Utilities and Infrastructure in the Charleston Metro
The Charleston, West Virginia metropolitan area operates on a network of utilities and infrastructure systems that shape daily life for residents and support the region's industrial and commercial base. This page covers the principal utility providers, infrastructure categories, regulatory oversight, and the decision points that determine how services are planned, funded, and delivered across Kanawha County and surrounding jurisdictions. Understanding these systems is foundational to engaging with Charleston Metro Area governance, economic planning, and public service delivery.
Definition and scope
Utilities and infrastructure in the Charleston metro encompass the physical systems and service organizations responsible for delivering water, wastewater treatment, natural gas, electricity, solid waste management, stormwater control, and broadband connectivity to residents and businesses. The geographic scope typically follows the Charleston Metropolitan Statistical Area, which the U.S. Census Bureau designates as including Kanawha and Putnam counties, though some utility service territories extend into Boone, Clay, and Lincoln counties.
Infrastructure in this context also includes the fixed capital assets that underpin those services: treatment plants, transmission lines, pipelines, pump stations, fiber conduit, and storage facilities. The West Virginia Public Service Commission (PSC) holds primary state-level regulatory authority over investor-owned electric, gas, and water utilities operating within the state (West Virginia PSC). Municipal and county utilities operate under separate frameworks established by local ordinance and state statute.
How it works
Utility delivery in the Charleston metro splits broadly across two governance models: publicly owned systems and investor-owned regulated utilities. The distinction determines rate-setting authority, capital financing mechanisms, and accountability structures.
Publicly owned systems are operated by municipal governments or regional authorities. Rates are set by elected or appointed boards, capital projects are financed through municipal bonds or state revolving funds, and service territories are defined by franchise agreements with local governments.
Investor-owned utilities are private corporations subject to PSC rate cases, in which the utility files a proposed rate structure and the PSC adjudicates whether the return on equity and cost recovery are just and reasonable under West Virginia Code §24-2-3.
The major utility providers operating in the Charleston metro include:
- West Virginia American Water – the primary investor-owned water and wastewater provider for the core urbanized area, serving approximately 174,000 customer connections statewide with a significant concentration in the Kanawha Valley (West Virginia American Water).
- Appalachian Power (AEP) – the dominant electric distribution and transmission utility for the region, a subsidiary of American Electric Power regulated jointly by the PSC and the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) (Appalachian Power).
- Mountaineer Gas – the primary natural gas distribution company in the metro, operating approximately 27,000 miles of pipeline statewide under PSC jurisdiction.
- Charleston Sanitary Board – a municipal authority providing wastewater collection and treatment for the City of Charleston, governed by a board appointed by the mayor.
- Kanawha County Solid Waste Authority – oversees solid waste collection, transfer, and disposal planning in alignment with the West Virginia Solid Waste Management Act.
Stormwater management is shared between the City of Charleston's Department of Public Works and Kanawha County, with federal Clean Water Act MS4 (Municipal Separate Storm Sewer System) permit requirements imposed by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA MS4 Program).
Broadband infrastructure delivery involves a combination of incumbent cable operators, DSL providers, and emerging fiber buildouts, with coordination partially driven by the West Virginia Office of Broadband under the state's Digital Equity Plan framework.
Common scenarios
Residents and businesses in the Charleston metro encounter the utility and infrastructure system in predictable recurring contexts:
- New construction and service connection – Developers must obtain utility availability letters from the relevant water, sewer, gas, and electric providers before local building permits are issued. Kanawha County's Planning and Zoning division coordinates this intake.
- Rate increase proceedings – When an investor-owned utility files for a rate increase with the PSC, residential customers may intervene as parties or submit public comment. PSC proceedings are public record and accessible through the agency's e-filing portal.
- Infrastructure failure and emergency repair – The 2014 Elk River chemical spill, in which approximately 10,000 gallons of MCHM contaminated the West Virginia American Water intake, prompted federal and state legislative responses including the Protecting Household Consumers from Contamination Act and revised source water protection requirements (EPA Elk River Response).
- Capital improvement planning – Both public and investor-owned utilities publish multi-year capital improvement plans (CIPs) that drive bond issuance, rate projections, and infrastructure replacement schedules.
The Charleston Metro Public Services framework intersects directly with utility governance whenever emergency management, public health, or transportation planning triggers infrastructure decisions.
Decision boundaries
Not every infrastructure question falls within a single authority's jurisdiction. The following boundaries govern where different decisions are made:
| Question | Decision Authority |
|---|---|
| Retail utility rates (electric, gas, water) | West Virginia PSC |
| Municipal water/sewer extensions | City or county public works + local council |
| Environmental discharge permits | WV DEP and U.S. EPA Region 3 |
| Federal highway and bridge funding | FHWA / WVDOT |
| Broadband grant allocation | WV Office of Broadband / NTIA |
| Emergency infrastructure repair declarations | Governor's Office / FEMA |
Infrastructure planning at the regional scale is coordinated through the Kanawha Valley Regional Transportation and Planning Agency (KVRTPA), which produces the metropolitan transportation plan and aligns capital projects with federal funding cycles. The Charleston Metro Regional Planning process governs how long-range infrastructure priorities are set and which projects qualify for federal formula funding under MAP-21 successor statutes.
The Charleston Metro homepage provides orientation to the full range of civic, governmental, and infrastructure topics covered across this reference resource.
References
- West Virginia Public Service Commission
- West Virginia American Water
- Appalachian Power (AEP)
- U.S. EPA NPDES Municipal Stormwater (MS4) Program
- U.S. Census Bureau – Charleston, WV Metropolitan Statistical Area
- Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC)
- West Virginia Office of Broadband
- West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection (WVDEP)
- U.S. EPA Region 3
- West Virginia Code §24-2-3 (PSC Authority)