the Bill Text As introduced, HB 5468 does not contain:
  • A total projected annual cost
  • A long-term fiscal impact estimate
  • A funding sustainability analysis
Without those figures, lawmakers and taxpayers cannot fully evaluate the long-term budgetary impact. 3. No Accountability or Performance Requirements The bill requires that funds be used “exclusively” for pay raises but does not require:
  • Reporting on how the funds are used
  • Demonstration of recruitment or retention improvements
  • Measurable public safety outcomes
  • Oversight or auditing requirements specific to the new allocation
There is no structural mechanism tying the additional spending to measurable results. 4. Sets Precedent for Sector-Specific General Revenue Supplements HB 5468 directs statewide tax revenue to a specific employee group without broader compensation reform. If compensation disparities exist across public service sectors (teachers, EMS, corrections, public health workers), those should be addressed through comprehensive workforce policy rather than targeted general revenue supplements. 5. Intergenerational Fiscal Responsibility Because this funding comes from general revenue and creates a continuing obligation, the cost ultimately falls on current and future taxpayers. Recurring obligations should include transparent fiscal modeling and sustainability planning before enactment. Conclusion HB 5468:
  • Creates a permanent general revenue expenditure
  • Lacks a dedicated funding source
  • Provides no fiscal impact estimate in the bill text
  • Includes no accountability or performance safeguards
For these reasons, I respectfully oppose HB 5468 unless amended to include full fiscal transparency, sustainability analysis, and accountability provisions.
2026 Regular Session HB4712 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Tori Bell on February 13, 2026 15:36

No one should be able to make the decision to get behind a wheel impaired and not have to answer for their consequences. Especially when it causes the death of another person. justice should be served.

2026 Regular Session HB5467 (Finance)
Comment by: Jayli Flynn on February 13, 2026 15:33
I respectfully oppose HB 5467, which increases the retirement multiplier for deputy sheriffs under West Virginia’s Deputy Sheriff Retirement System from 2.5% to 3% of final average salary per year of service. 1️⃣ Long-Term Fiscal Impact on Taxpayers An increase from 2.5% to 3% is not minor — it represents a 20% increase in pension accrual per year of service. Example:
  • 25 years of service
    • Current formula (2.5%): 62.5% of final average salary
    • Proposed formula (3%): 75% of final average salary
That is a significant lifetime increase in defined-benefit obligations. Because this is a defined benefit pension system, taxpayers ultimately bear the actuarial risk if:
  • Investment returns underperform
  • Contribution rates fall short
  • Liabilities are underestimated
This cost does not disappear. It shifts forward — onto Millennials, Gen Z, and Gen Alpha, who will be funding these obligations long after current policymakers leave office. 2️⃣ Retroactive Application Concerns The bill applies to members retiring on or after July 1, 2018. Retroactive benefit increases:
  • Expand unfunded actuarial liabilities
  • Create precedent for future retroactive enhancements
  • Increase pension system volatility
Any increase in multiplier should be accompanied by a transparent actuarial note outlining:
  • Projected 10-, 20-, and 30-year cost impacts
  • Required employer contribution increases
  • Impact on county budgets
Without that analysis, this bill shifts financial risk without full public disclosure. 3️⃣ Re-Entry / “Double-Dipping” Structural Risk West Virginia has previously allowed various forms of post-retirement reemployment in public service roles. When retirement systems permit individuals to:
  • Retire under enhanced benefits
  • Then return to work in covered or related positions
This can create structural inequities and higher long-term costs. If the multiplier is increased, safeguards should be strengthened to prevent:
  • Simultaneous pension draw and re-employment in the same system without actuarial neutrality
  • Manipulation of final average salary calculations
  • Pension spiking through late-career compensation adjustments
Absent reform in these areas, increasing the multiplier amplifies existing structural risks. 4️⃣ Equity and Preferential Treatment Concerns Other public employees in West Virginia do not receive comparable retirement multipliers at this level. If deputy sheriffs receive a 3% accrual rate:
  • Is similar enhancement being offered to teachers?
  • EMS personnel?
  • Public health workers?
  • Corrections staff?
  • Municipal employees?
Preferential benefit expansion for one sector — without comprehensive pension reform — raises fairness concerns across the workforce. 5️⃣ Intergenerational Responsibility West Virginia already faces:
  • Population decline
  • Aging demographics
  • Workforce participation challenges
Increasing long-term fixed pension liabilities without structural reform increases the burden on a shrinking tax base. Intergenerational fiscal responsibility requires:
  • Fully funded enhancements
  • Transparent actuarial certification
  • Structural safeguards against future unfunded liabilities
Without those protections, HB 5467 risks compounding long-term pension strain. Conclusion While law enforcement service is important, retirement enhancements must be evaluated in the context of:
  • Long-term solvency
  • Intergenerational equity
  • Structural pension reform
  • Re-employment safeguards
HB 5467 increases permanent pension obligations without accompanying systemic reform or clearly disclosed long-term fiscal modeling. For these reasons, I respectfully oppose this bill unless amended to include:
  • A full actuarial impact statement
  • Anti-double-dipping safeguards
  • Long-term funding guarantees
  • Equity review across all public retirement systems
Tax policy should not create permanent obligations that future generations must absorb without their consent
2026 Regular Session HB4712 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Amber Wilkinson on February 13, 2026 15:32
Many people I know have lost loved ones at the extent of an intoxicated driver. Justice deserves to be served!
