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Public Comments

2026 Regular Session HB4371 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Brittany Singhass on January 27, 2026 17:25
It is well past time for WV to catch up to our neighboring states on the legalization of THC and marijuana products! Think of the tax money we could bring in that is currently being handed over to Maryland, Virginia, and Ohio as WV residents simply cross the border to buy these items. I'm not sure how this topic is still under debate! PASS IT!
2026 Regular Session HB4080 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Trina Barrett on January 27, 2026 17:25
You cannot judge a candidates values, competence, etc. by their party affiliation. Keep municipal elections nonpartisan. We have enough partisanship and requiring changes in charters, by laws, etc. makes no sense. Keep the politics out of our small towns. Why are you messing up a good thing? This will just make more division in our small town.
2026 Regular Session HB4674 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Cheryl Middleton on January 27, 2026 17:23
I am writing to you today as a constituent to express my strong opposition to House Bill 4674. This legislation represents a direct infringement on the fundamental rights of West Virginian women to make their own healthcare decisions and access safe, FDA-approved medical treatments. By targeting "abortifacients," HB 4674 creates a climate of fear for healthcare providers and places further barriers in front of women—particularly survivors of sexual assault—who are already navigating the state's extremely restrictive reproductive laws. Furthermore, I am deeply concerned by the lopsided nature of this legislative session’s priorities. If the Legislature is intent on forcing women to carry pregnancies to term, even in the most tragic of circumstances, I have two pressing questions for you: 1. Where are the amendments to increase criminal penalties for men who commit acts of rape or incest? If the state is to be a "pro-life" state, it must be equally aggressive in punishing the perpetrators of the violence that leads to these pregnancies. 2. Why is the focus solely on restricting the victim's autonomy rather than ensuring the harshest possible accountability for the offender? Currently, we see no legislative movement to match these healthcare restrictions with mandatory maximum sentencing or enhanced penalties for those who commit the crimes of rape and incest that result in a pregnancy. HB 4674 violates the bodily autonomy of women while doing nothing to address the root causes of sexual violence or provide justice for survivors. I urge you to vote NO on HB 4674 and instead focus on legislation that protects the safety and rights of all West Virginians. I look forward to hearing your position on this bill and whether you intend to support harsher penalties for the perpetrators of sexual violence in our state.
2026 Regular Session HB4073 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Brittany Singhass on January 27, 2026 17:21
As a parent, I implore you... do not pass this bill! The majority of the WV population has told you time and time again that we trust SCIENCE when it comes to medicine. The current mandated immunizations for admissions to public schools are the reason why those diseases were eradicated! The law as it is currently written does NOT require parents to vaccinate their kids. It only requires vaccination if they want to enroll their kids in public school. Therefore, the parents who want the exemptions should just apply for the school voucher program and use those funds to homeschool their children. We require herd immunity to keep our communities safe from these diseases and allowing children into our public schools without these vaccines would be irresponsible.
2026 Regular Session HB4834 (Education)
Comment by: Josh Flesher on January 27, 2026 17:20
Girls wrestling is the fastest growing sport in the country. My daughter started wrestling 5 years ago. She was uncertain where she fit in. Wrestling gave her an voice and laid a foundation of self confidence. Through hard work and dedication she is looking to defend her Middle School State title in Charleston at the end of February. I have had the honor of coaching girls from across the state at the youth, middle school, and high school level and can say for certain that their hard work and dedication to the sport of wrestling warrants their own place in high school athletics in West Virginia. I urge you to cast your votes to sanction girls wrestling.
2026 Regular Session HB4459 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Brittany Singhass on January 27, 2026 17:13
I agree with the legislators' concerns about the use of kratom. I do not know if making it a schedule 1 drug is the right way to control its use due to it being such a new product and not at all regulated or studied by the FDA. I have read about cases where this drug has been used to help addicts get off "worse" drugs... but I have also read about instances where people who had no prior drug addiction struggles start using kratom and then go through withdrawal symptoms when trying to stop use.
2026 Regular Session HB4013 (Finance)
Comment by: Cheryl Middleton on January 27, 2026 17:13
  I am writing to you today as a constituent to express my deep concerns regarding House Bill 4013, the "Mountaineer Flexible Tax Credit Act of 2026." While economic growth is vital for West Virginia, the framework proposed in this bill presents significant risks to our local communities and our most precious natural resource: our water. My primary concerns center on the following issues: Erosion of Local Authority • Centralized Control: The bill shifts the power to certify and negotiate major industrial projects to a state-level Authority. This diminishes the ability of our local county commissions and city councils to ensure that new developments align with community-led planning and zoning. • Negotiated Compliance: The "flexible" nature of the Mountaineer Flex Agreements could allow the state to bypass local standards in favor of securing corporate investments, leaving residents with little say in the projects happening in their own backyards. Threats to Water Resources • Industrial Water Consumption: The bill specifically targets "niche" industries like large-scale data centers. These facilities are known to consume millions of gallons of water daily. Without specific guardrails in HB 4013, I am concerned about the long-term sustainability of our local aquifers and municipal water supplies. • Infrastructure Costs: While corporations receive substantial tax credits, the bill does not mandate that they cover the massive upgrades to water and sewer infrastructure required for their operations. This risks shifting the financial burden of industrial utility expansion onto local taxpayers and existing utility customers. • Lack of Environmental Protections: The bill focuses almost exclusively on financial metrics and job counts, failing to include mandatory protections for water conservation or the prevention of industrial runoff. West Virginia’s water is not just a commodity; it is the lifeblood of our tourism, agriculture, and public health. We should not be incentivizing industries to "absurdly diminish" their tax liability while simultaneously straining the resources our communities depend on. I urge you to oppose HB 4013 in its current form and advocate for amendments that restore local control and implement strict protections for our state’s water infrastructure. Thank you for your time and for your service to our district. I look forward to hearing your position on this critical matter.  
2026 Regular Session HB4834 (Education)
Comment by: Woodrow Turner on January 27, 2026 17:11
Making women’s wrestling a sanctioned sport is a must for West Virginia female athletes. Immediately upon sanctioning, another step towards the equality of opportunity promised by Title IX is achieved.  For no other reason, this makes this bill worth a yes vote. More importantly, sanctioning the sport of women’s wrestling immediately provides an economic benefit to the State of West Virginia in that teams from other states will be able to come to West Virginia to compete. In addition, states such as Missouri and Pennsylvania have seen incredible growth AFTER sanctioning. Most importantly, our West Virginia female wrestlers have earned a sanctioned sport through their dedication, sweat, tears, and blood.  West Virginia has sent national placers, Ironman and Powerade placers, and competitors to the highest level. A yes vote is respectfully requested.
2026 Regular Session HB4669 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Nicole on January 27, 2026 17:05
Please pass this bill. If people want fluoride in their water they can add it. But we cannot take it out.. so please let us choose what we want in our water. Thank you.
2026 Regular Session HB4371 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Seneca on January 27, 2026 17:05
  1. I'm a tax payer, land owner and registered voter. I fully support HB4371. It's time WV! Mountaineers are always free.
2026 Regular Session HB4073 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Zach on January 27, 2026 16:57
Please pass this bill. Wv deserves medical freedom. Where there is a risk, there must be a choice.
2026 Regular Session HB4013 (Finance)
Comment by: Randi Preston on January 27, 2026 16:57
As a citizen and landowner of this state, this bill lacks the true responsibility to hold these businesses accountable for their due taxes, accountable to local representatives as they are the ones who are boots on the ground and going to be the first to recognize any issues. There are no requirements for investing infrastructure that they are going to drawing from as they use immense amounts of water. There are many areas that already suffer due to lack of water. Drawing businesses in and not charging them taxes might be to their advantage, but our friends and neighbors need help. There can be advantages to new business, but they need oversight! No FOIA is asking for trouble. This would be the next robber barons of West Virginia's  future just like there was with coal, oil & gas, and now data centers. Don't let this new knowledge take advantage of West Virginia's people once again. Please fix this legislation before we are the victims yet once again!
2026 Regular Session HB4834 (Education)
Comment by: Douglas Marquette on January 27, 2026 16:51
Bill should be passed
2026 Regular Session HB4834 (Education)
Comment by: Stephen Kelley on January 27, 2026 16:42
Girl's wrestling needs to be a sanctioned high school sport in WV.
2026 Regular Session HB4834 (Education)
Comment by: Jayne simmons on January 27, 2026 16:42
We need girl wrestling in schools!
2026 Regular Session HB4834 (Education)
Comment by: Sandy Young on January 27, 2026 16:37

Been needed to happen catch our girls up to the rest of the nation 💯

2026 Regular Session HB4459 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Deana Lucion on January 27, 2026 16:36
To whom it may concern:   Honorable Senators,   I am writing to express extreme dislike of this bill and I am hoping that you will take into consideration the revenue that this brings into our state. Granted we need to make sure everything is tested and AKA certified I am strictly against you voting to completely make a plant a SCH 1. This is savagely a disadvantage to those of us  who have successfully QUIT opioids and other hard drugs with using kratom alone.  There have been no recorded ODs there always has been other substances involved. God made these plants and pharma is trying to stop anyone from healing themselves.
2026 Regular Session HB4710 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Tanganyika Medina on January 27, 2026 16:33
Great. What about switching parties after being elected?!
2026 Regular Session HB4834 (Education)
Comment by: Joshua Hollandsworth on January 27, 2026 16:28
As a coach and board member of Webster county youth wrestling, girls wrestling in moving in an upward trend each year. Girls should be able to have this as their own. The youth wrestling has girls divisions, tournaments and even a youth girls tournament. Why would you not want this in high school? It teaches girls  a lot. As a father of a girl wrestler this is an amazing thing that would happen.
2026 Regular Session HB4834 (Education)
Comment by: Mackenzie Whitney on January 27, 2026 16:21

Sanctioning women’s wrestling would be a huge move for our state!! My daughter has wrestled for 5 years and we’ve seen it grow more and more each year. She currently starts varsity at Hurricane Middle school, was also varsity last year and has multiple state championships. We’ve hoped since she started that she would have better opportunities once she got to high school. Please make this an opportunity!!

