Apr. 14—MORGANTOWN — The 2025 legislative session wrapped up at midnight Saturday, and a number of bills we followed along the way completed their journeys.
Most prominent among them is HB 3279. Over the objections of WVU and Marshall and others who said it addresses a problem that doesn’t exist, it turns the student, faculty and staff members of college and university boards of governors across the state into non-voting advisory members. For WVU specifically, it also makes the Extension service faculty representative a non-voting member.
Some final amendment fiddling and concurrence concluded Saturday afternoon and it heads to the governor.
WVU provided this statement to The Dominion Post on Monday: “West Virginia University is West Virginia’s University because of our students, faculty and staff, and their commitment to serving the state. We believe their voices should be heard and, in this case, they made their opposition to HB 3279 known to lawmakers.
“Once the bill is signed into law, ” WVU said, “we will work to implement its provisions as we do with every other law. The WVU Board of Governors will continue to include two faculty representatives, one classified staff representative and one student body representative. Going forward, we hope their perspectives and guidance will continue to be sought in the decision-making process.”
SB 50 aligns municipal election dates with statewide primary and general election dates, effective July 1, 2032. Last Monday, April 7, the House adopted an amendment by Delegate Geno Chiarelli, R-Monongalia, to move the effective date to July 1, 2028.
The Senate rejected that amendment and on Saturday the House receded and passed the Senate version 93-2. Chiarelli joined the majority but Delegate Evan Hansen D-Monongalia, voted against it (he voted for it when the House passed its amended version). It heads to the governor.
Here are some other bills heading to the governor.
After failing in 2023 and 2024, the bill to require the display of the U.S. Motto “IN God We Trust ” finally passed.
SB 280 requires public schools and higher education institutions to display a durable poster or framed copy of the motto “in a conspicuous location within a common area of the main building …that is accessible to the public.” Displays in other areas is optional.
Public funding is prohibited, while private funding is permitted.
HB 2003 requires county school boards to establish policies for permitting, or not permitting, personal electronic devices on school property. If permitted, the board will set parameters for use and for storage during instructional hours. It includes exceptions for medical issues and for students with Individualized Education Programs.
It also requires school boards to establish consequences for violations, including confiscation and ongoing prohibition from possession on campus.
HB 2164 allows schools three options to put security officers in their hallways. It allows public and charter schools, along with private and religious schools, to employ school safety officers. It allows public schools, including charters (private and religious schools do not appear in this section), to contract with a retired law enforcement officer to provide Guardian services.
And it allows schools — public, private and religious — to contract with private security firms.
HB 2434 is the Stop Squatters Act. It says a squatter is a person occupying a dwelling or other structure who is not so entitled under a rental agreement or is not authorized to do so by the tenant or owner. It allows a property owner or their authorized agent to request law enforcement to undertake the immediate removal of the squatter, under specified conditions.
The bill establishes the crime of criminal mischief for causing damages, with misdemeanor and felony penalties depending on the value of the damages. It also sets criminal penalties for selling real property without authorization and for advertising property for sale or rent without authorization.
HB 2960 launches a pilot project to plow secondary roads in Monongalia and Preston counties. It says, “Snow removal on the secondary roads in Monongalia County and Preston County has not been dependable, providing a hardship on the citizens of West Virginia.”
It establishes a two-year pilot project to put out a Request for Proposal for vendors to provide snow removal for District 4’s secondary roads in Monongalia and Preston counties.
The Division of Highways will identify the roads to be plowed. The DOH can terminate a contract, with 30 days’ notice, for substandard or unsatisfactory work.
A couple measures died.
SB 85 aimed to ban the prescription and dispensing of abortion medications by mail order. It passed the Senate but died in House Health without a hearing.
And the House was set to take up a Senate pro-coal resolution on Saturday but let it die.
SCR 18 announced the intention to create a West Virginia Coal Renaissance Act, citing the changing views about energy as the Trump administration follows the more renewable-minded Biden and Obama years.
It said the Coal Renaissance Act, along with programs and initiatives, will encourage and foster greater coal usage, and state agencies will develop strategies to fully develop coal production and consumption, including new coal-fired plants and efforts to keep current plants open.