Thursday, June 19, 2025
Thursday, June 19, 2025
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Senate Completes Feed to Achieve Act

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The Senate reconvened this afternoon to complete 40 pieces of legislation. Among those includes Senate Bill 663, the Feed to Achieve Act, and Senate Bill 464, which would allow 14-16-year-olds to use tanning beds with written parental consent.

The Senate refused to accept the changes the House made to House Bill 2014, the Budget Bill.

The Senate also adopted Senate Resolution 69 and House Concurrent Resolution 140, both of which would make July 16 “Atomic Veterans Day of Remembrance.”

The Senate will reconvene tonight at 7:30pm.

UPDATE:

The Senate reconvened to complete eight bills and to receive and pass one bill.

Bills completed in the Senate this evening include Senate Bill 172, relating to nonintoxicating beer distributor licenses.

The only bill passed this evening is Senate Bill 580, which would update requirements for dental intern, resident and teaching permits. The bill has been sent back to the House for consideration.

The Senate is in recess until 9:00 p.m.

UPDATE:

The Senate reconvened this evening to complete three pieces of legislation including House Bill 2498, which will make it a crime for grand jurors to reveal the identity of an individual who is being indicted.

The Senate also passed two bills including Senate Bill 435, which will continue the Municipal Home Rule Pilot Program.

All House Concurrent Resolutions in the Transportation and Infrastructure committee report were adopted.

House Completes Legislation On Selenium Bill

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The House reconvened to receive Senate reports and complete legislation on 17 bills.

House Bill 2579, which would revise the state water quality standard for Selenium and House Bill 3135, which generally relates to voting system certification and procedures at the central counting center, were both completed. House Bill 2571, which relates to who may serve as members of the environmental quality board, was also completed.

The House is in recess until 7:30 p.m.

The conference committee on Senate Bill 435 will at at 5 p.m. in 208W.

UPDATE

The House completed legislative action on a number of House Bills including House Bill 2747, relating to Open Governmental Proceedings and House Bill 2738, relating to the Center for Nursing.

The House will reconvene at 9:30 p.m. tonight

The Legislative Record

As of 4 p.m., Thursday, April 11, 2013, the 58th day of the 81st Legislature’s 1st Regular Session, 1,164 bills have been introduced in the House, 665 in the Senate. Of those bills, 66 have completed legislation in both chambers and either have or await the Governor’s signature. A sampling of these completed bills includes:

Senate Bill 80 requires certain central office administrators and supervisors to substitute teach on at least three instructional days each school year. Superintendents and those who have never held a valid teaching certificate or administrative certificate are exempt from the requirement.

Senate Bill 145 will add language permitting persons complaining of alleged violations of the federal Help America Voting Act, an Act created by the federal government to ease the general process of voting.

Senate Bill 158, called the “Complete Streets Act”, will encourage the Division of Highways to use the latest and best design standards that apply to bicycle, pedestrian, transit and highway facilities. This is expected to improve facilities and ease the commuting process for citizens.

Senate Bill 183 will provide that for tax year 2012, the meaning of terms in the West Virginia statutes relating to corporate net income taxes will have the same meaning as those terms have under federal statutes as amended between January 1, 2012 and January 3, 2013. This is the annual corporate net income tax update bill that incorporates changes in federal tax law enacted between January 1, 2012, and January 3, 2013, into the state corporate net income tax statutes for purposes of determining tax liability for tax year 2012.

Senate Bill 383 will authorize family court judges in family court contempt cases to appoint counsel if the indigent litigant faces jail time. Currently, an attorney who gives representation to someone appointed by a circuit or supreme court are immune from potential liability arising from the representation of that person, with this bill, family court is now also included.

Senate Bill 412 requires conservation district supervisors to be removed from office in the same manner in which other elected county officials are. This creates conformity among the removal process among elected officials but does not include judges due to their own specific procedures.

Senate Bill 421 will amend the state code to permit the Parkersburg South High School Patriot to carry its official musket onto school property when in acting in his or her own official capacity. West Virginia law already gives this same courtesy to the West Virginia Mountaineer.