2026 Regular Session HB4834 (Education)
Comment by: Marissa fleming on January 27, 2026 16:18
we should keep women’s wrestling!
2026 Regular Session HB4834 (Education)
Comment by: JAMES B MAYNARD on January 27, 2026 16:15
I SUPPORT SANCTIONING WOMENS WRESTLING IN WV HIGH SCHOOLS .
2026 Regular Session HB4834 (Education)
Comment by: Jared Hill on January 27, 2026 16:14
Womens wrestling is the fastest growing sports in the country. The young ladies that compete within our state deserve a safe environment to complete and their own division, sanctioned within the SSAC. These girls are strong and the ones that are currently competing for schools that don't have a seperate women's team are competing with the young men are incredibly brave. It is time to sanction womens wrestling.
2026 Regular Session HB4175 (Government Organization)
Comment by: Nicole Kirby on January 27, 2026 16:14
Vote yes. Car inspections take time and money we don’t have.
2026 Regular Session HB4834 (Education)
Comment by: Nikki Bailes on January 27, 2026 16:12
Please support this bill! West Virginia is one of five states in the US that have not yet sanctioned Women’s High School wrestling. Sanctioning will allow our girls to compete at higher levels, make them eligible for scholarships and support girls dreams of wrestling in college. Sanctioning women’s wrestling will also bring more profit into the state from neighboring states who currently have already sanctioned as sanctioning will drive athletes in to the state for tournaments resulting in hotel and restaurant revenue. Coaches are currently trying to split their coaching roles between female events and varsity “boys” events and this is not fair to the ladies or the men’s teams as one is frequently missing tournament opportunities. Our West Virginia ladies deserve the same opportunities as their male counterparts and the same opportunities as other female wrestlers around the country. Women’s high school wrestling is the fasting growing high school sport. Please support our West Virginia wrestlers and their hard work by supporting this bill!
2026 Regular Session HB4112 (Educational Choice)
Comment by: Nicole Kirby on January 27, 2026 16:12
Homeschool can be beautiful. However, after spending a decade in public ed homeschool is 1) not yielding better results than public school and 2) often used to avoid truancy charges and child protective services.  Adding incentives to keep kids home is only going to sweeten the pot for neglectful parents to “Homeschool.” Once the rose colored glasses come off, it’s clear that more kids belong at school than at home. Perpetually offering money to keep kids home will only deplete services for public schools causing a poorer outcome for them AND the ones at home. Also, WV’s median income is low and our people don’t go to college. Who can afford to stay home? Who has the skills to be teaching upper level math and science to allow that child to compete after school?  Vote no.
2026 Regular Session HB4834 (Education)
Comment by: Chrystal Ritchie on January 27, 2026 16:06
Sanctioning girls wrestling in West Virginia is not just about adding another sport — it’s about recognizing the strength, determination, and potential of young women who have already proven they belong on the mat. For years, girls across our state have trained, competed, and sacrificed alongside their peers, often without equal recognition or opportunity. They show up early, work through adversity, and represent their schools with pride — yet their achievements too often go uncelebrated simply because the sport they love lacks official sanctioning. That is not a reflection of their talent or commitment; it is a gap in opportunity that we have the power to close. By sanctioning girls wrestling, West Virginia would send a clear message: our daughters deserve the same chances to compete, to earn titles, to pursue scholarships, and to be seen. We would be giving them more than medals or matches — we would be giving them validation, equity, and a pathway forward. Wrestling builds resilience, confidence, discipline, and leadership. These are lessons that extend far beyond the mat and into classrooms, careers, and communities. When we support girls wrestling, we invest in stronger students, stronger athletes, and stronger future leaders. This is not about taking anything away — it’s about lifting others up. Sanctioning girls wrestling strengthens the entire wrestling community and reflects the values of fairness, inclusion, and opportunity that West Virginia stands for. Our girls are ready. They have already done the work. Now it’s time for us to stand with them and give them the recognition they deserve.
2026 Regular Session HB4834 (Education)
Comment by: Richard Parks on January 27, 2026 16:04
I’m in full support of these young ladies getting the opportunity to compete fairly against other young ladies. It’s unfortunate that it didn’t happen years ago but let do the right thing now! Rick Parks Head Coach Jackson Middle School
2026 Regular Session HB4834 (Education)
Comment by: Kat Blon on January 27, 2026 16:04
My daughter has wrestled the last 4 years. Not passing this Bill will keep girls from joining. Its a double edge sword. Girls are afraid to wrestle boys, because some location dont allow for that. While there are many schools that are building Girls Teams, WV is falling behind because this fast growing sport is not sanctioned. As a parent we are begging and pleading you pass this Bill.
2026 Regular Session HB4834 (Education)
Comment by: Paula goldbaugh on January 27, 2026 16:03
If boys can be sanctioned so should girls
2026 Regular Session HB4413 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Nicole Kirby on January 27, 2026 16:01
I do not support illegal drug use. To be clear a needle program, like the one trying to be made illegal, doesn’t “enable” drug use.  It makes it safer. Even if the bill sponsors don’t care about the user, they should care about public health. Communicable diseases DO NOT stay in the drug user population- they spread. My husband has been a volunteer fireman for decades, the number of times he has been exposed to pathogens is astronomical and we are fortunate that nothing came of it. Having needle programs protects our first responders. It also protects sons and daughters who are figuring out adult life in college- they don’t have to use drugs to be exposed.  There are so many unintended consequences to this bill that could directly impact people who do not use drugs.
2026 Regular Session HB4669 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Nicole Kirby on January 27, 2026 15:54
As a scientist and mother, there isn’t anything alarming about fluoride in water. The public good far outweighs anything negative and those who are worried can seek bottled/filtered water affordability. What is alarming is that we are considering removing fluoride from water, which has been proven safe, when we are rolling back environmental protections on people’s drinking water huge chunks of the state don’t already have clean water. You can’t say this is for public health  when it is clearly to cater to a political narrative.
2026 Regular Session HB4059 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Nicole Kirby on January 27, 2026 15:46
Illegals immigrants do not get health care. They are only going to get care in an ER. If illegals know they could be reported to ICE they simply won’t seek care for themselves or their for their children which will led to death and suffering.  On the administrative side, hospitals are already overrun with paperwork and this is going to increase that burden which will translate to higher costs of care for everyone. WV doesn’t have an extreme issue with immigrants either, so we are going to spend way more money in implementation than this would ever “save” citizens.
2026 Regular Session HB4794 (Education)
Comment by: Nicole Kirby on January 27, 2026 15:41
Please add to this bill that our representatives and all state employees must pass this test before the can be hired- then I would support. Otherwise absolutely not.
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Nathan Music on January 27, 2026 15:39
This bill is a ridiculous waste of time that lawmakers could be spending on something that would actually benefit the citizens of West Virginia.  Charlie Kirk has nothing to do with the State of West Virginia.  This bill is nothing but Republican grandstanding.
2026 Regular Session HB4059 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Brittany Singhass on January 27, 2026 15:39
I'm pretty sure that people who are of undocumented or "illegal" status in America do not qualify for Medicare benefits. I guess you can go ahead and push this through, if nothing more than to get on record that Republicans are lying about the cost of immigrants on the system and the state. Spoiler alert: giving tax breaks to billionaires costs the state a whole lot more than leaving immigrants alone.
2026 Regular Session HB4185 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Nicole Kirby on January 27, 2026 15:38
Vote no. Gun are an important part of WV culture. However, NO ONE needs a machine gun. On the contrary, there is peer reviewed research on top of  peer reviewed research that demonstrates that access to guns increases gun violence AND that gun violence is dramatically increasing. Now is simply not the time or the place to legalize weapons capable of such destruction.
2026 Regular Session HB4175 (Government Organization)
Comment by: Nathan Music on January 27, 2026 15:31
I am writing to express my opposition to this bill repealing state automotive inspections.  These inspections are critical for maintaining some level of safety oversight for the vehicles on the road.  Regular safety inspections help identify and prevent failures to critical vehicle safety features such as worn brakes, steering and suspension components, bald tires, and failed lights.  Systems that the general public may not be able to identify on their own until they fail completely leading to break downs or accidents causing potential property damage, injury, or loss of life.  Lawmakers should be focusing on strengthening safety standards to protect our motorists and pedestrians instead of loosening them.  
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Nicole Kirby on January 27, 2026 15:29
As a female I am appalled to see WV creating a day of celebration for Charlie Kirk who actively sought to limit civil rights for woman. If you want people to stay in this state and don’t provide clean water, good schools, and jobs- you’d better at least need to try and make it palatable.
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Brittany Singhass on January 27, 2026 15:17
It sickens, though does not surprise, me that our lawmakers would waste precious time bringing something like this to the committee and I truly hope it does not see the light of day on the floor. We should celebrate the First Amendment every day and not waste time making up ridiculous holidays in honor of people who did nothing positive for the state of WV. Please get back to work on real issues.
2026 Regular Session HB4185 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Kendall on January 27, 2026 15:17

I completely disagree with this bill. No one that is under the law should own a machine gun. What i mean by under the law, if you are not in the military, a police officer, or anyone related with the government. I think everyone in West virginia is crazy and so image them all having machine guns in the streets. Crazy that this bill was even invented.

