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Lush Green Hills
Garbage Collection Scene
Lush Green Hills

About the Region 8 Solid Waste Authority

Our Mission
To provide efficient and environmentally responsible solid waste disposal and recycling services while protecting public health and preserving our communities.

Our Vision
A cleaner, healthier region where waste is managed responsibly for future generations.

Landfills

The Authority opened our first sanitary landfill near Romney, Hampshire County in 1976. Subsequent landfills were constructed, opened, filled, then closed in Pendleton County, Hardy County and Grant County. Our two most recent landfills - near Romney and Petersburg - have been "capped" through the Department of Environmental Protection's Landfill Closure Assistance Program.

Our History

Back in the mid - 1970's, the mayors and county commissioners in our five counties - faced with the imminent closing of community "open dumps" by the State - decided to create a regional solid waste authority to address the municipal solid waste disposal problem on behalf of each local government. This innovative approach would create a single entity to deal with the waste disposal problem that each local government would otherwise have responsibility for. In the ensuing years the Region VIII Solid Waste Authority would gain national recognition for this cooperative, intergovernmental approach to rural waste management.


Originally a branch of the Region 8 Planning and Development Council, the Authority in the early 1980's reconstituted as a separate and independent agency of local governments. Working with the West Virginia Legislature on statewide issues, the Authority made a considerable contribution toward the content of legislation which created the Solid Waste Management Act. This Act - passed in 1988 - consolidated and strengthened existing solid waste rules and regulations and, among other things, mandated the creation of solid waste authorities as described above. The description of a regional solid waste authority was based largely on the structure of the Region VIII Solid Waste Authority.

Garbage Collection Scene

WEST VIRGINIA CODE

Chapter 22C-4 requires that each county establish a solid waste authority. A solid waste authority is a public agency whose responsibilities include creating and adopting a comprehensive litter and solid waste control plan, as well as adopting a plan for the approval of and exclusion of solid waste facilities within that authority's jurisdiction. A solid waste authority is empowered to - but not obligated to - engage in the actual delivery of municipal solid waste management services.

The Code further enables counties to join together to create a regional solid waste authority. From the onset, the counties of Grant, Hampshire, Hardy, Mineral and Pendleton agreed to join together to collectively address the many solid waste - related matters all had in common. Thus, the Region VIII Solid Waste Authority was created. We have operated as such since 1975. We are one of only two regional solid waste authorities in West Virginia. The other is a two county authority.

The Code stipulates who shall be represented on a solid waste authority board of directors. A single county board has five members. The Region VIII Solid Waste Authority Board of Directors has twenty three members:

 

  • County Commission - Each county has two appointments

  • Municipalities - The collective municipalities in each county have two appointments

  • Agencies - The West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection, The West Virginia Public Service Commission and The Potomac Valley Soil Conservation District each have one appointment


Appointment terms are staggered. Terms are four years.

Landfill With Bulldozer

Why Transfer Stations? 

When new, stricter landfill regulations required the closure of existing landfills, Region 8 researched building a new “generation” sanitary landfill for our five-county area. However, studies showed the region could not support a new landfill without importing waste from outside the area or state.

To continue providing dependable service while remaining financially and environmentally responsible, the Authority chose to establish two transfer stations adjacent to the closing landfills. This allowed us to keep waste “on wheels,” providing flexibility to use the most practical disposal sites available. The transition was seamless for haulers and residents, with no public opposition.

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