“‘Business’ is no longer a dirty word in West Virginia.”
With his opening comment Monday at the annual West Virginia Business & Industry Council (BIC) Pre-Legislative Conference at the state Culture Center in Charleston, West Virginia Senate President Craig Blair of Berkeley County gave BIC members reason for optimism.
Founded in 1982, BIC is made up of trade association executives who support expanding the influence of business at the state Capitol. The regular session of the 2024 legislative session began Wednesday.
President Blair led a chorus of state officials who touted the policy successes of recent legislative sessions. Speakers said budget surpluses and improved government efficiencies and priorities are the key results, and they open the door for improving the lives of West Virginians.
In the past, President Blair indicated, state leaders were not committed to encouraging economic growth. He said the Legislature today is committed to “working at the speed of business, not the speed of government.
President Blair said promoting the state’s economy is giving state government the resources it needs to address important policy challenges, including those involving education, child well-being, and corrections.
In the past, he said, state leaders saw a parade of young West Virginia citizens leave the state to find work elsewhere. Today, he continued, leaders in state government and higher education are collaborating to promote business investment in West Virginia and create employment opportunities for young people.
President Blair mentioned the cooperation he has experienced with Marshall University President Brad Smith, West Virginia University President E. Gordon Gee, and House of Delegates Speaker Roger Hanshaw of Clay County. The state recently has promoted itself to large companies, including those that have a strong interest in energy and technology.
President Blair noted that people create “true wealth” when they add value to raw materials and create useful products. He was especially bullish on preparing young people to work in the trades.
President Blair also called for more flexibility in public education. That could include allowing students to go to school 12 months a year if they want to, he said.
Governor Jim Justice spoke briefly, calling BIC members the state’s economic engine.
“For God’s sake alive, you make us go,” he said.
Justice, who is serving the last full year of his second term, said the past eight years have gone by quickly. He said companies’ decisions to invest in West Virginia are bringing newfound interest in the state as a place to do business.
“We’ve become the envy of the world,” he said. “Keep doing good stuff.”
Speaker Hanshaw agreed the state’s financial statements are strong, including “nine-digit budget surpluses,” but he acknowledged much work remains. As an example, he said 52% of the students in Clay County High School — the Speaker’s home-county high school — meet the federal definition of homelessness. He said that statistic doesn’t mean that 52% of the students are literally homeless, but it is evidence that much work remains, especially on the economic front.
“We’ve created a lot of jobs, and we’re proud of that, but we’ve got to create a lot more,” Speaker Hanshaw said.
Successfully expanding the economy will allow the state to pay attention to what the Speaker called “quality-of-life” challenges. One of those, he said, is to find a way to appropriately fund emergency and fire services. Both EMS squads and volunteer fire departments have said they have difficulty in recent years recruiting and retaining personnel. In addition, they note their operational costs continue to increase.
Speaker Hanshaw also said lawmakers want the state’s colleges and universities to have the funding they expect and deserve. Those institutions, he said, will use a new funding formula.
Like President Blair, Speaker Hanshaw said he sees the value of training citizens to work in the trades. National statistics, he said, show that West Virginians lag in acquiring post-secondary education. He said, however, that he sees a way for in-state institutions to award associate degrees and other certification that acknowledge training in the trades.
Judge Greear offers review of Intermediate Court
Judge Daniel W. Greear of the West Virginia Intermediate Court of Appeals provided the BIC audience on Monday with an update on the court’s work since it became operational in July 2022 after the Legislature approved its creation.
Judge Greear said the Court has accepted about 600 cases on an annual basis. About 32% are workers’ compensation cases, 30% are civil cases, 20% are family court cases, and 13% are administrative law cases, he said.
One of three judges on the Intermediate Court of Appeals, Judge Greear said the new court is reducing caseloads on the state’s circuit courts and the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals.
The Intermediate Court of Appeals created five satellite courtrooms, but those are underused, Judge Greear said. The satellite courtrooms are in Grant, Lewis, Morgan, Raleigh, and Lewis counties. The courtrooms, he continued, are intended to be a convenience for attorneys who have cases before the Intermediate Court.
Judge Greear said the Intermediate Court of Appeals is positioned to develop more family and administrative case law. He said circuit courts do not have the time and resources to devote to developing opinions that be of value when courts hear future cases.
BIC releases its 2024 legislative priorities
BIC released its 2024 legislative priority list on Monday, and the organization is calling for an array of measures, including:
· Investments in initiatives to support workforce participation;
· Investments in infrastructure, including roads, public buildings, water, sewer, and broadband;
· Modernization of laws, rules, and regulations governing business and industry to make sure they are not more stringent than federal regulations or rules in other states;
· Tort reform that brings the state’s civil justice system in line with the rest of the country;
· Professional licensure that protects consumer health, especially for engineers, architects, accountants, surveyors, foresters, in the real estate sector, and medical professionals;
· Timely use of $1.2 billion in federal broadband funds;
· Strengthening distracted driving laws to reduce highway fatalities and auto accidents;
· A full review and potential amending of regulations relating to above-ground storage tanks and vessels; and
· Campaign finance reform with an emphasis on increasing transparency and efficiency involving political action committees and organizational engagement. |