
Senate bill streamlines audits of volunteer fire departments
The West Virginia Senate on Wednesday unanimously passed Senate Bill 500, giving the West Virginia Legislative Auditor "the authority and duty to make a regular review of the finances of each volunteer fire company" in the state.
Under existing West Virginia law, both the Legislative Auditor and the State Auditor conduct rolling audits of each of the state's more than 400 volunteer fire departments. Customarily, the Legislative Auditor reviews only state funds a volunteer fire department received during a fiscal year, while the State Auditor reviews each department's entire finances.
"Senate Bill 500 will eliminate this unnecessary overlap making the process more efficient and removing the burden of duplicative financial examinations by multiple state agencies," State Auditor Mark Hunt said.
Although SB 500 consolidates the audits of volunteer fire departments with the Legislative Auditor, existing state Code will remain unchanged as to the requirement that audits or financial examinations "shall be scheduled as to complete a review of each volunteer fire company at least once every five years."
Hunt credited State Sen. Laura Chapman, R-Ohio County, for sponsoring the bill and bringing the issue before the Legislature.
"Under current law, which will remain unchanged, the scope of the audits will include all income of the volunteer fire departments, regardless of the source of funds, the assets, liabilities, and all expenditures of the departments," Chapman said. "Likewise, current law also provides that our volunteer fire departments may be audited more than once in a five-year period if there is reason to think that loss, mismanagement, misuse, or waste of funds is occurring."
In those instances, SB 500 would require the Legislative Auditor — "upon discovering any concerning or suspicious financial transactions" — to report the matter to the State Auditor's Office "to investigate and pursue correction or prosecution … of any misconduct, mismanagement, misuse, or waste."
Senate Bill 500 now goes to the West Virginia House of Delegates for consideration and passage. The Legislature's 60-day regular session concludes on April 12.

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The Hill
9 minutes ago
- The Hill
Texas showdown: Warrants, expulsion threats ratchet up fight
In today's issue: ▪ Abbott issues warrants for fleeing Dems ▪ Trump faces GOP skeptics on economy ▪ MTG on her place in the Republican Party ▪ How will tariffs affect back-to-school shopping? THE PRE-2026 MIDTERM redistricting battle has kicked into high gear as Texas Democratic legislators face arrest warrants and blue state governors plot to fight back against GOP maps. Texas Democrats' refusal to show up to the Legislature is part of a rapidly escalating political war over the state GOP's attempt to pass a highly unusual mid-decade redistricting plan. President Trump has encouraged the move, which could help the GOP win five additional House seats in next year's elections. Republicans, bracing for an unfavorable political environment in 2026, are hoping for an edge as they seek to ward off a Democratic takeover of the House that would likely open the Trump administration to numerous investigations. The group of 50-odd Texas Democratic lawmakers is threatening to wait out the remainder of the 30-day special session that gaveled in last month, depriving Republicans of a quorum. In response, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R) ordered the arrest of the Democrats who fled the Lone Star State. The Texas House on Monday approved warrants to track down the missing lawmakers in an 85-6 vote. Abbott said he would strip lawmakers who failed to return to the state Capitol of their seats. Texas lawmakers already incur a daily $500 fine and threat of arrest for breaking quorum, and Abbott previously threatened the legislators with bribery charges if national Democrats pick up the tab. 'I believe they have forfeited their seats in the state Legislature because they're not doing the job they were elected to do,' Abbott said Monday on Fox News. State Attorney General Ken Paxton (R) — who is running as a right-wing challenger to Sen. 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'These massive results seen by Microsoft and Meta further validate the use cases and unprecedented spending trajectory for the AI Revolution on both the enterprise and consumer fronts.' ▪ Smithsonian magazine: You can now have a conversation with the statues at Versailles using AI. ▪ The Hill: Elon Musk donates $5 million to Trump super PAC. ENERGY UNCERTAINTY: The president has been focusing on promoting U.S. energy in his sweeping trade negotiations, but announcements about the agreements reached have been light on details. Actual outcomes remain uncertain. 'There's still a lot we don't know about what these deals look like, including in terms of how ambitious these actually are,' said Clara Gillispie, a senior fellow for climate and energy at the Council on Foreign Relations. 'You have in some of the detail deals references to energy products. Some say energy exports from the U.S. LNG is often referenced as part of a suggestive, but not necessarily all inclusive list,' she added. 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SHIELD LAWS: Republicans are waging a multipronged campaign against abortion shield laws — legislation passed in states where the practice is legal that protects abortion providers from liability for violating anti-abortion laws in other states. Republicans are hoping to force the federal government to ultimately ban the laws. Legal experts say the effort will be difficult — as some states have already learned. Fifteen Republican attorneys general sent a letter to GOP congressional leaders last week urging federal action to preempt abortion shield laws, arguing they interfere with state criminal laws. 'Congress should consider stepping in to remedy this problem,' they wrote. 'Instead of allowing pro-abortion States to disrespect the decisions of other States regarding abortion and trample the Constitution, Congress should assess whether it should tackle this issue head on with legislation that preempts state shield laws.' Here is a breakdown from the University of California, Los Angeles law school tracking shield laws across the states. Elsewhere GAZA: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will convene his security Cabinet this week to decide on Israel's next steps in Gaza following the collapse of indirect ceasefire talks with Hamas. Netanyahu is reportedly pushing for a full occupation of Gaza, including areas where hostages are held, even as Palestinians in Gaza face a dire humanitarian crisis with mass hunger and inadequate access to aid. Over the weekend, special envoy Steve Witkoff had said he was working with the Israeli government on a plan that would effectively end the war in Gaza. 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Bloomberg
11 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
Cory Booker Is Misdiagnosing Democrats' Problem
Senator Cory Booker wants Democrats on Capitol Hill to fight harder against President Donald Trump. And accomplish what, exactly? During a fiery tirade on the Senate floor, the New Jersey Democrat last week accused his own party of being 'complicit' in Trump's ongoing series of constitutionally questionable power grabs — including withholding congressionally mandated funding; gutting federal agencies created via congressional statute; and using the government to intimidate private industry and universities.


