3:06pm: Hotline with Dave Weekley

Bill could end meth lab cleanup reimbursements from state

CHARLESTON, W.Va. — A bill pending in the Senate Finance Committee, with less than two weeks left in the 2014 Regular Legislative Session, would end reimbursements for meth lab cleanups through the West Virginia Crime Victims Compensation Fund.

It’s a change to the current law that Senator Mitch Carmichael (R-Jackson, 4) said makes sense.  “West Virginia was the only state in the nation that, within the Crime Victims Compensation Fund, would pay $10,000 to a landlord for any meth lab cleanup expenses….that occurred within their property,” he said.

“In a limited fund, should we really be taking money that was otherwise meant for victims of crime that were uncompensated and diverting that to give to a landlord to clean up their property for, in my opinion, a duty they should have had anyhow?”

State officials have said the state paid more than $700,000 for meth lab claims just last year through the Crime Victims Compensation Fund and, unlike when payments are made to other crime victims, the federal government does not reimburse the state for meth lab cleanups.  The federal reimbursement rate is 60 cents for every dollar spent.

Most homeowner insurance policies do not pay meth lab claims because there are exclusions, in many policies, for chemical contaminations.

Last week, members of the Senate Judiciary Committee unanimously approved the change to the bill that, overall, deals with how victims of all crimes are compensated.

The 2014 Regular Legislative Session will end on Saturday, March 8.  To stay alive, SB 204 would have to advance to the House by Wednesday — the deadline for bills to move out of the chambers where they were introduced.





More News

News
West Virginia among first states approved to unlock millions of federal broadband expansion dollars
West Virginia is in line for $1.2 billion.
April 25, 2024 - 2:16 pm
News
West Virginia officials blast new EPA rules with heavier restrictions on coal, gas power plants
Under the EPA rule announced today, coal plants that plan to stay open beyond 2039 would have to cut or capture 90% of their carbon dioxide emissions by 2032.
April 25, 2024 - 1:50 pm
News
Logan Kiwanis club celebrates 100 years
Organization formed by businessmen in 1924 remains committed to same goals of serving children a century later
April 25, 2024 - 1:44 pm
News
Motivational speaker Chris Gardner to deliver Marshall commencement speech Saturday
Two ceremonies will take place at the Marshall Health Arena in Huntington.
April 25, 2024 - 12:13 pm


Your Comments