2026 Regular Session HB5097 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Troy Osborne on February 13, 2026 15:30
I am supporting this bill because it would help us all get the best healthcare in most positive ways. That is why we need to get this bill passed and prevent this from becoming a misunderstanding in communication between patients and providers.
2026 Regular Session HB5465 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Jayli Flynn on February 13, 2026 15:30
I respectfully oppose House Bill 5465. HB 5465 would amend West Virginia Code §30-2-1 to permit any individual holding a master’s degree — regardless of the field of study — to sit for the West Virginia Bar Examination. This proposal raises significant concerns regarding both professional standards and equitable access within our state. 1. West Virginia Has Low Graduate Degree Attainment According to U.S. Census Bureau data compiled by the Federal Reserve Economic Data (FRED), approximately 9.6% of West Virginians age 25 and older hold a graduate or professional degree. That means fewer than 1 in 10 adults in the state possess the credential this bill would require. West Virginia also ranks among the lowest states nationally in overall higher education attainment. Approximately 19–20% of adults hold a bachelor’s degree or higher, well below the national average. Conditioning bar exam eligibility on possession of a master’s degree does not expand access for most West Virginians. Instead, it ties eligibility to a credential held by a small minority of the population — many of whom already have substantial financial and geographic access to higher education. In rural counties especially, access to graduate programs is limited, and pursuing a master’s degree often requires relocation and significant debt. If the goal is to address attorney shortages or expand opportunity, this bill does not meaningfully address structural barriers to legal education in West Virginia. 2. Master’s Degrees Do Not Ensure Legal Training Under current West Virginia Rules for Admission to the Practice of Law, applicants must graduate from an approved law school (J.D. or equivalent) before sitting for the bar exam. Law school provides structured instruction in:
  • Constitutional law
  • Civil procedure
  • Criminal law
  • Contracts and torts
  • Evidence
  • Legal research and writing
  • Professional responsibility and ethics
A general master’s degree — whether in business, biology, education, engineering, or another field — does not provide this legal training. The bar examination is designed to test legal knowledge; it is not designed to substitute for formal legal education. Eliminating the legal education prerequisite without replacing it with a defined law-specific training pathway removes a long-standing safeguard intended to ensure baseline professional competency before licensure. 3. Public Protection Considerations Attorney licensure standards exist to protect the public. Lawyers handle matters involving constitutional rights, criminal defense, property, contracts, family law, and access to the courts. Lowering educational prerequisites without implementing structured legal training requirements risks weakening that protective framework. Other jurisdictions that explore alternative pathways to licensure typically require supervised apprenticeships or defined legal coursework — not simply possession of an unrelated graduate degree. Conclusion HB 5465 does not meaningfully expand access for most West Virginians, given that fewer than 10% of adults hold a graduate degree. At the same time, it removes a core legal education requirement that has traditionally served to protect the public and maintain professional standards. For these reasons, I respectfully urge rejection of HB 5465 in its current form.
2026 Regular Session HB5462 (Finance)
Comment by: Jayli Flynn on February 13, 2026 15:25
I respectfully oppose House Bill 5462 as introduced. HB 5462 amends §33-30-6 of the West Virginia Code relating to mine subsidence insurance and clarifies limitations on coverage limits under the state’s Mine Subsidence Insurance Program. While framed as a technical clarification, any change affecting coverage limits, deductibles, or program structure must be evaluated in light of West Virginia’s long history of underground mining and the ongoing risk to homeowners. Mine subsidence is not a hypothetical concern in this state. Large portions of West Virginia sit over abandoned underground coal mines. When subsidence occurs, homeowners often have no viable responsible operator to pursue for damages. The Mine Subsidence Insurance Program therefore functions as a critical backstop for residents whose homes are damaged through no fault of their own. My concerns are as follows:
  1. Coverage Adequacy: Any clarification or limitation on coverage must ensure that policy limits remain sufficient to cover modern reconstruction costs. Construction and material costs have risen significantly in recent years. If coverage caps or structural limitations fail to keep pace with actual rebuilding costs, homeowners will bear uncompensated losses.
  2. Risk Allocation: The Mine Subsidence Insurance Program exists because historical mining created long-term structural risk. Legislative changes should not shift more of that financial burden onto individual property owners or taxpayers through narrowed coverage or higher effective exposure.