Senate Bill 430 adds a definition for the term “employment term” as it pertains to the “Teacher’s Defined Contribution Retirement System.”

Senate Bill 431 makes any participating employer, its transferee, successor or assignee liable for the payment of all employer and employee retirement contributions, delinquency fees and charges or costs related to participation in the public retirement system. It also allows the Consolidated Public Retirement Board to file a lien in the amount owed the Board, which the Board may enforce once any amount owed is more than 60 days past due. The Board may also recover costs of enforcing the lien.

Senate Bill 458 will allow the Public Employees Insurance Agency (PEIA) director to operate health benefit plans on a calendar year basis provided it is financially advantageous to the state. This gives more flexibility to the director and still allows financial plans to operate on a fiscal year basis.

Senate Bill 463 will increase the cap on fees charged for licensing gas transmission on pipelines from $315,000 to $400,000 in order to pay for at least one more pipeline inspector for the PSC. The increased fee will give more money on a volume/mile basis to pipeline owners.

Senate Bill 496 relates to finding and declaring certain claims against the state. The bill will direct payment of certain claims made by those who have provided commodities and services to state agencies who have not been paid because those claims would have put the agency over the allotted appropriation. These claims are subject to approval by the Legislature.

Senate Bill 638 will terminate the severance tax exemption for production of natural gas or oil. The bill eliminates exemption from oil and natural gas severance taxes as it applies to horizontal wells that applies to all natural gas or oil produced from any well which has not produced marketable quantities for five consecutive years.

House Bill 2108 makes the failure to wear a seat belt in West Virginia a primary offense, rather than the previous secondary offense. Penalties for the crime will remain at $25, with no court costs or points on driver’s licenses.

House Bill 2314 allows family court judges to order that a child be taken into the emergency custody of the Child Protective Services Division of the Department of Health and Human Resources in instances when the child’s physical well-being is in imminent danger and there are no other reasonable available alternatives to the custody order.

House Bill 2361 includes those who have served honorably or who were discharged because of service connected disabilities in the National Guard and Reserves in the definition of veterans eligible for preference in employment training and employment.

House Bill 2463 repeals an outdated article in the WV Code which permits guardians or care takers of a person who has been judicially ruled mentally incompetent to petition the court to have the person sterilized.

House Bill 2521 gives the prosecuting attorney of a county or a duly appointed special prosecutor additional procedures for forfeiture of contraband property involved in the trafficking of controlled substances.

House Bill 2553 permits the Secretary of State to shut down a limited liability company, a corporation, a nonprofit corporation or a foreign corporation corporate entity if a required professional license has been revoked or the entity is in default with the Bureau of Employment Programs.

House Bill 2729 allows schools to maintain epinephrine auto-injectors, also known as EpiPens, for emergency situations involving an anaphylactic reaction. Physicians will prescribe schools orders and protocols for the use of the EpiPens. School Nurses and other personnel will be required to receive training before being certified to administer the EpiPens.

House Bill 2858 corrects an incorrect internal reference in the WV Code relating to consumer relief bonds. It is purely technical in nature and simply corrects a reference to a subsection in WVC §24-2-4f.

House Bill 2923 provides an alternative way to meet the residency requirement for West Virginia-chartered banking institution’s board members. Currently, a majority of board members must be West Virginia residents. Under the bill, a board member may meet the legal requirement if he or she resides in West Virginia or within 100 miles of a physical office of the bank.

House Bill 2940 require a meeting in each Regional Education Service Area (RESA) of all superintendents and county board members in the RESA every other year to identify administrative, coordinating and other county level services and functions that may be shared between or among the county boards, especially when resignations, retirements, staffing realignments or similar events may occur.

House Bill 2992 eliminates duplicative reporting requirements on distributors of tobacco products regarding imported cigarettes.

House Bill 3003 requires tobacco product manufacturers not participating in Tobacco Master Settlement Agreement who want to do business in West Virginia to post bond.

House Bill 3028 expands the number of hours a state employee can work in a temporary position each year from ninety days to one thousand hours.

