September 4, 2008
Addresses at center of Huntington appeal
Page 2 of 2
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Eastham and Coffey sued over the ordinance before the December 2006 deadline set in Felinton's letter.

"There has been nobody discharged," McClure said. "Not a soul."

The high court affirmed the right of municipalities to enact employee residency requirements in 1999, after Wheeling passed such an ordinance. But Ketchum argued Wednesday that such provisions prevent places like Huntington, with a declining population and a struggling economy, to recruit and keep qualified employees.

"It's an antiquated law," he said.

Ketchum also suggested that Huntington might be the only city or town in the state with such a provision.

The West Virginia Municipal League is unaware of how many of the state's 234 incorporated places have residency rules, executive director Lisa Dooley said. That group's national counterpart has a similarly hard time tracking such laws.

Some states forbid cities and towns from using them, while others direct them only at police and firefighters, said Chris Hoene, director of policy and research for the National League of Cities.

Neighboring Ohio blocked such ordinances with 2006 legislation. But some of Ohio's larger cities, including Cleveland, have asked the state Supreme Court to overturn it.

Huntington was trying to ensure employees had a stake in their community with the law, while also seeking racial diversity and an increased tax base, McClure told the West Virginia court.

"It's a policy choice, with all due respect to Mr. Ketchum," he said. "It's not up to he and I, it's up to the elected Legislature, the city council."

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