  3. Transparency and Actuarial Justification: Before altering statutory language regarding coverage limits, the Legislature should publicly disclose actuarial data demonstrating:
    • Current claim frequency and severity,
    • Solvency projections of the fund,
    • Whether existing limits are inadequate or excessive,
    • The fiscal necessity of the proposed clarification.
  4. Public Protection Purpose: Chapter 33-30 was enacted to provide equitable availability of mine subsidence coverage statewide. Any amendment must preserve that protective purpose and avoid unintentionally weakening consumer safeguards.
West Virginia communities continue to live with the legacy impacts of underground mining. Insurance mechanisms addressing that legacy should err on the side of homeowner protection, not financial contraction. For these reasons, I urge careful reconsideration of HB 5462 and request full fiscal and actuarial transparency before any statutory limitation on mine subsidence coverage is modified.
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Carlos Duncan on February 13, 2026 15:19

Would love to see the dispensary have edibles

2026 Regular Session HB5154 (Judiciary)
Comment by: John Wells on February 13, 2026 15:18
This bill by Kayla Young is very much needed, considering that very little or NOTHING happens within the WVHRC in the time frame of one year. It takes them forever even to assign a case worker or investigator, not to mention the time it takes for people to find and retain legal assistance or counsel. The bill needs to be fully supported by both the Senate and House in unison. It's high time that this problem with the system be addressed by the Legislature. I also think that these so called secret or confidential WVHRC investigations should be made transparent for all parties. Secrecy WASTES so very much of the complainants time that it's ridiculous. I also thing the HRC should have the power to negotiate settlements or offer arbitration at the States expense, since WV is one of the poorest states in the union. It would save money and lessen the burden on civil courts immensely, and make the 6th Constitutional Amendment a reality[the right to face your accuser]  instead of a royal joke.
2026 Regular Session HB5460 (Finance)
Comment by: Jayli Flynn on February 13, 2026 15:17
I am submitting this comment in opposition to House Bill 5460, the Construction Cost Relief Act, based on substantive concerns regarding equity, fiscal prioritization, and lack of enforceable public benefit. House Bill 5460 proposes a refund of sales tax on construction materials used to build new single-family homes, payable after construction and sale (WV Code § Article ___). The bill authorizes the Tax Commissioner to calculate rebate limits based on county and state housing price indexes, and allows builders to claim up to 30% of the sale price as the maximum eligible rebate. The refund must be filed within one year of construction completion and applies to homes where construction begins after July 1, 2026. While increasing housing supply is a legitimate policy goal, the current structure of HB 5460 raises the following grave concerns: 1. Disproportionate Benefit to Private Property Owners HB 5460 provides a tax expenditure that accrues exclusively to private builders and future homebuyers of single-family homes. It does not include any affordability criteria, income targeting, or workforce housing requirements. As a result, public funds would be transferred to private property development without ensuring measurable public benefit or broad distribution of value. Tax expenditures function identically to direct spending. A refund of sales tax revenue reduces the state’s revenue stream and reallocates public resources, yet the bill imposes no statutory obligation that the construction benefit affordable housing outcomes or serve households unable to access homeownership. This creates an unequal subsidy that favors capital holders over the broader tax base. 2. Lack of Targeted Support for Renters and Cost-Burdened Households Many West Virginia households are renters living paycheck-to-paycheck, face utility and food cost burdens, and lack liquid assets necessary for down payments or qualifying mortgages. HB 5460 does nothing to address these structural barriers. In contrast, state policies that tie incentives to affordability restrictions, income thresholds, or long-term rent stabilization have demonstrated more equitable outcomes in other jurisdictions. The absence of such conditions in HB 5460 means that the public does not receive accountability for public revenue expenditures. 3. Opportunity Cost of State Revenue The sales tax refunds authorized under HB 5460 will reduce revenue that could otherwise support:
  • Expanded rental assistance programs
  • State housing trust fund contributions
  • Water and sewer utility affordability measures
  • Workforce development
  • Public safety net services
Without a requirement that the refunded revenue translate into tangible public housing benefits, the public bears the fiscal risk while private actors benefit. 4. No Conditional Public Benefit Requirements Unlike other state housing incentive programs that include clawback provisions, affordability periods, or monitoring requirements, HB 5460 contains no mechanism to ensure long-term public gains from the tax expenditure. Without statutory conditions, builders and buyers may receive refunds regardless of whether the resulting housing is affordable or accessible to low- and moderate-income families. Conclusion For these reasons, I oppose HB 5460 in its current form. If the Legislature intends to use tax policy to support housing development, it should pair those incentives with clear affordability requirements, income targeting, and accountability measures that ensure public benefits commensurate with public cost. I urge the Committee on Finance and the full House of Delegates to reject HB 5460 or to require amendments that incorporate enforceable public benefit conditions tied to affordability and equitable access to housing.
2026 Regular Session HB5260 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Natasha Redman on February 13, 2026 15:05
Gummies would be so beneficial to our area