Legislature Passes Primary Offense Seatbelt Law

After 9 Years, Legislature Comes Together to Join 33 other States in Making Failure to Wear a Seatbelt a Primary Traffic Offense

The slogan “Click it or Ticket” now has a more strict implication. In an attempt to protect West Virginia’s citizens, the legislature has passed a bill that would make operating a vehicle without wearing a seatbelt a primary offense. House Bill 2108 officially completed legislative action as of April 10, 2013.

The legislation will make failure to wear a seatbelt a primary offense and will forbid the denial of insurance coverage for using a prohibited electronic device while operating a vehicle. Failure to abide by this law will result in a $25 fine; points will not be added to the driver’s record and court fees will not be established. This not only applies to the driver of the vehicle, but also the front seat passenger and anyone else in the car under the age of 18.

Senator Corey Palumbo first introduced the idea for this bill in 2004 when he was a delegate in the WV House. For the first five years following its introduction, it barely made it through its assigned House committees. By the year 2010, it had finally passed the House but failed to be taken up in the Senate. After nine years of consideration, debate, and revision, the bill has finally been passed and will be made law.

Wearing a seatbelt has been a requirement of the state since 1993. However, it has only been regarded as a secondary offense until this recent bill was passed. Before, a person could not be pulled over for simply not being restrained by a seatbelt. If a person had been detained by an official for probable cause for another violation of the law, only then could they enforce this violation.

The first seat belt law to ever take effect was a federal law. It required that all vehicles, with the exception of buses, to be equipped with proper seat restraints. This law has since been changed and revised. West Virginia is currently one of 34 states in the nation to enforce this law, the first state being New York in 1984. According to the national Governor’s Highway Safety Association, West Virginia will be given up to $1.5 million a year in additional federal highway safety funds for implementing this new law.

“This has been an incredibly long process but I am happy it is finally being pushed through and becoming a law. I truly believe this law will save lives and prevent serious injuries,” Senator Palumbo said. “This experience has been quite frustrating because it has been so difficult, but that is the process.”

Complete Streets

Passage of Legislation Aims to Make Roads Safer for All

The streets of West Virginia will now be a safer place for motorists, cyclists, and pedestrians. The Complete Streets Act completed legislative action Thursday and is currently awaiting the Governor’s signature.

The Act is what lead-sponsor Senator Robert Beach (D-Monongalia) calls a “mind set.” The bill wouldn’t mandate the Department of Highways to make any changes to their current policies, but instead urges the department to consider the many different forms of transportation other than automobiles when constructing roads in the future.

The bill would also establish the “Complete Streets Advisory Board.” This board would be made up of 16 members, including members of the Department of Highways and citizens appointed by the Governor.

Laws similar to the one that just passed the West Virginia Legislature have been passed in over 20 other states and over 200 municipalities all across the United States. These acts are all part of a growing effort across the country to ensure all who travel roads in America are safe. This movement started in 1971, when the Oregon Legislature passed a bill known as the “Bike Bill” which required all roads built by the Oregon Department of Transportation in the future to accommodate bicycles and pedestrians. This bill was the first of its kind, starting a movement that continues to this day.

Last year, a similar proposal was introduced in the West Virginia House of Delegates by Delegate Nancy Guthrie (D-Kanawha), first as a bill, then later as a House Concurrent Resolution. Neither bill made it out of their respective committees. This session, an identical House Bill (HB 2494) was introduced by Delegate Margaret Staggers (D-Fayette) along with the Senate version (SB 158) that passed both chambers Wednesday.

In the last seven years, 206 pedestrians and cyclists were killed by vehicles while over 3,000 people were injured in West Virginia, according to a study conducted by West Virginia University. Lawmakers supporting this bill hope it would not only help save lives but also save the state medical costs by reducing the number of these injuries.

Virginia and Maryland, along with six regions in West Virginia, have adopted measures that include complete street-type policies.

House Completes Legislative Action on Three Bills

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The House met today to complete legislation on three bills.

Senate Bill 185, which relates to alternative-fuel motor vehicles and qualified refueling infrastructure tax credits and Senate Bill 190, which relates to public-private transportation projects funding, both completed legislation. Senate Bill 460, which exempts certain residents’ active duty military pay from state income tax.

