West Virginia’s state revenue surplus is coming from a variety of areas and has been boosted by an influx of federal pandemic money and a huge, recent spike in the energy severance tax linked to the Russian invasion of Ukraine. State officials said this week that the numbers show West Virginia will end the budget year with more than a billion dollars more than it first predicted. General revenue fund tax collections hit a more than $488 million high, and April started with a record $740 million on the books. Figures for the year through March showed a drop in tax collections for tobacco, vehicle registration fees and the business and occupation tax.