2026 Regular Session HB4794 (Education)
Comment by: Brittany Singhass on January 27, 2026 15:13
Can we also require our state lawmakers and governor to pass the same test before they can propose or enact new legislation for West Virginia?
2026 Regular Session HB4013 (Finance)
Comment by: Nathan Music on January 27, 2026 15:08
I oppose HB 4013.  State infrastructure is crumbling, we need to be generating tax revenue, not handing out tax breaks to corporations.  The main justification for the passage of HB 2014 was the increased tax revenue from attracting data centers to this state. This bill would allow these facilities to write off that tax debt eliminating that benefit.  Data centers to not bring any appreciable long term jobs to the state. Without these taxes there is no benefit to the local community that has to live with these installations.
2026 Regular Session HB4034 (Education)
Comment by: Brittany Singhass on January 27, 2026 15:06
As a Christian and a mother of children enrolled in West Virginia public schools, I must point out that this proposal is a waste of funds. Our schools cannot be forced to spend their already limited budget on something that actually is unconstitutional. You guys remember the Constitution, right? Separation of Church and State? Promoting religious beliefs of one particular group within a public school does not serve the students who engage in alternate religious practices. Most children would not even understand the language used in the Ten Commandments of the Christian Bible, let alone benefit from having them plastered around their schools. This is a ridiculous demand and overreach on the part of the legislature over our public schools. Please just allow schools to continue to educate students on the core subjects while also incorporating non faith-based lessons on empathy and humanity.
2026 Regular Session HB4669 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Brittany Singhass on January 27, 2026 15:00
It would be great if the sponsors of this bill would have included any sort of explanation for why they feel it is necessary to make this change. Please provide research from peer-reviewed sources explaining how the addition of fluoride negatively affects residents drinking the water. I am only aware of BENEFITS of fluoride additives in public water sources to improve dental health. This just seems silly to me.
2026 Regular Session HB4034 (Education)
Comment by: KRISTEN BATES on January 27, 2026 15:00
This has already been stopped and litigated in other states. This will cost the taxpayers of West Virginia time and money we do not have to fight this in court. This is a waste of time and recourses.
2026 Regular Session HB4669 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Susie Nelson on January 27, 2026 14:36
So you think West Virginians are leading the nation in their dental health?  Yeah, why bother keeping fluoride in our drinking water?  Maybe instead we should be worried about the unsanitary water conditions in southern West Virginia.  Clean that up first, then worry about fluoride.
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Susie Nelson on January 27, 2026 14:32
I'm sorry, this is ridiculous. I'm all for free speech, but I didn't even know who Charlie Kirk was until he died. Holidays are meant to honor our nation's collective heroes.  Shouldn't we celebrate free speech day every day?  Let's have a holiday for every single bill in the bill of rights?  What's stopping us from doing that?  That would mean 10 more holidays!  I don't understand why our legislators waste time with ludicrous bills.  Move on.
2026 Regular Session HB4004 (Finance)
Comment by: Brittany Singhass on January 27, 2026 14:28
This looks like an excellent program to help grow the skills of hard-working West Virginians and encourage business owners to advance their employees to higher levels of employment and earn higher wages. This bill will certainly improve the livelihoods of many West Virginians, if the program is implemented with the proper oversight.
2026 Regular Session HB4413 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Susie Nelson on January 27, 2026 14:25
So we're wanting to allow people to NOT get vaccinated, yet we won't allow programs that will prevent the spread of disease? Instead we should be implementing programs to HELP those who are addicted to substances instead of creating a culture where they can not only be on drugs, but are also at risk for further disease such as HIV and Hepatitis. Do you want to see an increase in HIV and Hepatitis in West Virginia?  I agree that we should not make it easy for people to use drugs, but what harm reduction and needle exchange programs do is allow for an opportunity to assist with rehabilitation.  It's not just about needle exchange, it's about access to individuals who need help and continuously working towards getting them to ultimately be drug free.  Please vote no.
2026 Regular Session HB4013 (Finance)
Comment by: Jodi on January 27, 2026 14:19
I would like to encourage our representatives to reflect this bill.
2026 Regular Session HB4382 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Susie Nelson on January 27, 2026 14:18
Please pass this bill.  Individuals dealing with debt are often living paycheck to paycheck. Requiring 30 days notice before taking funds from their pay is only logical.  With increasing health care costs, many more individuals in West Virginia will be dealing with healthcare debt, so this issue will unfortunately continue.
2026 Regular Session HB4175 (Government Organization)
Comment by: Susie Nelson on January 27, 2026 14:14
As a resident of a county that boarders Ohio, I ask you to please vote no on this bill. We see vehicles in our county from the state of Ohio every day.  The state of Ohio does not require inspections.  Many of the Ohio cars we see would never pass a West Virginia inspection.  This bill would increase hazardous on-the-road situations like tail lights being out, mufflers falling off or being held on by wire, or even headlights not working properly.  Oftentimes, these minor auto issues go unnoticed by the owner until their inspection.  Please keep WV roads safe by NOT passing this bill.
2026 Regular Session HB4013 (Finance)
Comment by: Emily Eskew on January 27, 2026 14:07
I am highly opposed to this bill. We do not need more companies coming in here that do NOT love our land and polluting it more. There is NO amount of money nor business that should permit the tearing down of our beautiful land. The AI bubble will pop soon. What happens when the fad is over and we’re left again with nothing. Find better things to bring here. One that doesn’t hurt OUR people….YOUR people.
2026 Regular Session HB4112 (Educational Choice)
Comment by: Susie Nelson on January 27, 2026 14:04
This is not the way the income tax system is intended to work. So does this mean that a childless couple should also have their income taxes credited since they don't have children in school? All West Virginians should be subject to the same tax structure to provide necessary government funding, including and especially education.
2026 Regular Session HB4073 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Susie Nelson on January 27, 2026 13:58
If a parent chooses to have his or her child exempt of vaccinations due to religion, he or she has the ability to homeschool the student and NOT spread such diseases to public school students.  Please protect public school children and do not pass this bill. Public health of all West Virginians is at risk.
2026 Regular Session HB4588 (Education)
Comment by: Jennings Berry on January 27, 2026 13:57

Dear Members of the West Virginia House Education Committee,

I am writing as a lifelong West Virginian and as a PhD candidate in Leadership Studies with an emphasis in Public Administration to share serious concerns regarding the proposed federal voucher-style tax credit program and the possibility of West Virginia opting into it.

While the program is framed as a tax credit of up to $3,400 for families, it functions in practice as a voucher program. Like other voucher programs, it diverts public resources away from public education and into private institutions. Regardless of the mechanism, the end result is the same: public money no longer supporting public schools.

It is also important to be clear that this is not “free money” for states. These tax credits reduce federal tax revenue—revenue that would otherwise support public education, infrastructure, healthcare, and other essential public services. For a state already struggling to maintain adequate funding levels, this tradeoff should not be taken lightly.

Recent research reinforces these concerns. A study by RAND examining West Virginia’s Hope Scholarship found that expanding vouchers to families already sending their children to private school was an inefficient use of public funds. This proposal replicates that same inefficiency by subsidizing decisions families have already made, rather than meaningfully expanding access or improving educational outcomes.

Additionally, it remains unclear whether—or how—public school students would actually be able to utilize this program until all federal regulations are finalized. Opting into a program without knowing how eligibility, oversight, and implementation will function places the state in a reactive position rather than one of responsible governance.

The role of Scholarship Granting Organizations raises further concern. These organizations are permitted to retain up to 10 percent of donated funds for administrative purposes. When those donations are incentivized through tax credits, that retained portion effectively comes from public tax dollars. This structure creates the appearance, at minimum, of a money-making scheme layered on top of public finance.

It is also worth noting that this program is voluntary. States are not required to opt in. West Virginia already operates a voucher-style program through the Hope Scholarship. Adding another program before fully assessing the long-term fiscal and educational impacts of the first only compounds uncertainty.

Until federal regulations are fully released, it is unclear how much authority states will retain to regulate or oversee this program. Committing state policy without knowing the rules is neither prudent nor consistent with sound public administration.

