619 A.2d 483 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1992
During the May special session, the General Assembly enacted Public Acts 92-16, which became effective on July 1, 1992. It was signed by the governor on June 8. Public Acts 92-16, 2(a) provides: "The commissioner of income maintenance shall adopt regulations in accordance with the provisions of chapter 54 establishing mandatory standards for the granting of general assistance financial and medical assistance, including the [minimum] level of FINANCIAL assistance to be provided at the expense of the towns in such cases, WHICH SHALL BE THREE HUNDRED FOURTEEN DOLLARS PER MONTH FOR A SINGLE EMPLOYABLE PERSON AND THREE HUNDRED FIFTY-SIX DOLLARS PER MONTH FOR A SINGLE UNEMPLOYABLE PERSON UPON A DETERMINATION OF HIS UNEMPLOYABILITY. . . ."
On or about June 8, 1992, the commissioner of the department of income maintenance (commissioner), Audrey Rowe, by her deputy, issued Policy Transmittal No. GA 92-3, which instructed each municipality to implement the changes mandated by Public Acts 1992, 92-16 in the manner set forth in the transmittal. The transmittal also instructed each municipality to implement the changes "despite the fact that regulations have not been promulgated."
In a letter dated June 26, 1992, the commissioner asked the governor to approve her finding of an imminent peril to the public welfare because "[t]he State Budget for the Fiscal Year 1992-93 is predicated on realizing savings from the above mentioned changes beginning on July 1, 1992. We have become seriously concerned that the lack of regulations which may be necessary to implement these mandates may either delay or prohibit implementation of the changes in a timely fashion, possibly imperiling the integrity of the *325 Connecticut State Budget." The governor, by signing the commissioner's letter, agreed that an emergency existed.
On June 26, 1992, the legislative regulation review committee received the proposed emergency regulations, and on June 29, 1992, regulations became effective when they were filed with the office of the secretary of the state.
On or about June 15, 1992, the department of income maintenance (department) provided the cities and towns that administer the program with notices concerning Policy Transmittal 92-3. The department suggested that all clients be provided with copies of these notices. The cities and towns apparently complied with this suggestion in a variety of ways and some clients received the notices earlier than others.
On July 1, 1992, Virginia Melton, Leda Fox, Victoria Perez, and James Harris, individually and on behalf of others similarly situated, filed a complaint seeking to prohibit commissioner and the municipalities from "reducing, terminating or denying general assistance benefits, pursuant to recent legislative enactments, without first promulgating regulations required by the Uniform Administrative Procedures Act." Mr. Thomas Saleeba was permitted to intervene as a party plaintiff on the second day of the hearing on this motion.
The issues raised in this proceeding are: (1) whether the court has the authority to review the commissioner's determinations and the governor's approval of that determination, that there was an imminent peril to the public health, safety or welfare, which justified the promulgation of emergency regulations; (2) if the court reviews the emergency determination, whether the commission and the governor erred in determining *326 that there was an imminent peril to the public welfare; (3) whether the plaintiffs received adequate notice of the reductions of their benefits.
The Uniform Administrative Procedures Act (UAPA) provides for the promulgation of emergency administrative regulations. General Statutes
Connecticut has not specifically authorized the judicial review of an agency's finding, which was approved by the governor, that an imminent peril required the adoption of emergency regulations. Several courts, which however, have allowed judicial review. In Poschman v. Dumke,
The commissioner argues that the agency's determination that an emergency exists cannot be reviewed because
Accordingly, the court concludes that it has the authority to review an agency's determination that there was an imminent peril to the public health, safety or welfare, as defined by §
Having determined that it can review the emergency determination, the court must next decide whether that finding was erroneous. On review, the standard "for deciding whether an agency's finding of an emergency . . . was warranted is whether there was a `substantial basis' for it." American Grain Products Processing Institute v. Department of Public Health,
There are no Connecticut cases or statutes that define the phrase "imminent peril to the public health, safety or welfare." "Public welfare," however, has been defined as: "[t]he prosperity, well-being, or convenience of the public at large, or a whole community, as distinguished from the advantage of an individual or limited class. It embraces the primary social interests of safety, order, morals, economic interest, and other non-material and political interests. In the development of our civic life, the definition of `public welfare' has also developed for the promotion of economic welfare and public convenience. "Black's Law Dictionary, (6th ed. 1990) p. 1233. In addition, a federal court has recognized a statement of emergency to the commissioner's as a valid justification for dispensing with the notice and comment procedures. In Philadelphia Citizens in Action v. Schweiker,
As mandated by OBRA, HHS promulgated emergency rules to implement the changes. Id. In support *330 of the emergency regulations, the secretary of HHS argued that "congressional concern with reducing government spending immediately and the short time Congress provided for implementation of the amendments — from August 13 to October 1 — made a full notice and comment procedure prior to implementation of the rules impracticable." Id., 882. In addition, the secretary argued that the "interim rules will permit the State and Federal governments to capture the greatest amount of cost savings from these provisions and this will be to the benefit of the public. We anticipate that the savings . . . from prompt implementation of these amendments will be about $2 billion and represent a substantial factor in the President's efforts to curb inflation and revitalize the economy." Id., 882 n. 4.
