Should West Virginia increase the tax rate on natural gas extraction to fund schools and roads?
West Virginia sits atop the Marcellus Shale, making it a natural gas powerhouse, yet the state continues to struggle with underfunded schools, PEIA shortfalls, and crumbling infrastructure. Proponents argue that the current severance tax is too low compared to the billions in value being extracted and shipped away, believing the state is missing its chance to convert one-time mineral wealth into long-term prosperity. Opponents warn that because gas prices fluctuate wildly, the tax revenue is unstable, and hiking rates will put West Virginia at a competitive disadvantage against Pennsylvania and Ohio, ultimately costing high-paying blue-collar jobs.
Answer Overview
Response rates from 9 America voters.
Historical Support
Trend of support over time for each answer from 9 America voters.
Loading data...
Loading chart...
Historical Importance
Trend of how important this issue is for 9 America voters.
Loading data...
Loading chart...
Other Popular Answers
Unique answers from America voters whose views went beyond the provided options.
Popular Conversations
Join in on the most popular conversations.
About This Data
Based on 9 responses to this question.
These results come from iSideWith's ongoing political issues survey. We collect over a million responses per day, filter out duplicate and multiple submissions, and break the results down by political party, ideology, age, state, and census demographics (income, race, education, household).
iSideWith is non-partisan — we don't advocate for any party, candidate, or position. We report what the public tells us.
Cite Or Embed This Poll
Writing about this issue? Use the live data and link back to the full results.