Finally, I believe it would be irresponsible for a state that is hemorrhaging its tax base, struggling to provide basic public services, and simultaneously considering further cuts to public funding to take on additional fiscal risk. West Virginia’s public schools, infrastructure, and healthcare systems are already under strain. Weakening them further does not serve our long-term economic or social stability.

My concern is not ideological. It is rooted in fiscal responsibility, public trust, and the basic obligation of government to steward limited resources wisely. I urge the committee to approach this proposal with caution and to prioritize transparency, accountability, and the long-term interests of West Virginia’s communities.

2026 Regular Session HB4013 (Finance)
Comment by: Rev Deborah Watts Higginbotham on January 27, 2026 13:57
I am NOT in favor of this HB 4013 which would sign into law large tax credits to data center projects AND forcing myself as a West Virginia taxpayer to subsidize them.   I also do not support these companies paying below a fair wage.  Have we learned nothing in the history of our state first with the Lumber industry, then the coal.... "I owe my soul to the company store"....    We cannot afford to subsidize yet another industry that will rob our state of resources, pollute our air, land and water with no repercussions.   I realize we have a governor that is not a West Virginian, but we as residents need to protect our land, air and water.  We also need to protect our residents to receive a livable wage, not slave wages that will benefit slave owners outside of our state's jurisdiction.  I am 72 and am tired of seeing our state and my kinspeople of this state being exploited!  "Greed is so destructive.  It destroys everything." Eartha Kitt
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Carolyn McDaniel on January 27, 2026 13:51
Please do not support this bill.  I do not believe we should criminalize assisting any immigrant.  I think this bill is too vague.  There are already laws that define harboring criminals.   Not all immigrants are criminals.
2026 Regular Session HB4013 (Finance)
Comment by: Marisa Jackson on January 27, 2026 13:44
Dear House Finance Members,
The people of my home, southern West Virginia, cannot afford to subsidize yet another industry that promises only to extract our wealth and our health rather than create real economic opportunity and raise the quality of life for a region and people in desperate need.
If passed, this bill would only serve to perpetuate the economic exploitation we've suffered for generations. I urge you to vote no. Protect our beautiful land and the health of the people of West Virginia.
Sincerely,
Marisa Jackson
2026 Regular Session HB4013 (Finance)
Comment by: Blake Flessas on January 27, 2026 13:44
I oppose HB 4013 because it goes against our values as West Virginians. We put our communities first. We support each other and lift up our neighbors. We want new opportunities for our communities and children, but not at the cost of our health or homes.  Our laws should uplift local businesses and families, protect our environment, and build trust between lawmakers and their constituents. This bill does none of those things. In fact, it feels like an abandonment of local communities while special favors are granted to corporations.   HB 4013 lets big corporations off the hook and could wipe out all state taxes on projects worth billions of dollars. The public already knows data centers don’t offer many jobs, and with 70% of data center property taxes being captured by Charleston under the Microgrid bill (B2014), counties are left with the scraps. HB4013 makes this worse by wiping out even more potential tax revenue through credits, starving communities further. The tax cuts outlined in HB 4013 are a giveaway to an industry that is already going to avoid paying their fair share to schools and public services while our towns pay the price with higher electricity costs, drying up local water sources, increased noise and strain on aging local infrastructure. It’s hard enough to pay our household bills without paying for surging demand from data centers and letting big corporations freeload.  I urge lawmakers to reject HB 4013 and pursue policies that reflect our shared values and build up our communities. 
2026 Regular Session HB4012 (Energy and Public Works)
Comment by: Abby Reale on January 27, 2026 13:12
PSC TIMELINES (Bill pp. 2–3;PDF pp. 3–4; Lines 27–49)
Thank you for the opportunity to provide comments on HB 4012. We appreciate the Legislature’s commitment to streamlining permitting and speeding the deployment of critical electric infrastructure in West Virginia. We strongly support the bill’s reduction of Public Service Commission review periods for CPCN applications. As outlined in the bill summary, the PSC’s maximum review time decreases from 270 to 180 days for most applications, and from 400 to 270 days for projects between $100 million and $750 million, with a new 360‑day timeline for projects over $750 million, changes reflected in the introduced version and summary. These revisions improve project certainty, reduce cost pressures, and help ensure utilities can deliver needed generation and transmission projects more efficiently. Speed to power! ADVANCED TRANSMISSION TECHNOLOGIES REQUIREMENT (Bill p. 7; PDF p. 8; Lines 11–13) HB 4012 adds a requirement that transmission CPCN applicants include “an explanation of the inadequacy of advanced transmission technologies to satisfy the need in the particular circumstance.” We understand and share the Legislature’s interest in encouraging innovative technologies that may enhance system performance. Utilities already review these technologies through standard engineering and PJM regional planning processes, and they can provide value in the right circumstances. To support the bill’s broader intent to reduce regulatory burden and avoid additional steps that could lengthen PSC cases or increase costs for ratepayers—especially in instances where PJM planning rules or physical system limitations restrict the use of such technologies—we respectfully suggest refining this language. Allowing applicants to address advanced technologies when relevant, rather than requiring a detailed justification in every filing, would preserve the Legislature’s policy goals while keeping the permitting process efficient and cost‑effective. We would welcome working with Committee Counsel on language that maintains legislative intent while protecting project timelines and ratepayer impacts. MAINTENANCE/REPLACEMENT WITHOUT NEW CPCN (Bill p. 9; PDF p. 10; Lines 57–65) We support the bill’s provision allowing utilities to maintain or replace existing transmission facilities, structures, or conductors—including through the use of advanced transmission technologies—without needing to seek a new CPCN. This is consistent with the bill summary’s recognition that utilities should be able to maintain existing infrastructure without unnecessary refiling. This flexibility will help avoid delays, improve reliability, and allow modern equipment to be incorporated more efficiently. The Legislature may also wish to clarify that the exemption applies to modernized equipment even when not categorized as advanced technology, as long as the work remains within the scope of the original CPCN. LOCAL PREEMPTION AFTER PSC APPROVAL To further support the streamlining goals of HB 4012, we recommend including clear language stating that once the PSC has granted a CPCN—after statewide notice and an opportunity for input—no local government may impose additional permitting, inspection, zoning, or approval requirements that could delay or condition the project. As West Virginia has long treated energy infrastructure siting and reliability as matters of statewide concern, this clarification would prevent conflicting or duplicative local processes from slowing construction or increasing project costs. A suggested amendment is: “State approval supersedes all local permitting and inspection requirements. Upon issuance of a certificate of public convenience and necessity by the Public Service Commission, no county, municipality, or other local governmental entity may impose, condition, delay, require, or enforce any permit, license, approval, inspection, fee, or other regulatory requirement related to the construction, maintenance, or siting of the project. Local governmental entities may receive notice for informational purposes only.” CONCLUSION We appreciate Delegate Linville and sponsors of the bill, along with the Legislature’s leadership in strengthening West Virginia’s energy infrastructure permitting framework. We respectfully request adoption of the shortened PSC timelines; refinement of the advanced transmission technology requirement to avoid unintended delays or costs; clarification of the maintenance and replacement exemption; and inclusion of state preemption language to ensure timely project development. Thank you for your consideration and for your continued work to advance West Virginia’s energy future.
2026 Regular Session HB4013 (Finance)
Comment by: Marie Battles on January 27, 2026 12:51
West Virginia does not have the income and revenue to support these tax cuts. I strongly urge you to focus on investing in clean drinking water, support cost efficient  and alternative energy options, support child care for working families. Most importantly, give local control back to local communities. Focus on alternatives that would actually help West Virginia families.
2026 Regular Session HB4826 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Nancy Haggerty on January 27, 2026 12:33
This is another way to funnel money to corporations while doing nothing to actually help people with addiction. Yet another thing the WV people don't want our government to do.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Diana Gainer on January 27, 2026 12:19
It does not hurt us to help people, helping people should matter before checking status.
2026 Regular Session HB4834 (Education)
Comment by: Derek Supanik on January 27, 2026 12:13
Dear Delegates,   I am writing to ask for your support of women’s wrestling opportunities in West Virginia schools.   Women’s wrestling is one of the fastest-growing high school sports in the nation and is now the 91st sanctioned sport in the NCAA. It provides young women with opportunities for athletic participation, college scholarships, leadership development, and personal growth. Many neighboring states already recognize and support women’s wrestling programs (PA has been sanctioned 3 years and currently is the best wrestling state for qomen), and West Virginia students deserve the same opportunities.   Supporting women’s wrestling promotes equity in athletics and gives more students a chance to succeed both on and off the mat.   Currently our team (Valkyrie Girls Wrestling Club) competes at National Duals versus other states and are proud to take ALL girls from WV on our team. If we get sanctioned, this will allow us to have more Girls compete and bring even more hardware back to our state.   I encourage you to support legislation, funding, or policy initiatives that expand women’s wrestling programs at the middle school, high school, and collegiate levels.   There are currently 46 states that have Sanctioned womens wrestling, and WV is one of the few yet to do so.   Thank you for your time, service, and consideration. I appreciate your commitment to the students and families of West Virginia.   Sincerely, Derek supanik Valkyrie Girls Wrestling Coach USA Wrestling Leader - Teal, Copper, Bronze Ohio/Marshall Counties