The court, in upholding the agency's finding of an emergency, stated that: "We believe that Congress, by setting an effective date so close to the date of enactment, expressed its belief that implementation of the amendments to the AFDC program was urgent. We cannot say that HHS, by paying heed to that congressional concern in its determination that it had good cause to promulgate interim final rules without full notice and comment, erred as a matter of law." (Emphasis added.) Id., 885. In the present case, during the May special session, the General Assembly passed Public Acts 1992, No. 92-16, which had an effective date of July 1, 1992. As a result, the commissioner had less than one month to comply with the Act's mandates.
Although Connecticut utilizes different language in its exception to the notice and comment procedure than the federal exception ("impracticable, unnecessary or contrary to the public interest"), Massachusetts, a state that utilizes similar language to Connecticut, has addressed whether a statutorily-created deadline can create an imminent threat to the public health, safety *331
or welfare. In Robinson v. Secretary of Administration,
In Pioneer Liquor Mart, Inc. v. Alcoholic Beverage Control Commission, supra, 4, the commission adopted an emergency regulation establishing price schedules *332
because there was "insufficient time in this instance for the [c]ommission to comply and it being contrary to the public interest to allow the months of March and April to pass without the establishment of legal and proper [m]inimum [c]onsumer [r]esale [p]rices as authorized by 25C." (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Id., 4 n. 5. The agency also argued that the emergency regulation was required "to promote temperance, to stabilize the business, to avoid price wars, to instill observance of the law, and to protect the public." (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Id., 4 n. 5. The court upheld the emergency regulation by stating: "Despite the meager character of the commission's statement of the `emergency' in respect of its approval of the price schedules, we cannot say that it was insufficient. The commission's statement must be viewed in the light of the commission's apparent difficulty in adjusting itself to compliance with 25C as interpreted by the Kneeland decision. The record does not justify us in concluding that the commission had no substantial basis for the finding that the public interest required promulgation for some price schedule for March and April, 1963. (Emphasis added.) Id.,
It should be noted, however, that an agency cannot rely only on a mandated deadline to justify an emergency determination. In New Jersey v. United States Environmental Protection,
An examination of the cases on this subject suggest that most courts invalidate emergency regulations because the agency had the ability to comply with the formal notice and comment procedure. The dissent in Philadelphia Citizens in Action v. Schweiker, supra, 891, based its opinion on the agency's ability to comply with the APA's notice and comment procedure: "If a two month time period [as in Sharon Steel Corporation v. EPA,
The court adopts the reasoning in Philadelphia Citizens in Action v. Schweiker, supra, 888, because of its applicability to this case: "Yet it bears emphasis, because the point is easily missed amid the concern over the reduction in benefits, that the validity of the benefit cuts is in no way before this Court. The reduction in benefits involved here is plainly required by [Public Acts 1992, No. 92-16] — a fully debated act of [the General Assembly] — and not by the implementing rules of [the department]. To the extent that the appellees wish to comment on the desirability of benefit cuts, the time for such comments passed with the enactment of [Public Acts 1992, No. 92-16]. At issue now are simply the rules of the department implementing the clear statutory directive. [The department of income maintenance] may not undo what [the General Assembly] and the [governor] have done; its discretion with respect to reducing benefits is quite narrowly defined. In judging the validity of the procedures by which its rules were promulgated, we must not be swayed by our views of the desirability of the underlying statutory policy that [the department] is bound to implement."
It is the conclusion of the court that the commissioner acted in good faith when adopting the emergency regulations, and the determination that there was an imminent peril to the public welfare did not lack a substantial basis and was not palpably wrong.
While the aforementioned conclusions are also dispositive of the notice claims raised by the plaintiffs, the plaintiffs have raised a due process claim in this action.
An examination of the notice forms and the fair hearing process offered to recipients compels the conclusion *336 that the recipients have been afforded such reasonable notice as to satisfy due process requirements.
It should be noted that the status of married couples under Public Acts 1992, No. 92-16 is unclear and the department will be obliged to consider their circumstances in light of the brief pronouncements of the act itself.
The court cannot conclude, however, that this shortcoming is sufficient to warrant the extraordinary relief requested.
In view of the court's findings as to the emergency determination and the forms of notice, the plaintiffs' motion For temporary injunction is denied.