Chicago Tribune
40 minutes ago
- Chicago Tribune
John Curran: Illinois Democrats' delivery tax is a short-term cash grab paid by those who can least afford it
Well past midnight, on the final night of the spring session, Illinois Senate Democrats passed one of the most broad-based, regressive taxes on working families our state has seen in decades, which will affect every family and business from deep southern Illinois to towns on the Wisconsin border and everywhere in between. This delivery tax would force each Illinoisan to pay an additional $1.50 on nearly every order placed in our state, regardless of its cost, size or supplier. Whether you are making a bulk order of expensive items or just need a pack of diapers for a sick child, the tax will charge you $1.50 on every order. The Senate Democratic majority says groceries and prescriptions are exempt — but the moment your cart includes anything else, from shampoo to school supplies, the tax kicks in. The majority of the estimated $1 billion collected yearly from Illinois taxpayers in all 102 counties will be sent to bail out the grossly mismanaged CTA and decades of unfunded pensions in the city of Chicago. Unfortunately for Illinois taxpayers who are expected to shoulder this burden, the proposal lacks the meaningful reforms needed to improve transit funding long term and, as these Chicago bailout proposals always do, carves out an exemption for many deliveries in the very city it was created to help. Known as the Retail Delivery Climate Impact Fee, the proposal would not collect a tax on any deliveries made by bicycle, which, because of congestion, are far more prevalent in Chicago, ensuring that suburban and downstate residents will be much more likely to be charged the fee. Besides being patently unfair, it doesn't make any sense, as studies show delivery services can actually help lower emissions by reducing trips to the store. The regressive nature of the tax will have the worst effect on vulnerable populations, including low-income people unable to afford or store bulk orders, seniors, single parents and everyone without their own transportation. This effect on the poor is so concerning that a group of faith leaders sent a letter to Illinois senators opposing the legislation, saying the plan is 'a tax structure that punishes poverty.' Sadly, their pleas were ignored. Data from Colorado, the only state that has enacted a broad delivery tax — 28 cents per motor vehicle order, a far cry from Illinois' $1.50 — validates their concerns. A survey of Colorado residents highlighted the tax's disproportionate impact on people with disabilities and low-income households. The share of the tax relative to income was over four times higher for households earning less than $25,000 per year compared with those earning $200,000 or more. The tax increased take-out prices across the board, leading to more than hundreds of thousands of fewer delivery orders, millions in lost revenue for local businesses, and revenue and job losses for restaurant and delivery workers. The increased prices and reduced sales are especially burdensome for small businesses that already operate on razor-thin margins. Other states are taking note, and in 2024 and 2025, every state that considered such a tax, including neighboring Indiana, dropped or rejected their proposals. Maurice Scholten: The RTA has more money to work with than it realizes. State lawmakers need to know tax on working families is even more offensive when you consider the fact that Illinois brought in a record $54 billion in tax revenue in fiscal year 2025 — the most money our state has ever taken from taxpayers — and the Democratic majority still passed a budget with nearly $1 billion in additional tax hikes, budget gimmicks and no solution for the CTA. There is no denying that we must continue to invest in our state's public transit system for the millions of Illinois families, students, tourists and workers who rely on it. But the taxpayers who pay for it deserve a fiscally conservative approach and reforms needed to ensure a world-class, safe and soluble system — not a short-term cash grab that hurts, rather than helps, Illinoisans, $1.50 at a time.