2026 Regular Session HB4834 (Education)
Comment by: Anita Stewart on January 27, 2026 12:10
As a mother of 3 wrestlers, 2 boys, and 1 girl, I am thrilled to see that all of my children would have equal opportunites to compete and join the other 46 states that have sanctioned Women's Wrestling.  We have seen tremendous growth in this sport since our daughter started 2 years ago at age 6, and continue to see it grow each year.  We are also seeing continued opportunites at a collegiate level.  Having more opportunites for our youth to be engaged in meaningful activities with positive role models has been shown to be a protective factor for communities in reducing high risk behaviors; by sanctioning Women's Wrestling in WV, you are adding another protective factor to our communities, and giving our young ladies, our future West Virginians, a hand up!
2026 Regular Session HB4059 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Misty Curry on January 27, 2026 11:44
to me it seems like this bill is intentionally targeting less than 1% of our population. It seems like it will be used against anyone that could be here undocumented or illegal. It could also prevent those few people from seeking medical treatment when it’s absolutely necessary. Which would increase communicable diseases in our towns. we live in a state with very low population, and we are trying to find ways to increase our economic growth and it seems like maybe instead of making less than 1% of our population feel unwanted. We should find resources to help integrate them into our community, the correct way.  I’ve seen 2 other bills today that want to force the 10 Commandments in classrooms Bibles in classrooms  and when you read the Bible, it teaches us to love our neighbor, regardless of who they are and to me this is one step toward doing exactly the opposite of that. so I would encourage you to look deep into your hearts before you make a decision on something that is really trivial when it comes to the other problems that we have in this state,
2026 Regular Session HB4836 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Jayli Flynn on January 27, 2026 11:36
HB 4836 creates an unnecessary and inequitable restriction on access to essential services. Many West Virginians lack reliable internet, online ordering access, delivery services, or the financial means to substitute in-person shopping. Penalizing individuals simply for the presence of an animal — without requiring any disruption or health risk — disproportionately harms low-income, rural, elderly, and disabled residents. Existing federal and state laws already regulate service animals, sanitation, and public safety. This bill adds stigma, increases discriminatory enforcement, and creates barriers to food access where no legal gap exists. For these reasons, I oppose HB 4836.
2026 Regular Session HB4833 (Finance)
Comment by: Jayli Flynn on January 27, 2026 11:27
HB 4833 amends W. Va. Code § 8-13A-3 by removing the statutory limitation that a municipal stabilization fund “may not exceed thirty percent of the most recent general fund budget.” The bill removes an existing fiscal safeguard without adding any corresponding oversight, reporting, or audit requirements. Under current law:
  • A municipality may create a stabilization fund by majority vote of the governing body.
  • The fund may receive appropriations, gifts, grants, and any other funds made available, including non-state funds.
  • The statute does not require public justification, itemized reporting, or independent audit triggers tied to fund size or use. (See W. Va. Code § 8-13A-3.)
HB 4833 does not amend:
  • W. Va. Code § 6-9A-1 et seq. (Open Governmental Proceedings Act) to require enhanced disclosure of stabilization fund decisions;
  • W. Va. Code § 12-1-1 et seq. to impose fiscal reporting thresholds;
  • Any provision requiring public accounting of grant or federal funds once deposited into a stabilization fund.
As a result, removing the cap allows municipalities to accumulate unlimited reserves, including grant or federal dollars, without new statutory mechanisms to ensure transparency or necessity. Further, the West Virginia Ethics Act limits the scope of ethics enforcement. The Ethics Commission’s public guidance states that negligence, incompetence, or poor judgment alone do not constitute violations unless they fall within specific prohibitions of W. Va. Code § 6B-2-5 or § 6B-2B-1. This means fiscal mismanagement that does not meet those thresholds may fall outside Ethics Commission jurisdiction. Taken together:
  • HB 4833 removes a fiscal cap;
  • Adds no new accountability standards;
  • Operates within a system where ethics oversight does not cover incompetence or mismanagement absent a defined ethics violation.
For these reasons, HB 4833 should not advance without amendments requiring:
  • Annual public reporting of stabilization fund balances and sources;
  • Disclosure of grant or federal funds deposited;
  • A documented public finding of necessity for balances exceeding a defined percentage of the general fund.
Absent such amendments, HB 4833 weakens fiscal accountability and transparency under existing West Virginia law.
2026 Regular Session HB4830 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Jayli Flynn on January 27, 2026 11:24
I support the idea of compensating residents who suffer real harm from government misconduct. However, HB 4830 is written so broadly and vaguely that it risks becoming an unaccountable payout mechanism rather than a fair, transparent remedy. HB 4830 creates a “Supreme Court of Appeals Victim’s Fund” for people “adversely affected” by actions/inactions of the Judicial Investigative Committee or “any other division operating under the umbrella” of the WV Supreme Court of Appeals, administered by the Legislative Claims Commission.   But the bill does not define: •what counts as “adversely affected,” •what evidence is required, •what the standard of proof is, •who exactly the “supervisory authority” is, •how conflicts of interest are avoided, •how appeals work (it references an “appropriate authority” without naming it).   This matters because West Virginians are dealing with complex harms across multiple systems—civil rights, environmental health, FOIA transparency, and discrimination. For example, my documentation packet focuses on water contamination and health plausibility: PFAS and disinfection byproducts are discussed with specific measurements and trends (including PFAS sampling and a PFAS table listing PFOA and GenX results).     Another packet lays out a legal-style “biological plausibility” framework comparing contaminants and medical lab trends (explicitly not claiming definitive causation).   These kinds of harms are not addressed by HB 4830 because the bill is limited to Supreme Court divisions/committees and does not create broader protections or remedies.   If the Legislature advances this bill, it should be amended to include: 1.Clear definitions of “adversely affected,” eligible claims, and exclusions; 2.A transparent evidentiary standard and written findings requirement; 3.Named decision-makers, conflict-of-interest rules, and public reporting (aggregate data at minimum); 4.A defined appeals process and venue; 5.A clear funding source, caps/limits, and safeguards against arbitrary or political payouts; 6.A statement clarifying that this fund does not replace other legal remedies. As written, HB 4830 is too vague to trust and too narrow to help residents facing real-world harms outside the judicial committee context. I urge the Legislature to reject it or significantly amend it.
2026 Regular Session HB4827 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Jayli Flynn on January 27, 2026 11:16
I recognize the importance of early-intervention services for infants and toddlers with developmental disabilities, and I understand that West Virginia must comply with federal IDEA requirements. However, I cannot support a 25% increase in provider compensation under HB 4827 without parallel investments or accountability measures, given the broader conditions facing residents across this state. West Virginians are experiencing widespread unemployment, food insecurity, lack of affordable housing, failing infrastructure, and limited access to education and workforce training. Many families cannot meet basic needs, yet this bill proposes a significant pay increase for a narrow class of contracted professionals without addressing these systemic failures or ensuring improved access for the families most in need. HB 4827 does not:
  • Guarantee reduced waitlists or improved access statewide
  • Require service provision in rural or underserved counties
  • Tie increased payments to measurable outcomes or equity standards
  • Address the broader social and economic conditions impacting families raising children with disabilities
While compliance with federal mandates is necessary, budget decisions reflect values. Increasing compensation in isolation, while leaving families without food, housing, clean water, jobs, or educational opportunity, highlights a serious imbalance in legislative priorities. If the Legislature chooses to advance this bill, it should be amended to include accountability, geographic equity, outcome reporting, and concurrent investment in basic human needs. Without those protections, HB 4827 represents piecemeal policymaking that fails to address the real crisis facing West Virginia families.
2026 Regular Session HB4826 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Jayli Flynn on January 27, 2026 11:13
I oppose HB 4826 because it expands state authority to override personal autonomy, medical consent, and due-process protections by permitting court-ordered, involuntary substance-use treatment based on subjective criteria and third-party petitions. West Virginia does face a serious substance-use crisis. According to the CDC and the West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources, West Virginia has historically had the highest overdose death rate in the nation, exceeding 80 deaths per 100,000 residents, with approximately 1,300 overdose deaths in 2023. However, recent state data also show a 30–40% decline in overdose deaths in 2024, demonstrating that non-coercive, public-health-based interventions are already working. HB 4826 moves the state in the opposite direction by substituting judicial compulsion and moral judgment for voluntary, evidence-based care. Forcing treatment does not address the root causes of substance use in West Virginia — including poverty, trauma, housing instability, limited healthcare access, and economic displacement — and instead risks pushing people further into court systems, confinement, and non-compliance. Medical and public-health research consistently shows that treatment outcomes are strongest when care is voluntary, trauma-informed, and community-based. Involuntary treatment increases distrust of healthcare systems, discourages people from seeking help, and may worsen long-term outcomes — especially in rural and economically distressed communities like those across West Virginia. HB 4826 also raises serious constitutional concerns by undermining:
  • Bodily autonomy and the right to refuse medical treatment
  • Due process protections
  • Equal protection, by disproportionately impacting already marginalized populations
West Virginia’s recent progress shows that harm-reduction strategies, voluntary treatment access, naloxone distribution, and social supports save lives without stripping rights. Expanding coercive authority is not only unnecessary — it is counterproductive. For these reasons, I urge the Legislature to reject HB 4826 and instead invest in voluntary, evidence-based, community-centered substance-use treatment and prevention programs that respect constitutional rights while improving public health outcomes.