Eighteen bills have been amended, passed, and sent back to the Senate. Senate Bill 394 was one of those bills. It relates to scholarships for dependent children of state troopers who die in performance of duty. Senate Bill 22, requiring maternity services coverage for all health insurance plan dependents in certain circumstances, was also amended and passed.

The conference committee for Senate Bill 265 will meet at 2 p.m. in 252.

UPDATE:

The House amended, passed and sent back to the Senate four bills including Senate Bill 172, relating to nonintoxicating beer distributor licensees and also completed two bills including Senate Bill 630, relating to Chief Technology Officer’s duties with regard to security of government information and Senate Bill 470, permitting wine sale on Sunday mornings at fairs and festivals.

Also, two House Resolutions including House Resolution 37, recognizing the 24th Anniversary of the “Doc for the Day” program and House Resolution 38, memorizing the life of the Honorable Loutellus M. Stout, farmer, association executive and public servant.

The House will reconvene at 4:00 p.m. today

The Senate Convenes for the Final Day of the 2013 Regular Legislative Session

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The Senate convened this morning, the last day of the 2013 Regular Legislative Session, to complete 20 bills and amend and pass 18 bills, which were sent back to the House of Delegates for consideration.

Bills completed include House Bill 2717 , requiring that deputy sheriffs be issued ballistic vests upon law-enforcement certification. The bill requires the county commission of each county to expend from the general county fund, upon request and requisition by the sheriff, the necessary expenses of providing the vest.

House Bill 2513 was one bill the Senate passed this morning, improving enforcement of drugged driving offenses. Under this bill,any person who drives a motor vehicle in West Virginia is considered to have given implied consent for a secondary chemical test of the breath or of the blood for controlled substances or drugs.

The Senate is in recess until 1:30 p.m.

UPDATE:

The Senate reconvened this afternoon to complete eight bills and pass nine bills.

House Bill 3160 was one bill to complete legislation this afternoon. It creates a pilot initiative on governance of schools jointly established by adjoining counties. One school this bill will effect is a school being built that will serve students from both Lewis and Gilmer County. The bill will allow for a School Board comprised of two members from each county and a one state-level member.

Bills passed this afternoon include House Bill 3020 , also known as the “Michael Cunningham Bill”. This bill will improve boat dock and marina safety. Cunningham was killed in a tragic electrical boat accident late last year.

The Senate is in recess until 4:00 p.m.

House Passes Feed To Achieve Act and Budget Bill

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The House reconvened this evening to pass 20 bills, advance 29 bills to third reading, and three bills to second reading.

Of the 20 bills passed was Senate Bill 437, which would regulate commercial dog-breeding operations. Senate Bill 663, which would create the Feed to Achieve Act. This bill would provide free and nutritious breakfasts and lunches to students in public schools, was also passed. In addition to those, House Bill 2014, the budget bill, passed as well. This bill would make apprpriations of public money out of the treasury in accordance with section fifty-one, article six of the constitution.

Senate Bill 470, which would permit wine sale on Sunday mornings at fairs and festivals and Senate Bill 460, which would exempt certain residents’ active duty military pay from state income tax, were both advanced to third reading.

One of the bills advanced to second reading was Senate Bill 521, which would create amnesty program for certain drivers with suspended or revoked licenses.

House Passes Prison Overcrowding Bill, Senate Bill 371

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Today during the morning session, the House passed 15 Senate Bills including Senate Bill 371, genreally relating to prison overcrowding and also completed legislation on four Senate Bills, including Senate Bill 331, permitting Courthouse Facility Improvement Authority to issue bonds.

The House also completed legislative action on two House Bills including House Bill 2542, relating to publication of the Senate Register and House Bill 2979, relating to broadband deployment projects.

Also, the House adopted House Concurrent Resolution 107, expressing support for the President’s proposal to increase minimum wage from $7.25 to $9.00 and hour as well as House Concurrent Resolution 140. Six Senate Concurrent Resolutions were also adopted in addition to six Senate Concurrent Resolutions.

The House will reconvene today at 3:00 p.m.