WV Farm Bureau Magazine April 2013 | Page 11

Hartman is in his third year of leading the Rural Caucus, a group designed to focus on issues important to the voters in West Virginia’s pastoral counties. The Caucus meets every Thursday at 11:30 in the McManus Conference Room at the State Capitol during the West Virginia legislative session, and is open to all. “I try to keep politics out of it,” says Hartman. He wants to promote solidarity between parties to accomplish the group’s ultimate goal – looking out for the specific needs of rural West Virginians. “ issues in a more relaxed, informal atmosphere. Providing lunch helped the delegates make more efficient use of their tight schedules. So, the meetings continued, affording the chance for the legislators to explore and deepen their knowledge on other important topics. The focus, however, remained on issues significant to rural areas, as organizers felt that urban concerns already received more than their fair share of attention. Some key accomplishments of the Rural Caucus include the aforementioned involvement with the Tier 2.5/Antidegradation of Streams legislation to ensure the protection of private property rights; heightened the awareness of oil and gas issues and surface owners’ rights, which aided in the completion of common-sense legislation protecting private property rights; providing a forum to keep legislators abreast of EPA attacks on agriculture, coal and forestry; assisting in the defeat of legislation which would have resulted in a significant increase in insurance premiums; and playing a key role in informing legislators on the benefits of deer farming. We need to promote the common good, and get away from partisanship.” The meetings usually go something like this: Delegates filter in one by one, snagging a box lunch provided by hosts such as West Virginia Farm Bureau, West Virginia Forestry Association, Allegheny Wood Products, MeadWestvaco or West Virginia Royalty Owners Association. The brief luncheon meeting features a speaker (or two if time allows), whose purpose is to educate the group by providing background information pertaining to issues on the legislative agenda. Legislators can follow up with questions if time allows. The Rural Caucus took its present shape from casual meetings that began several years ago during heated legislative debates regarding water quality vs. private property rights. West Virginia Farm Bureau, West Virginia Forestry Association, and MeadWestvaco helped organize these informal sessions, in an effort to provide a thorough understanding of the potential impacts of proposed legislation. Lawmakers liked having the opportunity to learn about and discuss the The 2013 session of the West Virginia Legislature has seen attendance at Rural Caucus meetings explode. Average attendance by delegates during this session has been well over forty. Hartman hopes it endures. “I want to continue to make it viable, to offer a service to delegates to keep everyone well-informed,” he states. “We need to promote the common good, and get away from partisanship.” Above left: Delegate Bill Hartman speaks to a packed house,while Ag Commissioner Walt Helmick waits to address the crowd. West Virginia Farm Bureau News 11