2026 Regular Session HB4824 (Energy and Public Works)
Comment by: Jayli Flynn on January 27, 2026 11:10
I oppose HB 4824 based on the following statutory and factual considerations: HB 4824 would add a new article to West Virginia Code Chapter 24, requiring public and private utilities regulated by the West Virginia Public Service Commission (PSC) to deposit five percent of revenues generated from an approved rate increase into an Infrastructure Improvement Fund. The bill restricts use of those funds to capital utility infrastructure projects and prohibits recovery of the set-aside from customers through rates or fees, as administered under W. Va. Code §24-2-1 et seq. (Public Service Commission authority). West Virginia is currently receiving infrastructure funding under the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, Pub. L. 117-58 (2021), which provides federal funding for roads, bridges, water systems, broadband, and related infrastructure through programs administered under 23 U.S.C. §101 et seq. (highways) and 33 U.S.C. §1251 et seq. (Clean Water Act infrastructure funding mechanisms). These federal funds include projects located in Cabell County and the Huntington area. The federal Build Back Better Act was a separate legislative proposal and did not pass Congress. Current infrastructure funding in West Virginia is derived from enacted federal law, not from that proposal. Recent state legislation has reduced or streamlined regulatory oversight for certain large-scale industrial developments, including data centers and associated microgrid districts, by limiting Public Service Commission jurisdiction and local regulatory authority. These changes are reflected in amendments to W. Va. Code §24-2-1, §24-2-11, and related provisions governing PSC review, as well as economic development statutes authorizing exemptions or alternative regulatory structures for high-impact facilities. Data centers are documented high-demand users of electricity and water infrastructure, increasing load on public utilities and water systems regulated under W. Va. Code §16-1-1 et seq. (public health and water systems) and W. Va. Code §22-11-1 et seq. (water pollution control). West Virginia water infrastructure has been documented as aging and underfunded, with multiple systems operating under compliance, capacity, or maintenance challenges. At the same time, state policy continues to pursue reductions in personal income tax revenue under W. Va. Code §11-21-1 et seq., which is a primary funding source for state agencies responsible for infrastructure oversight, inspections, enforcement, staffing, and maintenance. These agencies include those operating under W. Va. Code Chapters 16, 22, and 24. HB 4824 does not establish a stable, statewide funding mechanism for non-utility infrastructure such as roads, snow removal, regulatory staffing, or water quality enforcement, nor does it require evaluation of cumulative infrastructure impacts associated with increased industrial demand. HB 4824 creates an infrastructure funding requirement that is contingent upon rate increases rather than proactive infrastructure planning and does not address broader infrastructure funding gaps arising from regulatory changes, increased industrial demand, or reduced state revenue.
2026 Regular Session HB4044 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Ashley Rouchard on January 27, 2026 11:05
I highly support this bill in order to protect all children, especially those in the foster care system.
2026 Regular Session HB4033 (Local Governments)
Comment by: Misty Curry on January 27, 2026 11:03
as a Christian a mother and a grandmother, I strongly urge everyone to vote no on this. There is a reason why there is separation of church and state. We need to focus on real true education in schools that can help our children in adulthood with good Vocational or college degrees that can help them be good successful members of our state and society.  we should leave our religious beliefs up to the parents and the family. We have a very diverse state. We have many religions within our state and it would be very unfair to force children to read something every day in every classroom that they do not believe in. Even though I believe in the Bible and the 10 Commandments, I know that my neighbor may not have those same beliefs, and it is very unfair to force anything religious onto anyone studies actually show that it pushes people away from religion when it is in a forceful manner, and not natural and organic
2026 Regular Session HB4821 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Jayli Flynn on January 27, 2026 11:02
HB 4821 (2026 Regular Session) proposes creation of an “Affordable Medicaid Buy-In Program,” administered by the West Virginia Department of Human Services, to allow residents who are ineligible for Medicaid and Medicare to purchase coverage that leverages the Medicaid benefit structure. The bill sets an implementation deadline of January 1, 2027. The bill includes prescription drug coverage and authorizes the Department to establish drug procurement methods, including combined purchasing strategies, and to pursue federal Affordable Care Act options or waivers to maximize federal funding. Individuals who do not qualify for federal financial assistance may purchase coverage at full cost. These provisions must be evaluated in the context of West Virginia’s documented history with pharmaceutical oversight and access. Under former Attorney General Patrick Morrisey, West Virginia pursued opioid litigation against pharmaceutical manufacturers, distributors, and national pharmacy chains, including Walgreens and Kroger, alleging failures in supply-chain controls and dispensing practices that contributed to widespread addiction and public health harm. West Virginia later participated in national opioid settlement agreements resulting from this litigation. West Virginia has also experienced documented pharmacy access challenges, including pharmacy deserts and recent statewide pharmacy closures, which directly affect access to medications regardless of insurance status. In addition, drug shortages are an ongoing national issue monitored by federal authorities and professional pharmacy organizations. HB 4821 does not address how prescription drug access would be prioritized during medication shortages or in areas with limited pharmacy availability, nor does it specify safeguards to ensure that access to medically necessary medications is determined by clinical need rather than by ability to pay, insurance tier, or purchasing status.
2026 Regular Session HB4819 (Government Organization)
Comment by: Jayli Flynn on January 27, 2026 10:55
I have concerns about HB 4819 because, while it limits automatic licensing denials based solely on criminal history, it does not meaningfully protect access to actual employment in an at-will, right-to-work state like West Virginia. Under HB 4819, licensing authorities may still deny or delay licensure based on a prior conviction if they determine a “rational nexus” between the offense and the occupation. Even when rehabilitation, time since conviction, and compliance with sentencing are considered, the decision remains discretionary, and mandatory waiting periods may still apply. This continues to impose post-sentence barriers to lawful work. More importantly, even when a license is granted, there is no guarantee of hiring, promotion, or advancement. West Virginia’s at-will employment framework allows employers to lawfully refuse to hire or promote someone without providing a reason. In practice, this means individuals may remain excluded based on past convictions or legal status, even when state law permits licensure. This gap already exists for other lawful statuses, including medical cannabis patients. Although medical cannabis is legal under state law, employers are not required to hire or promote cardholders. Employers may state that hiring decisions are “up to them,” effectively allowing exclusion based on status alone. HB 4819 risks creating the same outcome for people with prior convictions — legal eligibility on paper without real access to employment. As a result, HB 4819 may function as a procedural reform without a practical remedy, leaving individuals subject to continued economic exclusion through discretionary licensing and at-will employment practices. This undermines rehabilitation, workforce reintegration, and public safety goals, while increasing the likelihood of unemployment and dependence on state or local assistance. A true second-chance policy must address not only licensing eligibility, but the real-world effects of discretionary decision-making in an at-will employment system. Without that, the bill risks extending punishment beyond sentence completion through ongoing economic barriers.
2026 Regular Session HB4013 (Finance)
Comment by: Kimberly White on January 27, 2026 10:51
Please vote no on this bill to give tax breaks to data centers. The locals (who you all are supposed to represent) are very clear about not wanting data centers in WV. They will destroy the peace and beauty of WV. Corporate greed has robbed us of almost everything else all ready (health, economy, etc). WV has been exploited enough. Please protect the people and the wildlife from noise/light pollution. We have enough polluted water to deal with for lifetimes, we do not need more suffering. These places will also raise our electricity bills. I cannot bribe you as I don’t have money. I know this is what most of you want, if you vote yes in giving tax breaks to satay centers, then your hearts are greedy and empty of love for us, Nature, and God. You will answer for the evil you do in this life eventually. Remember this as you vote.
2026 Regular Session HB4021 (Finance)
Comment by: Y on January 27, 2026 10:50
I urge everyone to take the time to completely research the reasons why out of state facilities are being used for inpatient care. If we cannot have quality resources in our state then the best chance that our children have of getting correct treatment is out of state.  we cannot jeopardize any child’s mental health, physical health, emotional health just to have them in state for money reasons only. And I agree that it is important for children to be able to have family close by for visits, phone calls, and things like that, but we really should work on getting the appropriate treatment centers and residential facilities in state and that will boost our economy and our infrastructure, it will allow for specialist to have quality jobs in state as well as encourage local employment while taking care of our children in state.  but we cannot rush, just to have children brought back in state because of money is they cannot get real help.
2026 Regular Session HB4812 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Jayli Flynn on January 27, 2026 10:49
I oppose HB 4812 because it creates a new WV statutory scheme restricting state/local police participation in federal law enforcement based on vague, subjective standards (“any indication or sense” of a “political nexus”), while simultaneously providing immunity and employment/decertification protections tied to the Attorney General’s determination.  HB 4812 relies on the anti-commandeering doctrine (Printz v. United States), which already limits true federal “commandeering,” but the bill goes further by creating broad state-law prohibitions and immunities that risk inconsistent enforcement, politicized decision-making, and reduced accountability.  Rights and state constitutional provisions implicated:
  • U.S. Const. 1st Amendment and WV Const. Art. III §16 (assembly/petition/redress): the bill’s “political nexus” framing risks chilling protected speech/association by turning cooperation decisions into political judgments.  
  • U.S. Const. 4th Amendment and WV Const. Art. III §6 (unreasonable searches/seizures): because the bill restricts participation in federal warrants/operations under subjective criteria, it may interfere with consistent constitutional policing standards and oversight when agencies disagree about “political” motivation.  
  • U.S. Const. 14th Amendment (due process/equal protection) and WV Const. Art. III §10 & §17 (due process and open courts/remedy): the bill’s vague threshold (“sense” / “political nexus”) and immunity provisions risk reducing legal accountability and creating unequal treatment depending on viewpoint, target, or jurisdiction.  
For these reasons, HB 4812 should be rejected or rewritten with clear, objective standards, strong accountability safeguards, and explicit protections against viewpoint-based or discriminatory application.
2026 Regular Session HB4080 (Judiciary)
Comment by: rebekah aranda on January 27, 2026 10:45
HB 4080 would require city council elections to be partisan and mayors to be elected in a process determined by the state. I would urge rejection of this bill for two reasons:
  1. Local control is something that has been advocated for by both republicans and democrats serving in the legislature. City government is the epitome of local control, and if the people of a city desire these measures they can advocate for change at the local level. We do not need the state interfering in processes which we find satisfactory and functional at the local level.
  2. Partisanship has become so severe in this country that it has led to an almost insurmountable divide both politically and socially. Local elections should be about finding the best leaders who can address local problems. These are frequently far different than the partisan issues that we hear about nationally. I predict that injecting partisanship at the local level will only serve to divide our communities and leave us less capable of solving the problems that impact us the most.
This bill is a solution in search of a problem and we should not be wasting our time on such measures. I urge a no vote on HB 40480.
2026 Regular Session HB4740 (Health and Human Resources)
Comment by: Penny Fioravante on January 27, 2026 10:43
Regarding Article 14 b; "the board shall also require the completion of continuing education credits in nutrition", further clarity is needed. How many hours CME and which category? Is this included in or in addition to the hours already required for licensing? Thank you for addressing this.  
2026 Regular Session HB4811 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Jayli Flynn on January 27, 2026 10:42
I support HB 4811 because West Virginia has a documented, long-term pattern of public-fund misuse, inconsistent enforcement, and institutional non-action that current ethics and oversight mechanisms have failed to address. As demonstrated by numerous confirmed cases across state agencies, universities, counties, and municipalities, misconduct involving public funds often results in resignations, quiet retirements, or no charges at all. In many instances, agencies have publicly stated that “negligence,” “incompetence,” or “corruption” are not grounds for investigation, creating a systemic accountability gap. HB 4811 is necessary because it closes that gap by addressing false or misleading claims involving public money, including claims made with reckless disregard for the truth — a standard already recognized under federal False Claims Act jurisprudence. Why this matters in practice Records obtained through WVU FOIA #250278 show that state institutions have entered into multiple international agreements and memoranda of understanding involving:
  • student exchanges,
  • faculty collaboration,
  • energy-adjacent research,
  • and foreign institutional partnerships,
while repeatedly stating that such agreements involve no funding commitments, no financial obligations, or no enforceable consequences. However, the same agreements acknowledge:
  • administrative costs,
  • program implementation responsibilities,
  • institutional branding use,
  • compliance with export control laws,
  • and future funding-dependent activities.
These representations raise legitimate questions about material omissions, certifications of compliance, and whether agencies exercised appropriate diligence when public resources, staff time, or grant-linked activities were involved  . Why existing oversight is insufficient FOIA records demonstrate that:
  • agreements may be approved without transparent fiscal impact analysis,
  • oversight bodies often decline review absent explicit criminal intent,
  • and agencies self-certify compliance while disclaiming responsibility.
HB 4811 does not criminalize ideology, political rhetoric, religion, or policy viewpoints. What it does is ensure that when public money, grants, or benefits are requested or used, agencies and officials cannot avoid accountability by labeling failures as “mistakes” or “non-binding.” Why HB 4811 strengthens—not weakens—good governance
  • It protects taxpayers by allowing recovery of improperly used funds.
  • It empowers whistleblowers when agencies refuse to act.
  • It deters reckless disregard for truth in grant certifications and funding representations.
  • It restores confidence that ethics and compliance standards apply equally to all state actors.
For a state that regularly emphasizes moral governance and public trust, HB 4811 provides the legal mechanism to ensure those values apply where it matters most — public money. For these reasons, I strongly support HB 4811 and urge its passage.
2026 Regular Session HB4807 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Jayli Flynn on January 27, 2026 10:35
As a West Virginia taxpayer, I oppose HB 4807 unless it is amended to include stronger due-process protections, transparent oversight, and clear limits that prevent misuse against vulnerable residents. In West Virginia, “mental hygiene” proceedings are not limited to mental illness. WV Code §27-5-2 explicitly includes substance use disorder (including withdrawal) as a basis for involuntary hospitalization petitions, with standards that can be interpreted broadly in practice.  This means people with substance use disorder—including taxpaying citizens and people using medications legally—can be swept into a process that threatens liberty, privacy, employment, housing, and family stability. I am especially concerned because West Virginia communities have already seen serious controversy around the “recovery/sober living” ecosystem. Huntington, for example, has pursued litigation seeking information about parolees and sober living homes, raising significant public-safety and transparency issues.  Huntington-area treatment entities have also faced major fraud allegations, which should be a warning that oversight failures can be real and costly.  Given these realities, West Virginia should not expand or streamline involuntary processes without clear guardrails:
  • Independent, accountable oversight and public reporting (not just internal processes)
  • Strict “least restrictive alternative” requirements, with documented findings
  • Guaranteed counsel and meaningful hearings, with enforceable timelines
  • Protections so the system cannot be used as a shortcut when adequate voluntary care, housing, or outpatient services are lacking
California’s emergency hold framework is tied to specific mental-health criteria (“as a result of a mental health disorder”), not simply substance use or a desire to place someone into a bed. WV should not move in a direction where a person’s substance use or stigma becomes an easy trigger for loss of liberty.  Please vote NO on HB 4807 unless amended to protect constitutional due process and prevent the involuntary system from becoming a pipeline into poorly regulated or profit-driven placements.
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Misty Curry on January 27, 2026 10:32
Message I strongly oppose this moving forward. This is a waste of time for citizens of West Virginia. We have hundreds and hundreds of citizens in the southern part of the state that are suffering due to not having clean drinkable usable water. Instead of worrying about what a social media influencer had going on in his life that most people don’t even agree on we need to worry about taking care of real problems in this state. We still have a family that does not have a bridge to get to their home in Gary West Virginia. We have problems with our substance use disorder population, and we could spend our time working on more important bills and issues that really help the citizens of this state.  Please vote note on this bill.
2026 Regular Session HB4806 (Government Organization)
Comment by: Jayli Flynn on January 27, 2026 10:29
I appreciate the Legislature’s willingness to engage in thoughtful review of compensation structures for county elected officials. However, I respectfully oppose House Bill 4806 as currently drafted for the following reasons: 1. Principle of Equitable Compensation vs. Across-the-Board Increases While I acknowledge the importance of fair compensation for our Sheriffs — who perform critical public safety duties — I am not persuaded that a blanket statutory 10 % premium over County and Circuit Clerks is the most responsible approach. Compensation standards should reflect job responsibilities, county fiscal health, and transparent job-value assessments rather than rigid percentages enshrined in statute. 2. County Fiscal Responsibility and Certification Requirement HB 4806 retains the existing requirement that the County Auditor certify sufficient fiscal capacity before salary increases take effect. Yet, this safeguard alone does not ensure equitable budgeting prioritization, particularly in counties facing budgetary constraints or competing service demands. Counties should retain flexibility to adjust compensation based on local needs and economic conditions rather than a state-mandated pay structure. 3. Lack of Justification for Salary Differential The bill does not provide a legislative finding or data demonstrating why Sheriffs’ compensation should be specifically set at 10 % above the Clerk positions. Absent a comparative workload, complexity analysis, or statewide job study, this differential appears arbitrary and risks perceptions of preferential treatment among elected offices with different functions. 4. Impact on Recruitment, Retention, and County Budgets Although higher pay could improve recruitment and retention for Sheriffs, there is no guarantee that this statutory differential will yield those outcomes. Instead, counties may face increased fiscal strain if implementation is triggered in less fiscally resilient jurisdictions — potentially diverting resources from public safety, infrastructure, or essential services. 5. Alternative Recommendation Rather than enact a fixed percentage increase, I urge the Legislature to consider:
  • Commissioning an independent compensation study of county officials across all classes of counties;
  • Establishing a performance-based or cost-of-living adjusted compensation framework that respects local budget realities;
  • Providing optional guidelines or model compensation charts rather than hard targets.
Conclusion For these reasons, I respectfully urge opposition to HB 4806 as introduced. If the Legislature chooses to act on compensation reform for county officials, please do so with evidence-based justification, local flexibility, and a transparent process that balances fiscal responsibility with fair pay for public servants. Thank you for the opportunity to comment.
2026 Regular Session HB4804 (Finance)
Comment by: Jayli Flynn on January 27, 2026 10:27
I oppose HB 4804 due to unresolved constitutional, federal compliance, and equity concerns. While the bill proposes increased retirement benefits for a specific class of public employees, it raises serious issues under both the U.S. Constitution and the West Virginia Constitution, particularly regarding equal protection, contract impairment, and federal pension compliance. First, HB 4804 creates unequal treatment among similarly situated public employees by granting enhanced retirement benefits based on retirement date and job classification without clear, transparent actuarial justification. Under the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment, classifications in public benefit systems must have a rational basis tied to a legitimate governmental interest. The bill fails to clearly document why this class is treated differently while other public employees—many of whom face comparable risk and service requirements—are excluded. Second, public retirement benefits in West Virginia are widely recognized as contractual in nature once earned. Any statutory changes that alter benefit calculations or funding mechanisms risk violating the Contract Clause of the U.S. Constitution (Article I, Section 10) if they impair vested expectations or shift long-term liabilities without sufficient safeguards or funding guarantees. Third, HB 4804 relies on compliance with federal Internal Revenue Code limits (including IRC §415) to preserve tax-qualified status. However, the bill does not include sufficient safeguards or adaptive language to ensure ongoing compliance with future federal regulatory changes. Failure to do so could expose the retirement system—and taxpayers—to federal penalties or plan qualification risks. Fourth, the bill authorizes county-level funding mechanisms without adequate voter oversight or transparency, potentially shifting long-term financial risk onto taxpayers who are already facing reductions in essential services such as healthcare, food assistance, and infrastructure. Public pension legislation must be equitable, fiscally transparent, constitutionally sound, and federally compliant. HB 4804, as written, does not meet these standards. For these reasons, I urge the Legislature to reject HB 4804 or substantially amend it to address equal protection concerns, protect vested contractual rights, ensure federal compliance, and provide full fiscal transparency to taxpayers.
2026 Regular Session HB4803 (Finance)
Comment by: Jayli Flynn on January 27, 2026 10:25
HB 4803 increases retirement benefits by creating a new 1% annual annuity adjustment for deputy sheriff retirees and surviving spouses, and it changes how employer contribution rates are set and capped. While the bill conditions the annuity adjustment on the plan reaching 105% funded status, it still expands benefits and shifts policy choices at a time when many West Virginians are struggling with basic needs and disaster recovery.  West Virginia taxpayers are being asked to support “more incentives” for law enforcement while unresolved public concerns continue about accountability, spending, and priorities. For example, there has been documented legislative scrutiny over whether revenue tied to vehicle inspection “sticker” fees (the State Police Motor Vehicle Inspection Fund) was spent outside legally allowed purposes, with reported allegations involving purchases like tasers/body cameras/motorcycles and questions about compliance with state law.  At the same time, West Virginia has ongoing, well-documented gaps in flood resiliency funding, with reporting noting the state’s flood-focused funds/plans have existed without meaningful appropriations, leaving communities exposed and recovering without reliable state resources.  I urge the Legislature to prioritize:
  1. fully transparent, audited, and legally compliant spending across public safety programs;
  2. fully funded flood prevention/recovery resources and critical infrastructure; and
  3. broad taxpayer relief and essential services — before expanding retirement incentives through HB 4803.
For these reasons, I oppose HB 4803 as introduced, or request it be tabled until there is clear statewide fiscal context, independent oversight documentation, and a demonstrated commitment to funding core public needs alongside any additional law-enforcement retirement enhancements. 
2026 Regular Session HB4390 (Finance)
Comment by: Misty Curry on January 27, 2026 10:21
I think it’s important to remember that just because you’re related to a child in the foster care system does not mean that you were prepared to take on the financial struggle of bringing extra child or children into your home. It is important that those families get the same financial support as any other foster parent would. No family member ever expects that someone in our family needs that extra support and it’s not the children’s fault and the children are the ones who suffer when finances are an issue. And let’s not forget that kids have to go to school with other children who can be very mean and if those subsidies can’t afford children things like decent clothes and shoes the children are gonna suffer from bullying as well. So the financial support should be the same across the board
2026 Regular Session HB4013 (Finance)
Comment by: alan tomson on January 27, 2026 10:08
The state of West Virginia needs increased revenues to address the myriad issues it faces, such as improving education and roads. We cannot continue to give away tax revenue credits. As a major power producer, we can entice business without providing such deep tax credits. Therefore, I recommend not supporting HB 4013. Alan Tomson Mayor, Town of Davis
2026 Regular Session HB4005 (Government Organization)
Comment by: Jo Ellen Gabbert on January 27, 2026 09:38
Vote NO on HB 4005. This bill does nothing to protect children. It allows for their exploitation. Support education opportunities, healthcare for all children, and anti -poverty causes.  Stop this road to abuse!
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Ashley Rouchard on January 27, 2026 09:25
This bill makes no sense. No one is smuggling people over state lines or even within the state for financial gain. That's what smuggling is. This is just an attack on anyone that is willing to help people in need. Shame on you.
2026 Regular Session HB4797 (Government Administration)
Comment by: Rebekah Bostic on January 27, 2026 09:03
As a West Virginia constituent, I do not support the passage of this bill. It is a purely political move meant to divide people. I would urge the legislature to instead focus on issues that actually affect West Virginians.
2026 Regular Session HB4013 (Finance)
Comment by: Jim Marion on January 27, 2026 08:57
I do not think you should give any special help to the data centers because it will negatively impact the people in the state. Water rates will go up from their usage, wages for those jobs are not enough, pollution will damage the environment, and these data centers are just not good for the state or its people.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Angela on January 27, 2026 08:51
Please,  vote NO on this bill and add an addendum "for financial gain."
2026 Regular Session HB4013 (Finance)
Comment by: Paige Kubacka on January 27, 2026 08:48
I urge you to reject HB 4013. Eligibility for the tax credit is tied to worker pay levels at 75 percent of mean wage for the state or respective county. In Mingo County that is approximately $30,000 per year, well below what is considered a living wage for that area. HB 4013 essentially allows the state to pay corporations to pay people an unlivable wage. Even more, West Virginia does not have the income and revenue to support these tax cuts. Instead of giving away money that belongs to West Virginians to out-of-state corporations, we urge the finance committee to: - Prioritize subsidies to West Virginian small businesses and developers - Invest in drinking water and wastewater infrastructure and flood resiliency funds - Enable cost-efficient and alternative energy alternatives, like community solar - Repair our roads - Expand broadband and internet connectivity - Fund access to better healthcare and hospitals across the state. All of the previous alternatives would bring true economic benefits and development to our state while ensuring West Virginian communities can thrive. Again, please vote NO on HB 4013.
2026 Regular Session HB4013 (Finance)
Comment by: Paige Kubacka on January 27, 2026 08:40
Reverand said it better than i could, but I want to add that I LOVE West Virginia. We are hardworking people living in the most beautiful place in the world. Though in our history of hard work and grit, we have damaged our water and land. We deserve access to clean water, a living wage, and not another utilities’ cost increase on our backs. My local water bill in Ohio county has gone up just this year. I get a letter in the mail every few months letting me know I have lead pipes. Please don’t allow data centers to pillage our community. Please vote NO to giving a tax credit to the ones trying to rape our water systems. “Dear House Finance Members, The people of my home, southern West Virginia, cannot afford to subsidize yet another industry that promises only to extract our wealth and our health rather than create real economic opportunity and raise the quality of life for a region and people in desperate need. If passed, this bill would only serve to perpetuate the economic exploitation we've suffered for generations. I urge you to vote no. Sincerely, Rev. Brad Davis”
2026 Regular Session HB4013 (Finance)
Comment by: Michael Jones on January 27, 2026 08:26
Hello I oppose HB 4013. This is a giveaway to large out-of-state corporations that will take profits and leave West Virginians with the degraded environment, suffering health consequences, and no jobs or economic development. It is just another extractive industry. I urge you to vote NO on HB 4013, and work to bring benefits to ordinary West Virginians through real jobs, real economic development, clean and reliable drinking water, and good individual and public health. Mike Jones
2026 Regular Session HB4130 (Government Organization)
Comment by: Gina Myers on January 27, 2026 08:25

Dear House Finance Members,

Stricter animal cruelty laws are much needed in West Virginia, as are more facilities to house stray, surrendered, and seized animals. I’ve volunteered in rescue for many years and have witnessed first hand the abuse and neglect inflicted on animals, the impact of overpopulation on our communities, and overpopulated shelters turning people away or directing them to rescues with even less resources than the shelters have. It seems never ending from my position but stricter consequences for those doing harm would be a good start, as would funding for programs that support spay and neuter and more shelter facilities. Also, an appropriate outdoor shelter should be defined by law along with care requirements for breeders to prevent for-profit neglect. Investigation into these matters when reported to law enforcement in towns and counties that do not have a humane officer should be required.

Thanks for your consideration,

Gina Myers